How Long Does a Furnace Last: 2026 Data

By Dave Musial: CEO of Four Seasons Heating, Air Conditioning, Plumbing, Electric.
- July 1, 2026

Home » Blog » How Long Does a Furnace Last: 2026 Data

From January through April 2026, our research team aggregated HVAC industry data from ASHRAE’s equipment service life database, which tracks nearly 39,000 field data points. The U.S. Department of Energy’s technical documentation, supported by 2026 installation cost reports from more than 10,000 verified customer projects, rounded out the dataset. Per DOE and AHRI modeling, the median service life for a residential gas furnace is 18 years. The DOE also confirms furnaces 15 years or older can carry efficiency ratings as low as 56%, compared to 90% or higher in modern high-efficiency systems. The data below gives homeowners a practical reference for deciding when to repair or replace their system.

What You Will Learn

  • Average Furnace Lifespan by Type: Benchmark service life data for gas, electric, oil, boiler, and heat pump systems based on ASHRAE, DOE, and NAHB research
  • How Age Affects Furnace Efficiency: AFUE performance decline across key age milestones from installation through year 20 and beyond
  • Top Replacement Indicators by Category: The most critical warning signs that signal a furnace needs replacement, organized by severity
  • Furnace Replacement Cost by Type: Verified 2026 installed cost ranges broken down by fuel type and system category

Average Furnace Lifespan by Type

Multiple research bodies have established median service life benchmarks for residential heating systems. ASHRAE’s service life database aggregates field data from contractors and facility managers across North America, while NAHB’s most recent life expectancy study was published in 2020. DOE rulemaking documents use modeled lifetimes as key inputs for life-cycle cost analyses. Our analysis below reflects the consensus range from these datasets.

Heating System TypeTypical Lifespan RangeMedian Service Life (ASHRAE)DOE/AHRI Modeled Life
Gas Furnace15 – 20 years18 years18 years
Electric Furnace20 – 30 years20 years20 years
Oil Furnace15 – 25 years20 yearsN/A
Boiler (Gas/Oil)20 – 25 years24 years25 years
Air Source Heat Pump10 – 15 years14 years14 years

Key Insights:

  • Gas furnaces represent the most widely installed residential heating system in the U.S., and their 18-year median service life makes the 15-year mark a meaningful evaluation point for homeowners weighing repair against replacement.
  • Heat pumps have the shortest service life among residential heating equipment, at 10 to 15 years, a gap worth factoring into long-term cost comparisons with gas or electric furnace systems.

How Age Affects Furnace Efficiency

Furnace age directly affects operating efficiency and monthly heating costs. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, furnaces 15 years or older can carry AFUE ratings as low as 56%, while today’s high-efficiency models reach 90% to 98.7% AFUE. Industry analysis from AC Direct indicates furnaces lose 1 to 2% of operating efficiency per year after the first decade of use. The table below reflects estimated efficiency performance across key age milestones based on these data sources.

Furnace AgeEstimated AFUE RangeEfficiency StatusRecommended Action
0 – 5 years80% – 98.7%Peak performanceRoutine annual maintenance
6 – 10 years78% – 96%Minor decline beginsMonitor energy bills
11 – 15 years70% – 88%Moderate efficiency lossBegin repair-vs-replace evaluation
16 – 20 years60% – 80%Notable energy wasteReplacement often cost-effective
20+ yearsAs low as 56%Significant efficiency lossReplacement strongly advised

Key Insights:

  • A furnace operating at 56% AFUE wastes nearly half of every energy dollar spent on heat. Upgrading to a 96% AFUE model can cut fuel consumption by 20% to 30%, translating to measurable annual savings on heating bills.
  • Older gas-burning equipment from the 1970s through 1990s typically carries a rated efficiency of 65%. Modern units with 80% to 98% AFUE ratings make replacement financially sound well before a system fails completely.

Top Replacement Indicators by Category

Recognizing when to replace a furnace helps homeowners avoid unplanned breakdowns and escalating repair costs. The indicators below reflect field-reported data from HVAC service organizations and DOE guidance on aging equipment, cross-referenced with HomeAdvisor’s national repair analysis and ranked by severity.

Replacement IndicatorSeverity LevelWhat It Signals
Visible cracks or rust on the heat exchangerCriticalCarbon monoxide leak risk; immediate inspection required
Yellow or flickering burner flameHighCombustion issue; possible CO hazard
System age exceeds 15 yearsHighAt or approaching median service life
Rising heating bills without increased usageHighAccelerating efficiency decline
Repairs needed more than once in 12 monthsHighCumulative costs may exceed replacement value
Uneven heating across roomsModerateAirflow or heat distribution failure
Unusual noises (banging, rattling, squealing)ModerateMechanical wear on internal components

Key Insights:

  • The 50% rule offers a practical financial guide: when a single repair costs more than 50% of a new system’s price, replacement typically delivers better long-term value. A $2,500 repair on a 16-year-old furnace puts the homeowner halfway toward a new system with current warranties and higher efficiency.
  • The CDC reports more than 100,000 emergency room visits in the U.S. each year due to carbon monoxide poisoning. A cracked heat exchanger creates a direct pathway for CO to enter living spaces, making it the most urgent indicator on this list.

Furnace Replacement Cost by Type

Replacement costs vary by fuel type and efficiency rating, with home size and local labor rates influencing the final amount. HomeAdvisor’s cost data, drawn from over 10,000 verified customer projects and updated in 2025, puts the national average installed cost at $4,813, with most projects landing between $2,823 and $6,896. The table below reflects the current 2026 ranges by system type.

Furnace / System TypeInstalled Cost Range (2026)National Average Installed
Electric Furnace$2,000 – $7,000~$4,500
Gas Furnace$3,800 – $10,000~$6,900
Oil Furnace$6,750 – $10,000~$8,375
Mini-Split System$5,000 – $15,000~$10,000
Geothermal System$10,000 – $40,000+~$25,000+

Key Insights:

  • Gas furnaces hold the broadest cost range, from $3,800 to $10,000 installed. BTU capacity and AFUE rating drive the spread, with ductwork modifications pushing costs toward the higher end. High-efficiency models cost more upfront but typically recoup the difference through reduced monthly energy costs within several years.
  • Annual professional maintenance, which runs $100 to $300 per visit according to HomeAdvisor, extends furnace service life and preserves AFUE ratings. Consistent upkeep delays the replacement timeline and protects the investment in both the existing system and any future installation.

Requesting a Copy of This Report

If you would like to request a PDF copy of this report or learn more about furnace replacement services in the Chicagoland area, reach out here to connect with a certified technician or request a free in-home estimate.

Sources

  1. EGIA Contractor University. “Average Service Life of Residential HVAC Equipment.” 
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy. “Furnaces and Boilers.” 
  3. HomeAdvisor / Angi. “How Much Does a Furnace Replacement Cost?” 
  4. National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). “Study of Life Expectancy of Home Components.” 
  5. Griffith Energy Services. “How Long Do Gas Furnaces Last?” 

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