NEC 220.82 · Zone 5A

Heat Pump Panel Check — Nebraska

Is your Nebraska home ready for a heat pump? Check your electrical panel capacity in 3 minutes — free. Same NEC 220.82 Optional Method your electrician uses.

Up to $500 in rebates available in Nebraska

Serving Omaha, Lincoln, Bellevue, Grand Island and all of Nebraska

Available rebates in Nebraska

ESTIMATE ONLY — amounts and eligibility change. Verify with program administrators before purchasing.

Federal — Expired

IRA 25C Tax Credit

$0

IRA Section 25C expired December 31, 2025. Not available for heat pump systems installed in 2026.

Installed before Dec 31, 2025? Claim on your 2025 tax return (IRS Form 5695).

HEEHRA

Pending

Nebraska Program

$8,000
Low income (<80% AMI)$8,000
Moderate (80–150% AMI)$4,000

Nebraska has not yet launched its HEEHRA program as of March 2026. Contact the Nebraska Energy Office for updates. IRA 25C tax credit expired Dec 31, 2025.

State / Utility

Nebraska Programs

OPPD Residential Heat Pump Rebates

$500
Details →

Lincoln Electric System (LES) Residential Rebates

$400
Details →

Estimated maximum combined rebates in Nebraska

HEEHRA $0+ state programs $500 (IRA 25C expired Dec 31, 2025)

Low income (<80% AMI)

up to $500

ESTIMATE ONLY. Amounts vary by income, equipment specifications, and program availability. Not all programs are stackable. Verify eligibility before purchasing equipment.

IECC 2021Zone 5A — Cool-Humid

Nebraska climate and heat pump sizing

Nebraska is classified as IECC 2021 Zone 5A — Cool-Humid. Typical winter design temperatures are 0°F to 15°F.

Cold-climate ASHP required (Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat, Bosch IDS, Daikin Fit, etc.). Size for outdoor design temperature, not average.

Heating demand is the primary load driver. NEC 220.82(C) largest-of logic often selects the heat pump load as the controlling value.

Nebraska at a glance

IECC Zone5A
Design temp range0°F to 15°F
Cold-climate HP neededYes
Electrical codeNEC 220.82
Check my Nebraska panel →

How the Nebraska panel check works

Three inputs, one clear answer. No electrician visit required for a preliminary NEC 220.82 assessment.

01

Enter your ZIP + panel details

Your ZIP code in Nebraska pre-loads your IECC zone and available rebates. Add your panel size, square footage, and existing loads.

02

NEC 220.82 calculation runs

The Optional Method — first 10 kVA at 100%, remainder at 40%, plus the largest of AC / heat pump / existing heat. Same standard your electrician uses.

03

PASS, WARN, or FAIL — plus rebates

Get exact amperage figures, upgrade recommendation if needed, and a full breakdown of Nebraska rebates you qualify for. Download the PDF to share with your contractor.

Frequently asked questions — Nebraska

How much does a heat pump cost in Nebraska?

In Nebraska, a whole-home air-source heat pump typically costs $5,000–$14,000 installed, depending on home size, system type, and contractor. Cold-climate models for zones like Zone 5A cost more but deliver lower operating costs. Combined rebates of up to $500 (state programs) can offset a significant portion of installed cost.

Is HEEHRA available in Nebraska?

Nebraska's HEEHRA program has not yet launched but is expected to open. Nebraska has not yet launched its HEEHRA program as of March 2026. Contact the Nebraska Energy Office for updates. IRA 25C tax credit expired Dec 31, 2025. Check your state energy office for updates. Note: the federal IRA 25C tax credit expired December 31, 2025 and is not available for new 2026 installations.

What size heat pump do I need in Nebraska?

Nebraska falls in IECC 2021 Zone 5A — Cool-Humid. Typical winter design temperatures are 0°F to 15°F. Cold-climate ASHP required (Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat, Bosch IDS, Daikin Fit, etc.). Size for outdoor design temperature, not average. Sizing requires a Manual J load calculation — but as a rough rule, allow 20–30 BTU/h per square foot for older homes in Nebraska.

Do I need a panel upgrade for a heat pump in Nebraska?

Not necessarily. Most 200A panels in Nebraska have headroom for a heat pump under the NEC 220.82 Optional Method — which accounts for diversity of loads rather than peak simultaneous demand. A 100A panel is more likely to require an upgrade, especially if you also have an EV charger or electric range. Our free audit calculates your exact available capacity in 3 minutes using the same method your electrician would use.

Check your Nebraska panel capacity now

Free NEC 220.82 load calculation. Takes 3 minutes. Find out if your Nebraska home is ready for a heat pump — before you spend $5,000 on an unnecessary panel upgrade.

Up to $500 in rebates available to qualifying Nebraska homeowners.

ESTIMATE ONLY — NEC 220.82 Optional Method. Verify all results with a licensed electrician before any panel modifications.