Updated May 2026 · Local pricing for the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area
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Prices estimated using the NailThePrice Local Cost Model™ — national averages adjusted for Minneapolis's labor rates, cost of living, and material pricing.
The cost to install a furnace in Minneapolis ranges from $2,600 to $8,330, with most homeowners paying around $4,680. Your actual cost depends on several factors specific to your home and the Minneapolis-St. Paul market.
Gas furnaces are most common and cost-effective in areas with natural gas. Electric furnaces cost less to install but more to operate. Oil furnaces need a storage tank.
Standard-efficiency (80% AFUE) furnaces cost less upfront but waste 20% of fuel. High-efficiency (95–98% AFUE) units cost more but save $200–$500 annually on heating.
Leaky or undersized ducts waste 20–30% of heated air. Duct sealing or replacement during furnace install improves comfort and efficiency.
Proper sizing via Manual J calculation ensures efficiency and comfort. An oversized furnace short-cycles, wastes energy, and wears out faster.
Adding zone dampers and multiple thermostats to control heating by area costs $1,500–$3,500 but significantly improves comfort and efficiency in multi-story homes.
The Midwest has a strong pool of skilled tradespeople, and labor rates tend to be moderate compared to coastal cities. Union and non-union shops both compete, giving homeowners options on pricing.
A lot of homeowners hear "gas furnace" and assume there's barely any electrical work involved. In reality, modern furnaces rely heavily on electrical components for blower motors, ignition systems, control boards, condensate pumps, and thermostats. Even when the heating source is gas, the furnace still needs a properly installed dedicated circuit and clean low-voltage controls to run reliably.
The thing that surprises people most is how often furnace replacements expose existing electrical problems nearby. I've opened plenty of furnace areas where the HVAC equipment itself was being replaced, but the electrical side had extension-cord wiring, overloaded utility circuits, loose service switches, open junction boxes, or old thermostat wire spliced together five different times. The furnace replacement suddenly becomes the first time anyone has looked closely at that area in 20 years.
One pattern I see constantly is contractors reusing old electrical infrastructure because "it still works." Existing service switches, old whip connections, low-voltage wiring, or condensate pump receptacles get left in place even when the rest of the equipment is brand new. That's how homeowners end up with callbacks where the furnace is fine but some older electrical component nearby starts failing a few months later.
The other thing people underestimate is how much modern furnaces depend on proper thermostat and control wiring. Smart thermostats, variable-speed blowers, zoning systems, humidifiers, and air cleaners all add complexity to the low-voltage side. A lot of nuisance problems people blame on the furnace itself actually trace back to bad thermostat wiring, missing common wires, or accessory wiring that was never cleaned up properly during installation.
One honest boundary here: combustion analysis, venting, airflow balancing, and furnace sizing are HVAC territory, not mine. From the electrical side, I'm looking at whether the dedicated circuit, service switch, controls, thermostat wiring, and accessory power were installed cleanly and safely.
When I review quotes, I want to see whether thermostat upgrades are included, whether new low-voltage wiring is assumed or excluded, whether condensate pump power is addressed, and whether the electrical reconnect is being fully updated or simply reused. "Reconnect existing electrical" can mean very different things depending on the contractor.
If it were my house, I'd rather spend a little more upfront cleaning up the surrounding electrical and control wiring during the furnace replacement instead of bolting new equipment onto messy infrastructure that was already overdue for attention.
Budget $85–$220 for the mechanical permit covering furnace installation in Minneapolis (per-unit fee). Your contractor typically handles the permit process.
Existing residential mechanical permit is tiered by scope: Level 1 (misc HVAC with no burner) $84.20; Level 2 (Level 1 + boiler/furnace replacement) $132.40; Level 3 (Level 1+2 + entire system replacement) $216.60. Plus $1 MN state surcharge. New-construction mechanical uses a separate fee schedule.
Hiring a pro? Make sure they're properly licensed — see Minnesota HVAC technician license rules.
Electrical permits are issued by the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry, not the City of Minneapolis (verified via the city's Permit Types page). Pool permits are issued by the city under Title 5 Chapter 89, with fees calculated using the standard building valuation tier. Frost-line plumbing and structural design are subject to Minnesota State Building Code; verify with CPED before construction.
Source: City of Minneapolis Building Permit Fee Schedule and Worksheet, accessed 2026-04-27.
Heating efficiency matters more in cold climates. High-efficiency units (95%+ AFUE for furnaces) cost more upfront but save significantly on heating bills over time. Heat pump systems may need supplemental heating below 0°F.
This project requires a licensed professional in Minneapolis. Attempting furnace installation without proper licensing can void insurance and create serious safety hazards.
Compare licensed, insured contractors serving Minneapolis-St. Paul.
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The average cost to install a furnace in Minneapolis ranges from $2,600 to $8,330, with most homeowners paying around $4,680. This estimate includes both labor ($1,870) and materials ($2,810). Costs in Minneapolis are near the national average due to local cost of living and labor market conditions. Get multiple quotes from licensed Minneapolis contractors to lock in the best price.
Yes, Minneapolis requires a mechanical permit for furnace installation. The City of Minneapolis Development Review (CPED) — Construction Code Services charges $85–$220 for this permit type, with an inspection turnaround of 5–15 business days. Your contractor typically handles the permit application. Minneapolis requires a contractor licensed by the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry for this work.
Most furnace installation projects in Minneapolis take 1–2 days to complete. The timeline depends on project scope, contractor availability in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area, and seasonal demand. Scheduling during Minneapolis's off-peak season (typically fall and winter) can reduce wait times and may lower costs.
If you live in a cold climate and plan to stay in your home for 5+ years, a 95–98% AFUE furnace pays for itself through fuel savings. The extra $500–$1,500 upfront typically saves $200–$500 per year. In mild climates, the savings are smaller and payback takes longer.
Furnaces typically last 15–25 years. Replace if yours is over 15 years old and needing frequent repairs, if repair costs exceed 50% of replacement cost, or if your energy bills are climbing despite maintenance. A new furnace can cut heating costs by 20–40%.