| Scenario | Installed | Rebates | Credit | Year‑1 Savings | Life | Escalation | Discount |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base Home | 8,500 | 1,200 | 20% (cap 2,000) | 900 | 15 | 3% | 6% |
| Higher Utility Rates | 9,200 | 1,500 | 20% (cap 2,000) | 1,250 | 15 | 4% | 6% |
| Longer Life | 8,500 | 1,200 | 20% (cap 2,000) | 900 | 20 | 3% | 6% |
- Tax credit used = min(Installed Cost × Credit %, Credit Cap).
- Net upfront cost = Installed Cost − Rebates − Tax credit used.
- Year t net savings = (Year‑1 savings) × (1 + escalation)^(t−1).
- Cash flow: Year 0 = −Net upfront; Years 1..N = net savings (plus residual value in final year).
- NPV = Σ CashFlow_t ÷ (1 + discount)^t.
- Payback = first time cumulative cash flow becomes positive (with fractional-year interpolation).
- IRR = discount rate that makes NPV equal to zero (estimated by bisection).
- Lifetime ROI = (Total undiscounted benefits − Net upfront) ÷ Net upfront.
- Enter the installed cost, then add rebates and any credit percent/cap.
- Provide expected year‑1 energy savings and any maintenance difference.
- Set escalation for future energy prices and your discount rate.
- Choose a project life and optional residual value at the end.
- Click Calculate ROI to see payback, NPV, IRR, and yearly cash flows.
- Use the export buttons to download your results as CSV or PDF.
Investment framing for upgrades
Heat pump upgrades behave like capital projects: a large upfront outlay followed by annual operating savings. This calculator converts those savings into cash flows so you can compare the upgrade to other uses of money. Start with the installed cost, subtract rebates, then apply any capped credit to estimate net upfront cost. That single number is the investment your savings must recover clearly.
Building annual savings assumptions
Annual savings are entered as year‑one net bill reduction plus any maintenance difference and other measurable benefits. The tool escalates those savings by your chosen energy‑price growth rate. For example, $900 in year one at 3% escalation becomes about $1,042 by year six. Adding an end‑of‑life residual value captures resale potential or avoided replacement spending.
Payback and cash recovery
Payback focuses on liquidity: it finds the first year when cumulative cash flow turns positive, with fractional‑year interpolation for accuracy. If your net upfront cost is $6,000 and year‑one savings are $1,000 growing at 3%, payback is near six years. Longer project life improves payback only if savings remain positive and stable. Use the year‑by‑year table to see how much cushion you gain after breakeven.
Discounting and value creation
Net present value tests value creation at your required return. Discounting converts future savings into today’s money; higher discount rates penalize distant benefits. A positive NPV means the upgrade beats your hurdle rate. The savings‑to‑investment ratio (SIR) summarizes this: discounted benefits divided by net upfront cost. Values above 1.00 indicate attractive economics. When NPV is slightly negative, modest changes in rebates or savings can flip the decision.
IRR and scenario planning
Internal rate of return translates the cash‑flow stream into a single comparable percentage. When IRR exceeds your financing rate or alternative investment return, the upgrade is financially compelling. Use scenarios: change escalation, adjust savings, or model higher maintenance costs. The chart highlights how quickly cumulative value builds, helping you explain the decision to stakeholders. Pair IRR with payback so both profitability and timing are clear.
FAQs
Which inputs typically change ROI the most?
The largest drivers are net upfront cost, year‑one savings, escalation, and project life. Small changes in savings or incentives can shift payback by years, especially when discount rates are high.
What discount rate should I use?
Use a discount rate that reflects your opportunity cost: loan rate, expected investment return, or a conservative hurdle rate. If you are unsure, test a range like 4% to 10% to see sensitivity.
Why does IRR sometimes show N/A?
IRR may show N/A when cash flows never cross from negative to positive, or when the pattern is unusual. In that case, rely on NPV and payback for decision guidance.
How do I model switching from gas or oil?
Enter energy savings as the net difference versus your current system, including both heating and cooling changes if relevant. If you expect added electricity costs in some months, reduce the savings estimate accordingly.
What should I put for residual value?
Residual value represents resale value, remaining equipment value, or avoided replacement spending at the end of the analysis period. If you prefer a conservative view, set it to zero.
Can I include cooling benefits?
Yes. If the upgrade reduces summer bills, include that benefit in year‑one savings. The escalation factor then grows the combined heating and cooling savings over time.