Boston · Heating installation

Furnace Installation in Boston, MA

Gas, oil, and high-efficiency furnaces installed and sized for New England winters — by a local crew, quoted before any work.

Free on-site estimates ✅ Upfront, no-surprise pricing
HVAC technician beside a new high-efficiency furnace in a Boston basement

Furnace installation in Boston is about getting reliable heat that holds up through a New England winter. We install and replace gas, oil, and high-efficiency furnaces, size them to your home, and remove the old unit cleanly — with the price quoted before any work starts.

New furnaces for New England winters

Boston's design temperatures sit around 7°F, so a furnace has to be sized for real cold, not a rough estimate. We run a proper load calculation so your new system keeps up on the worst nights without short-cycling or running constantly.

Gas, oil, and high-efficiency options

We install gas and oil furnaces as well as high-efficiency condensing models that reach higher AFUE ratings and lower fuel bills. If you're rethinking your whole heating setup, a cold-climate heat pump can heat and cool from one system, and we'll compare the options honestly. Homes on radiator heat may be better served by a boiler instead.

Furnace replacement: signs it's time

Rising heating bills, repeat repairs, uneven heat, or a furnace past about 15–20 years are the usual signs replacement makes sense. If you're not sure, start with a diagnosis on our furnace repair page, and see typical numbers in the HVAC installation cost guide.

Furnace installation questions

What homeowners ask us

How much does a new furnace cost in Boston?

New furnace installs in the Boston area span a broad range depending on fuel type, efficiency, and the condition of your existing venting and ductwork. We give a ballpark up front and confirm the exact price on a free on-site visit; see the HVAC installation cost guide for typical numbers.

How long does furnace installation take?

A straightforward furnace replacement is usually completed in one to two days. Conversions or venting and ductwork changes can take longer.

Furnace or heat pump — which should I install?

It depends on your home, fuel costs, and goals. A high-efficiency furnace is a proven heat source, while a cold-climate heat pump heats and cools and may qualify for MassSave rebates. We compare both for your home before you decide.

Time for a new furnace?

Call for a free on-site assessment, or request an estimate and we'll help you choose the right system before winter.

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