Heat pumps that keep working when the thermometer drops.

How air-source heat pumps perform, get sized, and stay efficient through a Canadian winter — written for homeowners who want the technical detail, not a sales pitch.

Air-source heat pump outdoor unit running in deep snow
An outdoor unit operating in snow. Cold-climate models are built to extract heat from outdoor air well below freezing.

How a heat pump heats a home in winter

Diagram showing the refrigeration cycle of an air-source heat pump
The refrigeration cycle moves heat from outdoor air into the home, even in sub-zero conditions.

A heat pump does not burn fuel to make heat. It moves heat that already exists in the outdoor air indoors, using a refrigerant cycle that reverses the way a refrigerator works. Because it transfers energy rather than generating it, a single unit of electricity can deliver several units of heat.

The efficiency of that transfer falls as the outdoor temperature drops, since there is less ambient heat to capture. Cold-climate models address this with variable-speed compressors, larger heat-exchange surfaces, and refrigerants chosen to keep working at low temperatures.

Two numbers describe the result: the Coefficient of Performance (COP), which compares heat delivered to electricity consumed at a given temperature, and the Heating Seasonal Performance Factor (HSPF), which averages performance across a heating season.


Practical guides for cold-weather operation

Outdoor heat pump mounted beside a house
Performance

What happens to capacity below freezing

How rated capacity, COP, and the balance point change as outdoor temperatures fall, and what the published low-temperature ratings actually mean.

Read article →
Air-source heat pump unit on display
Sizing

Sizing a unit for a Canadian winter

Why a heat-loss calculation matters more than floor area, and how the design temperature for a region shapes the equipment you choose.

Read article →
Ductless mini-split heat pump installation
Operation

Backup heat and the defrost cycle

How auxiliary heat sources, dual-fuel setups, and the defrost cycle keep a home comfortable during the coldest stretches.

Read article →

Why outdoor temperature changes everything

Capacity fades with cold

Heating output is highest in mild weather and lowest on the coldest day. Manufacturers publish capacity at multiple outdoor temperatures so the curve can be matched to local conditions.

Efficiency is a moving target

COP is not a single figure. A unit may exceed 3.0 near 8.3°C and fall closer to 2.0 in deep cold, which is why seasonal measures like HSPF are more useful for planning.

The balance point matters

The balance point is the temperature where heat-pump output equals the home's heat loss. Below it, supplementary heat covers the gap.

Send a question about cold-climate heating

Reading the ratings on a spec sheet can be confusing. If you have a question about a term used on this site, send a note and it will be reviewed.

Editorial contact

Email: editor@pinewindowhouse.org

PineWindowHouse is an independent informational reference. It is not affiliated with any equipment manufacturer and does not sell, install, or service heating equipment. Content is general in nature and should not replace advice from a licensed HVAC contractor.