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The most efficient heating system for a New Hampshire home is the one matched correctly to that home's design, fuel availability, and budget. There is no single best answer. A high-efficiency gas furnace, a cold-climate heat pump, or a dual-fuel pairing can all be the right choice in the right scenario.

At A.J. LeBlanc Heating, we install all of these systems across Manchester, Bedford, Concord, Nashua, Salem, and Auburn. Here is how each one performs in NH conditions.

Start with the home itself

Heating accounts for roughly 50 to 60 percent of total energy use in a typical NH home. Equipment efficiency only matters relative to how much heat the home actually loses. A poorly insulated, leaky house with a high-efficiency furnace can use more fuel than a well-sealed house with a mid-efficiency one.

Before sizing a new system, we recommend confirming:

  • Attic insulation is at current standards (R-49 to R-60)
  • Major air leaks have been sealed
  • Duct leakage (if applicable) has been addressed

An NHSaves home energy assessment can quantify all three.

Home design and existing distribution

The home's existing distribution system often points strongly to the right replacement:

Forced-air homes (with ductwork)

Most homes built after the 1950s in NH have ducted forced-air systems. Replacement options:

  • High-efficiency gas, propane, or oil furnace
  • Central cold-climate heat pump, with or without a backup furnace (dual-fuel)

Hydronic homes (with boilers and baseboards or radiators)

Many older NH homes have hot-water heat distributed through baseboard, cast-iron radiators, or radiant floors. Replacement options:

  • High-efficiency condensing boiler (best when the system can run with return water below 130°F)
  • Quality non-condensing boiler when the existing emitters require high water temperatures
  • Mini split heat pumps added to provide cooling and supplemental heat in specific rooms, with the boiler continuing to serve the rest of the home

How the major options compare

High-efficiency gas, propane, or oil furnace

  • Efficiency: AFUE 95 to 98 percent for condensing gas and propane; 87 to 90 percent for oil
  • Upfront cost: moderate
  • Operating cost: depends heavily on fuel prices. Natural gas typically lowest where available.
  • Best fit: homes with established gas service, or oil heat customers who want familiarity and high BTU output per gallon

Cold-climate heat pump (central or ductless)

  • Efficiency: delivers 2 to 3 units of heat for every 1 unit of electricity at most NH winter temperatures
  • Upfront cost: moderate to higher, depending on whether ductwork already exists
  • Operating cost: very competitive with gas in NH; typically lower than oil, propane, or electric resistance
  • Best fit: homes converting away from oil, propane, or electric heat; homes that also want cooling
  • Bonus: provides air conditioning as part of the same system

Dual-fuel (heat pump plus furnace or boiler)

  • Efficiency: the heat pump handles fall and spring at high efficiency; the backup furnace or boiler covers the coldest days
  • Upfront cost: highest of the three options
  • Operating cost: typically the lowest year-round operating cost available in NH
  • Best fit: homes already replacing the heating system and adding cooling; homes that want backup heat security on the coldest nights

What about rebates and tax credits?

Incentives meaningfully change the math, but the federal picture changed at the end of 2025. The 25C Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit and the 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit both ended for installations placed in service after December 31, 2025. See our 25C tax credit update for current status. What remains live:

  • NHSaves utility rebates: vary by program and household income

Program rules change. Confirm current eligibility before purchase.

The right decision is the one that fits your home

If you are facing furnace, boiler, or heat pump replacement, the right answer depends on your home's heat loss, available fuels, current equipment, comfort priorities, and how long you plan to stay. Contact A.J. LeBlanc Heating for a no-pressure consultation. Serving New Hampshire families since 1928.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which heating system has the lowest operating cost in New Hampshire?

Dual-fuel (heat pump plus backup furnace) typically produces the lowest year-round operating cost in NH. Natural gas heat is competitive where available.

Are heat pumps actually practical in New Hampshire?

Yes. Modern cold-climate heat pumps deliver useful heat at outdoor temperatures down to minus 13°F and below. Most NH installations include a backup heat source for the coldest stretches.

How efficient is a modern condensing boiler?

Up to 95 percent AFUE or higher in lab conditions, but only if the system can deliver return-water temperatures low enough to condense. Outdoor reset and properly sized emitters are needed to capture that efficiency in practice.

What is the difference between AFUE and real-world efficiency?

AFUE is a lab number. Real-world efficiency depends on system sizing, short-cycling, standby losses, and how well the equipment matches your home's actual heat loss. Outdoor reset, ECM circulators, and correct sizing close most of the gap.

Heating project on the horizon?

Free estimates from licensed NH heating pros. We handle the rebate paperwork too.

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