Furnace & HVAC rebates · Kingston

Furnace & HVAC rebates in Kingston, Ontario.

Ontario Furnace Rebates helps Kingston homeowners check the same Ontario furnace and HVAC rebates as the rest of the province — $1,000–$7,500 for most homes, and up to ~$22,000 for oil-heated homes. Check what you can get back in 60 seconds.

Independent Free & no obligation No energy audit required Ontario homeowners
Independent Free & no obligation No energy audit required Ontario homeowners

How much is the furnace & HVAC rebate in Kingston?

Kingston homes get back the same provincial and federal amounts as everywhere in Ontario — what you qualify for depends mostly on how your home is heated today.

How much you get back depends mostly on how your home is heated today.

Your home is heated byEstimated rebate (furnace / AC / heat pump)
Natural gas (furnace upgrade)$1,000–$2,000
Electric / oil / propane / wood$3,000–$7,500
Geothermal (ground-source)$3,000–$12,000
Oil (stacked with federal OHPA)up to ~$22,000 combined

No energy audit required for a heat pump on its own. Amounts are estimates and depend on your home and eligibility — confirm current figures on the official program site. Last verified: June 2026.

Local programs in Kingston

Your utility

In Kingston, electricity is delivered by Utilities Kingston. Being on the Ontario electricity grid is part of qualifying for the Home Renovation Savings Program.

Ontario Furnace Rebates covers the same provincial and federal programs for Kingston homeowners as the rest of Ontario. Use the calculator above for your exact number, or read the breakdown below.

Which programs can Kingston homeowners use?

The provincial Home Renovation Savings Program is the main one. Oil-heated homes can add the federal Oil to Heat Pump Affordability program, and the interest-free Canada Greener Homes Loan stacks on top. See who qualifies for the full checklist.

Frequently asked questions

How much can I get back on a furnace or HVAC upgrade in Ontario?

A high-efficiency gas furnace upgrade typically returns $1,000–$2,000. Electric, oil, propane and wood homes replacing heating with a heat pump usually qualify for $3,000–$7,500, and up to $12,000 for geothermal. Oil homes can stack federal funding toward roughly $22,000.

Do I need an energy audit?

Not for a heat pump installed on its own — that’s one of the best parts of the current program. Audits only come in if you bundle other upgrades like insulation or windows.

Is this free?

Yes. Checking your rebate and getting matched with a registered contractor costs you nothing.

Do you submit my application?

We connect you with a registered contractor who handles the application for you — that’s who the program requires to submit it.

How long until I get paid?

Usually 60–90 days after your system is installed.

Can I keep my gas furnace?

Yes — many homes keep the furnace as backup and still qualify for a heat pump rebate.

What if I heat with oil?

Oil homes qualify for the most: the provincial rebate plus federal oil-conversion funding, which can approach $22,000 combined.

Is there a deadline?

The Home Renovation Savings Program is confirmed through November 2026 but can close earlier, and contractor registration closes May 31, 2026 — so it’s worth not waiting.

Amounts are estimates and depend on your home and eligibility — confirm current figures on the official program site. Last verified: June 2026.

See your Kingston rebate in 60 seconds.

Free, no obligation.

Check My Rebate

Check My Rebate