5-Ton Heat Pump: Size, BTU & Cost
A 5-ton heat pump delivers 60,000 BTU/hr and suits roughly 2,100–3,500 sq ft, depending on climate. Here are the details.
What is a 5-ton heat pump?
A "ton" measures cooling/heating capacity — one ton equals 12,000 BTU/hr. So a 5-ton heat pump delivers 60,000 BTU/hr. It typically conditions a home of roughly 2,100–3,500 sq ft, with the colder your climate, the smaller the home it covers.
5-ton heat pump by climate
| Climate | Home size a 5-ton unit suits |
|---|---|
| Cold (Zone 5–7) | ~2,100–2,600 sq ft |
| Mixed (Zone 4) | ~2,600–3,100 sq ft |
| Mild (Zone 1–3) | ~3,100–3,500 sq ft |
5-ton heat pump cost
A 5-ton ducted air-source system typically runs $12,325–$16,675 installed. Estimate your exact price below. (The federal 25C/25D tax credit expired Dec 31, 2025 — factor in state and utility rebates instead.)
Do you actually need a 5-ton unit?
Tonnage should be set by your home's heat loss, not a rule of thumb alone. An oversized unit short-cycles and wastes energy; an undersized one cannot keep up. Use our size calculator with your square footage and climate, then confirm with a contractor's Manual J.
Frequently asked questions
What size home does a 5-ton heat pump heat?
Roughly 2,100 sq ft in a cold climate up to about 3,500 sq ft in a mild one — a 5-ton unit is 60,000 BTU/hr. Insulation, windows and ceilings shift it, so confirm with a load calculation.
How many BTU is a 5-ton heat pump?
60,000 BTU/hr — one ton equals 12,000 BTU/hr.
How much does a 5-ton heat pump cost?
A 5-ton ducted air-source system runs about $12,325–$16,675 installed, before any state or utility rebates. The federal 25C/25D tax credit expired at the end of 2025.
Other heat pump sizes
⚠️ Rule-of-thumb estimate, not a substitute for a professional Manual J load calculation.