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Midea Heat Pump Installation in Boston, Massachusetts

By MassHVAC Editorial Team Reviewed by MassHVAC Editorial Team Last updated

Midea in Boston: the quick picture

The budget winner — 15–25% below Daikin equipment-level, smaller MA installer base but growing. EVOX 360 line is HPQPL-listed.

Best for in Boston: Cost-sensitive whole-home ductless installs where the homeowner is willing to do more upfront installer vetting in exchange for a 15–25% lower install bill.

How Boston customers file the rebate: Midea cold-climate heat pumps installed in Boston qualify for the 2026 Mass Save whole-home rebate of up to $8,500 when filed by a Mass Save HPIN-enrolled installer (Boston customers file through Eversource as their Mass Save electric sponsor). The 0% HEAT Loan up to $25,000 is also available.

Cost in Boston, 2026

Configuration Install cost (before rebate) Net cost after Mass Save
Single-zone ductless $4,500 – $9,000 $2,250 – $4,500 (partial-home rebate applies)
Multi-zone whole-home $11,000 – $19,000 $2,500 – $10,500 (whole-home rebate $$8,500)

Sourced from the Midea resource page and verified 2026-05-27. Run your specific home in the cost calculator for a number tied to your tonnage, region, and income tier.

Why Boston's housing stock matters here

Boston's South End and Back Bay are dominated by 1850s–1870s Victorian brick and brownstone rowhouses built four to five stories on filled tidelands, with party walls and no rear yards that materially constrain outdoor condenser placement. Triple-deckers are common in Dorchester, Roxbury, and Hyde Park; West Roxbury and parts of Roslindale lean post-war single-family. Most homes do not have original central ductwork, which is why ductless mini-split heat pumps are the dominant retrofit path here.

For Midea specifically: Midea EVOX 360 ductless multi-zone is well-matched to Boston's older ductless-default housing — same HPQPL eligibility and cold-climate spec as Mitsubishi, at 15–25% lower equipment cost. The trade-off is a smaller Midea-experienced installer bench in Boston, so verify your installer specifically has done Midea installs before.

Boston's winter design temperature (12.4°F)

Boston Logan's ASHRAE 2009 99% heating design dry-bulb temperature is 12.4°F — milder than inland Worcester thanks to coastal moderation, but humid enough that summer dehumidification capacity (not raw BTUs) often drives equipment sizing. Cold-climate certification is still required for whole-home Mass Save qualification.

Midea's cold-climate lines (EVOX 360) are spec'd to maintain rated heating capacity to 5°F and operate down to roughly -13°F to -15°F with derated capacity. Boston's 12.4°F design temp falls inside that operating range. Above 70,000 BTU/hr of calculated heating load, plan for resistance-heat backup for the few deep-cold hours per year — your Midea Trained Pro Installer installer should propose this in the install spec.

Boston permitting and historic review

Permits: HVAC mechanical permits in Boston go through the Inspectional Services Department (ISD), Building Division. Your Midea Trained Pro Installer-credentialed installer pulls the permit and coordinates inspection; you don't file directly.

Historic review: The Back Bay Architectural Commission and Beacon Hill Architectural Commission both require approval for HVAC condensers and mini-split heads visible from any public way; rooftop placement set well back from cornices is the typical approved location for those neighborhoods.

How the Mass Save rebate works for Midea in Boston

For a Midea cold-climate install in Boston, the rebate stack works like this:

  • Whole-home Mass Save: $2,650/ton up to $8,500, filed through Eversource as your Mass Save electric sponsor.
  • Sizing bonus: additional $500 if your installer's Manual J calc lands inside the 90–120% load band.
  • Weatherization bonus: additional $500 if you complete Mass Save weatherization (insulation/air-sealing) within 12 months of the install.
  • HEAT Loan: 0% APR up to $25,000, term tiered by income (84/60/36 months).
  • HEAR (income-qualified): up to $8,000 if you're at or below 80% AMI — stacks with Mass Save.

Federal §25C and §25D credits both expired December 31, 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and have not been reinstated. Some legacy installer marketing still references them — do not believe a quote that prices a 2026 install assuming federal tax credits.

Midea Trained Pro Installer + Mass Save HPIN in Boston

Two installer credentials matter for a Midea install in Boston, and they're not the same thing:

  • Midea Trained Pro Installer: the Midea dealer credential. Required if you want the extended manufacturer warranty (typically 12-yr parts + compressor when registered through a credentialed installer).
  • Mass Save HPIN: the Mass Save installer roster. Required for the rebate to be filed at the full whole-home tier — non-HPIN installers forfeit thousands of dollars.

Verify both before signing. They commonly overlap but not always; the safest pick in Boston is a Midea Trained Pro Installer-credentialed installer who is ALSO HPIN-enrolled. Read our installer-vetting guide for the full checklist.

Midea in Boston — FAQ

How much does a Midea heat pump install cost in Boston?
Single-zone Midea ductless installs in Boston run $4,500–$9,000 in 2026 dollars. Multi-zone whole-home Midea cold-climate configurations run $11,000–$19,000 before any rebate. After the Mass Save whole-home rebate of up to $8,500, expect a net cost of $2,500–$10,500 for a multi-zone install.
Does Midea cold-climate equipment qualify for the Mass Save rebate in Boston?
Yes. Midea EVOX 360 models appear on the current Mass Save Heat Pump Qualified Products List and qualify for the 2026 whole-home rebate of up to $8,500 when installed by a Mass Save HPIN-enrolled contractor as the sole heating and cooling source. Boston customers file the rebate through Eversource.
Why does cold-climate certification matter for Boston?
Boston's 99% winter design dry-bulb temperature is 12.4°F per Boston Logan Int'l (ASHRAE 2009). Midea's cold-climate lines (EVOX 360) are engineered to maintain rated heating capacity to 5°F and continue operating (with derated capacity) below 0°F — exactly the conditions Boston sees during the coldest week of the year. Non-cold-climate models that don't meet the ENERGY STAR ccASHP specification will under-perform at these temperatures.
What does Boston's housing stock mean for Midea installation?
Boston's South End and Back Bay are dominated by 1850s–1870s Victorian brick and brownstone rowhouses built four to five stories on filled tidelands, with party walls and no rear yards that materially constrain outdoor condenser placement. Triple-deckers are common in Dorchester, Roxbury, and Hyde Park; West Roxbury and parts of Roslindale lean post-war single-family. Most homes do not have original central ductwork, which is why ductless mini-split heat pumps are the dominant retrofit path here. That makes ductless multi-zone configurations the dominant install path here, which lines up with Midea's product strength.
How does the Boston permitting process work for HVAC installs?
HVAC installation permits in Boston go through the Inspectional Services Department (ISD), Building Division. The Back Bay Architectural Commission and Beacon Hill Architectural Commission both require approval for HVAC condensers and mini-split heads visible from any public way; rooftop placement set well back from cornices is the typical approved location for those neighborhoods. Your Mass Save HPIN installer pulls the mechanical permit and coordinates inspection; the homeowner doesn't need to file directly.
Is Midea the right brand for my Boston home?
The budget winner — 15–25% below Daikin equipment-level, smaller MA installer base but growing. EVOX 360 line is HPQPL-listed. Cost-sensitive whole-home ductless installs where the homeowner is willing to do more upfront installer vetting in exchange for a 15–25% lower install bill. Get three quotes — ideally one Midea quote alongside two competing brands — to verify the Midea price you're being shown is consistent with what Boston installers typically charge.

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