Heat Pump Installation for Cupertino, Santa Clara County Homes
Heat Pump Installation work in Cupertino runs differently than the same service in a tract suburb. 1950s-1960s ranch tract homes throughout Garden Gate and Rancho Rinconada. Our technicians have completed hundreds of heat pump installation jobs specifically in this housing stock and the Linda Vista area, so we recognize the patterns most contractors miss the first time around.
Local consideration we always check first in Cupertino: Hillside homes in Inspiration Heights present access logistics challenges
Electrification is the largest residential HVAC trend of the decade and it is happening fastest in the Bay Area. Federal IRA 25C ($2,000), TECH Clean California ($1,000-$3,000), PG&E rebates, and CCA rebates from Silicon Valley Clean Energy and Peninsula Clean Energy stack to commonly $4,500-$8,500 in incentives on a single heat pump conversion. That math has flipped the default replacement choice from gas furnace + AC combo to heat pump for a growing share of our customers. The installations are technically more complex — panel capacity matters, equipment selection requires knowing which CCA serves your address, and TECH Clean rebate paperwork has specific contractor and equipment qualification requirements. We have been a TECH Clean approved contractor since 2022 and have processed more than 380 heat pump rebate applications.
Cupertino sits between the Santa Cruz mountain foothills and the inland valley, giving it a microclimate distinctly warmer than Palo Alto but cooler than San Jose. The Apple Park / Vallco corridor drives substantial premium home demand and corresponding HVAC investment. We service the full range of Cupertino housing — from 1960s Rancho Rinconada tract homes that need original-AC replacement, to new-construction homes off Stevens Creek requiring Title 24-compliant variable-speed equipment.
A heat pump installation pattern we see often in Cupertino
Symptom: Outdoor unit placement constrained in tight Eichler atrium or Old Palo Alto side yard
Cause: Modern heat pumps need 12-inch clearance on side, 36-inch front, plus airflow path
What we do: Daikin Fit (smaller footprint) or wall-mount Mitsubishi solutions; sometimes relocate to roof or front yard with screening
Why Cupertino Chooses Us for Heat Pump Installation
- ACCA Manual J load calculation matched to your home's actual heat loss
- Electrical service load calculation and panel capacity verification
- Equipment selection with 2-3 tiers and CCA rebate optimization
- TECH Clean California rebate application filing
- Federal IRA 25C documentation for tax filing
- PG&E and CCA (SVCE / PCE) rebate paperwork
- Title 24 documentation and HERS verification coordination
Local Considerations for Heat Pump Installation in Cupertino
Cupertino\'s housing stock and local conditions create specific heat pump installation considerations:
- Apple Park area properties have higher equipment standards expectations — premium tier installations are common
- Rancho Rinconada's 1960s tract has aging original ductwork that often needs replacement during AC upgrade
- Hillside homes in Inspiration Heights present access logistics challenges
- Cupertino Union School District tax base supports premium home values; equipment investment recovers well at resale
Common Heat Pump Installation Issues in Cupertino
Existing 100-amp panel cannot support new heat pump load
Cause: Service panel sized for original 1970s loads, modern home adds 60-100 amps of new electric loads
Fix: Panel upgrade to 200A ($4,500-$6,500) or smart panel / soft-start solution ($1,800-$9,500)
Customer wants heat pump but ductwork is undersized
Cause: Variable-speed heat pumps need 400 CFM/ton at low static; older ducts often deliver 350 CFM/ton at high static
Fix: Duct rework: return upsize $400-$1,200, supply trunk modification $1,500-$4,000
Outdoor unit placement constrained in tight Eichler atrium or Old Palo Alto side yard
Cause: Modern heat pumps need 12-inch clearance on side, 36-inch front, plus airflow path
Fix: Daikin Fit (smaller footprint) or wall-mount Mitsubishi solutions; sometimes relocate to roof or front yard with screening
Customer expects equivalent gas furnace warm-air feel
Cause: Heat pump supply air is 95-105°F vs gas furnace 130-145°F — feels less warm to the hand even at same room temp
Fix: Education during proposal; supply air temp expectation set in writing; consider auxiliary heat strip for cold-snap days
Replacing gas furnace creates orphaned water heater on shared chimney
Cause: Removing the furnace removes the heat that drives water heater draft up the chimney
Fix: Concurrent water heater replacement with power-vent or heat pump tankless; or chimney liner downsize per CMC §802
Our Heat Pump Installation Process for Cupertino Homes
In-Home Estimate
90-120 min visit: Manual J load calc, electrical panel inspection, ductwork evaluation, outdoor unit placement, CCA rebate eligibility verification.
Written Proposal
Itemized proposal with equipment options, electrical scope (if any), all rebates documented with timing, financing options, written commissioning standard.
Permits + Coordination
Mechanical permit from your jurisdiction. If panel work, electrical permit pulled by C-10 partner. PG&E meter coordination if service upgrade needed.
Installation
Typically 2-3 days for whole-home conversion. Day 1: tear-out and rough-in. Day 2: equipment set, line set, electrical, condensate. Day 3: commissioning and detail.
Commissioning + HERS
Refrigerant charge by weight, subcool measurement, defrost cycle observation, balance point and aux heat lockout configured. HERS rater scheduled separately.
Inspection + Rebates
Building inspector visit, TECH Clean application filed, IRA 25C tax documentation, PG&E / SVCE / PCE rebate paperwork. Funds typically arrive 8-14 weeks.
Heat Pump Installation Pricing in Cupertino
Typical heat pump installation cost in Cupertino: $11 000 – $28 000 installed before incentives. We charge the same flat-rate pricing across all of Silicon Valley — no premium for Santa Clara County zip codes. Most jobs complete in 2-3 days for installation; HERS verification 1-3 weeks; permit close-out 4-8 weeks; rebate funds 8-14 weeks.
Heat Pump Installation in Cupertino — FAQ
How much does heat pump installation cost in Cupertino?
Heat Pump Installation pricing in Cupertino typically runs $11 000-$28 000 installed before incentives. Pricing is consistent across our service area — we don't charge premium rates for premium ZIP codes. Every quote is flat-rate, written, and provided before work begins.
How fast can you respond for heat pump installation in Cupertino?
Standard dispatch to Cupertino is 1-2 hours during business hours (8 AM – 8 PM) and 1-3 hours for after-hours emergency calls. We're based in Palo Alto and Cupertino sits within our 35-mile primary service area, so parts and crew are nearby.
Do you handle Title 24 paperwork for Cupertino heat pump installation?
Yes — every Cupertino installation includes Title 24 Part 6 documentation, HERS verification coordination, and permit pulling through the appropriate Santa Clara County or city building department. Rebate paperwork (PG&E, IRA 25C, TECH Clean California) is handled in-house.
What heat pump installation brands do you service in Cupertino?
We are factory-trained on Carrier, Daikin, and Mitsubishi Electric for heat pump installation, and service all other major brands in Cupertino: Trane, Lennox, Rheem, Goodman, American Standard, Bryant, York, Ruud, Amana, Coleman, LG, Heil, Maytag, Fujitsu. OEM parts where available, with appropriate aftermarket alternatives clearly disclosed for older equipment.
Are you licensed for heat pump installation work in Santa Clara County?
Yes. California State Contractors License Board (CSLB) license #1082456 — valid statewide for HVAC work. EPA Section 608 universal certification (EPA-2015-CA-0847) for refrigerant handling. $2 million general liability insurance and California workers compensation coverage. Bonded per CA Business & Professions Code §7071.