❄️ Ductless System Cost

Mini-Split Cost Calculator

Estimate the installed cost of a ductless mini-split heat pump system in Canada by number of zones, capacity per zone, and cold-climate rating.

💰 Installed Cost Estimate
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💰 Total Installed Cost

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🔧 Cost Per Zone

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Cost Breakdown

📊 Cost by Number of Zones

Full Cost Table

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How to Use the Mini-Split Cost Calculator

1
Select Number of Zones

Choose how many indoor units the system needs, from a single room to a multi-zone system covering several areas.

2
Select Capacity Per Zone

Choose the typical capacity per indoor unit in BTU/hr, based on the size of each room being served.

3
Select Cold-Climate Rating

Choose standard or cold-climate rated performance depending on local winter severity.

4
Calculate

Click Calculate Installed Cost to see equipment cost, installation cost, and total installed cost.

What Drives Mini-Split Installed Cost

Mini-split cost scales primarily with the number of zones, since each indoor unit needs its own refrigerant line set, electrical connection, and mounting work, all beyond the cost of the indoor unit itself. The outdoor condensing unit also typically needs to scale up in capacity to support more zones running at the same time, which adds equipment cost on top of the added labour for each zone.

Why Multi-Zone Systems Cost More Than Simple Multiplication

A four-zone system costs meaningfully more than four times the cost of a single-zone system, since the outdoor unit, refrigerant branching, and controls all need to support the combined capacity and complexity of multiple zones operating independently. This is a normal part of mini-split pricing and not a sign of being overcharged.

When Mini-Splits Make Sense Over Extending Ductwork

Mini-splits are often the practical choice for additions, older homes that never had ductwork, finished basements, or rooms that are difficult or expensive to reach with new ducting. Each situation is different, and comparing mini-split cost against the cost of extending or adding ductwork is worth doing before deciding, especially for larger multi-room projects.

Cold-Climate Performance Matters

A cold-climate rated mini-split costs more upfront but maintains a meaningful share of its heating capacity much further below freezing than a standard-rated unit, which matters significantly for reliable heating through a Canadian winter. Confirming this rating before purchase is one of the most important decisions in a mini-split project for a cold climate. See the heat pump cost calculator for the equivalent ducted comparison.

Checking for Rebates

Mini-split heat pumps are commonly eligible for the same energy efficiency rebate programs that apply to ducted heat pumps. Check the utility rebate calculator before finalizing a project budget.

Frequently Asked Questions

A single-zone mini-split typically costs somewhere in the range of $4,000 to $7,000 installed depending on capacity and cold-climate rating, while a multi-zone system with three or four indoor units commonly runs from $10,000 to $18,000 or more, since each additional zone adds both an indoor unit and installation labour.

Each zone needs its own refrigerant line set run from the outdoor unit to that indoor unit, along with its own electrical connection and mounting work, all of which adds labour beyond just the cost of the indoor unit itself. The outdoor condensing unit also typically needs to be sized larger to support more zones running simultaneously, adding further equipment cost.

Mini-splits can be a strong option for additions, older homes without existing ductwork, or homes where installing ducts would be prohibitively disruptive or expensive. Whether a multi-zone system makes more sense than adding or extending ductwork depends heavily on the specific home's layout and how many rooms need independent temperature control.

Cold-climate rated mini-splits are specifically designed to maintain a meaningful share of their heating capacity well below freezing, and many perform reliably through most Canadian winters. Standard, non-cold-climate rated mini-splits lose heating capacity more sharply as temperatures drop, which is an important distinction to confirm before choosing equipment for a cold climate.