What Size Heat Pump for 2,000 Sq Ft?
A 2,000 sq ft home typically needs about 4 tons (~48,000 BTU/hr). The exact size depends on your climate, insulation and ceilings — see by zone below or calculate yours.
2,000 sq ft heat pump size by climate zone
These figures are a starting estimate. A contractor's Manual J load calculation accounts for windows, air-sealing, orientation and local design temperatures — always confirm before buying.
How we size a heat pump for 2,000 sq ft
We multiply your floor area by a climate factor (about 18–30 BTU per square foot, rising the colder your region), then adjust for insulation and ceiling height, and divide by 12,000 to get tons. For 2,000 sq ft in an average cold climate that lands near 4 tons (48,000 BTU/hr).
What changes the size for your home
- Insulation & air-sealing — a tight, modern 2,000 sq ft home may need a half-ton less.
- Windows — lots of glass or single-pane windows push the load up.
- Ceiling height — vaulted or 10 ft+ ceilings add volume to heat.
- Climate — see the by-zone table above; it's the single biggest factor.
Ducted or ductless for 2,000 sq ft?
If you already have ductwork, a single ducted 4-ton unit is usually simplest. Without ducts, a multi-zone mini-split — roughly 5 indoor heads for this size — gives room-by-room control and avoids costly duct runs.
Frequently asked questions
What size heat pump do I need for 2,000 sq ft?
About 4 tons (~48,000 BTU/hr) for an average home in a cold climate, less in a mild one. Insulation and windows shift it — use the calculator above for your exact figure.
How many BTU is a 4-ton heat pump?
48,000 BTU/hr — one ton equals 12,000 BTU/hr.
Will a 4-ton unit heat 2,000 sq ft in winter?
In most climates, yes. In very cold regions a cold-climate model or backup heat covers the coldest days below the balance point.
Other home sizes
⚠️ Rule-of-thumb estimate, not a substitute for a professional Manual J load calculation.