Heat pump hot water in Queensland, a complete guide
A heat pump hot water system is one of the most effective ways to cut a Queensland home's energy use. This is an in-depth, no-jargon guide to how heat pumps work, what they cost, the rebates available, and how they pair with solar.
- Independent and Queensland-focused
- No jargon
- Checked May 2026
The short answer
A heat pump hot water system heats your water using far less electricity than a conventional electric tank, typically cutting hot water running costs to a fraction of what an old electric system uses. Hot water is one of the largest energy uses in a Queensland home, so the saving is real and ongoing. A heat pump costs more upfront than a basic electric system, and in Queensland federal and state support can be combined to reduce that upfront cost. Pair it with rooftop solar and your hot water can run largely on your own power.
How a heat pump hot water system works
The name is a little misleading. A heat pump hot water system does not generate heat the way an old electric element does. Instead it moves heat, using the same refrigeration cycle as a fridge or an air conditioner, but in reverse.
It draws warmth out of the surrounding air and uses it to heat the water in a storage tank. Because it is moving existing heat rather than creating it from scratch, it does the same job using far less electricity. A conventional electric tank turns one unit of electricity into roughly one unit of heat. A heat pump turns one unit of electricity into several units of heat. That efficiency is the entire reason heat pumps save money.
What a heat pump costs in Queensland
As with solar, the price depends on the system and the home, but the cost breaks into the unit itself, the installation, and the rebates that come off the price.
Cost figures are a rough guide, based on current Queensland market data, checked May 2026. They are not a quote. Your actual price depends on the system you choose and your home.
The way to think about a heat pump is upfront cost versus ongoing saving. It costs more to buy and install than a basic electric tank, but it uses far less power, so it pays that difference back over the years that follow. How quickly depends on what you are replacing and your electricity use.
Heat pump rebates in Queensland
Queensland heat pumps are supported in two ways, a national scheme and a Queensland efficiency rebate, and the support can stack.
The federal scheme
Under the federal scheme, a heat pump hot water system is treated as a renewable hot water technology and generates small-scale technology certificates, the same type of certificate a solar system creates. Your installer claims these and applies their value as a discount on the price you pay, at the point of sale. The value depends on the system and the certificate market, and the scheme reduces over time.
The Queensland rebate
On top of the federal scheme, Queensland offers a state efficiency rebate that supports households replacing an old hot water system with an energy-efficient one such as a heat pump. It is applied through approved retailers and installers. Eligibility rules and the rebate amount apply, and program detail can change, so it is worth confirming the current position with your installer when you quote.
Last checked: May 2026. Rebates and schemes are reviewed and can change. Confirm the current detail with your installer when you get a quote, as they apply the support available at the time.
Running your heat pump on solar
A heat pump still uses electricity, just much less of it than an electric tank. That leads to the obvious next step: if you also have rooftop solar, you can run the heat pump largely on your own power.
A heat pump and solar pair naturally. A heat pump uses a modest, steady amount of electricity to heat water, and a solar system generates the most power during the middle of the day. Set the heat pump to run during daylight hours, many units have a timer or smart control for exactly this, and it heats your water using solar power your panels are generating anyway. Power that might otherwise be exported to the grid for a modest feed-in credit goes into heating your water instead.
Hot water on solar
Run the heat pump in the daytime and it heats water using your own solar generation rather than grid power.
Uses daytime surplus
It soaks up daytime solar you would otherwise export cheaply, turning it into hot water you will use.
Simple to schedule
Most heat pumps have a timer or smart control, so lining the run time up with your solar is straightforward.
One coordinated project
Planning solar and a heat pump together means the system is sized with your hot water load in mind.
For a Queensland household, solar plus a heat pump is a strong combination, low-cost generation feeding a low-consumption hot water system. If you are considering both, it makes sense to get them looked at together.
Get a quote for your Queensland home
See what a heat pump, or solar and a heat pump together, would cost and save at your property.
Get a quote→Is a heat pump worth it in Queensland?
A heat pump is a strong upgrade for many Queensland homes, but an honest look at where it fits is worth more than a blanket yes.
A heat pump tends to suit you if
- You are replacing an old or failing electric hot water system
- Your hot water bills are a noticeable part of your power costs
- You have, or are planning, rooftop solar to run it on
- You plan to stay long enough to see the running-cost savings build up
Worth thinking carefully if
- Your current system is new and working well
- Your budget cannot stretch to the higher upfront cost right now
- The only suitable location is tight on space or close to bedrooms
- You may move home before the savings catch up with the cost
The clearest way to judge it is a quote for your home, which shows the installed cost after the federal and Queensland support and lets you weigh it against what you currently spend on hot water.
Queensland heat pump FAQ
How much does a heat pump cost in Queensland?
Industry figures put the average installed cost of a heat pump hot water system in Queensland at broadly $4,000 to $4,500 as at early 2026, including the federal certificate value. The Queensland rebate can reduce this further. The price depends on tank size, the brand and the installation, so a quote based on your home gives the accurate figure.
What heat pump rebates are available in Queensland?
Queensland households can access federal and state support. The federal scheme gives small-scale technology certificates, applied as a discount by your installer. On top of that, Queensland offers a state efficiency rebate for replacing an old hot water system with an energy-efficient one such as a heat pump. Eligibility rules apply and program detail can change, so confirm the current position with your installer when you quote.
How much does a heat pump save?
A heat pump uses far less electricity than a conventional electric hot water system, so its running cost is a fraction of an old electric tank's. For a typical household that commonly works out to a saving of a few hundred dollars a year, every year, which is what builds the payback over time.
Do heat pumps work across Queensland?
Yes, and Queensland's warm climate suits them well. Heat pumps extract usable heat from the surrounding air, and warmer air makes that easier, so they tend to run efficiently across Queensland. Choosing a suitable model and installing it well still matters, which a good installer will advise on.
Can a heat pump run on solar power?
Yes, and it is a strong pairing. A heat pump uses a modest, steady amount of electricity, and solar generates most power during the day. Setting the heat pump to run in daylight hours, using a timer or smart control, means it heats your water largely on your own solar rather than grid power.
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