Indiana is the heart of the U.S. geothermal manufacturing industry — Fort Wayne is home to WaterFurnace International, one of the country's largest residential geothermal heat pump manufacturers. The state has 85 verified geothermal contractors and a deep installer base. Even after the federal §25D residential credit was terminated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21) on December 31, 2025, Indiana's utility rebate programs and the §48 commercial credit keep ground-source competitive.
- 85 verified contractors
- 61 cities covered
- ★ 4.2 avg rating (41,136 reviews)
- 21 WaterFurnace dealers
- 7 IGSHPA-certified
Top Indiana cities for geothermal contractors
Coverage centers on Indianapolis (the largest metro), Fort Wayne (WaterFurnace headquarters and a deep regional contractor pool), South Bend / Mishawaka in the north, Evansville in the southwest, and Bloomington in central Indiana. The state's flat-to-rolling glacial-drift terrain makes both vertical and horizontal loops viable across most of Indiana.
Featured Indiana geothermal contractors
The contractors below are Indiana's highest-rated on Geothermal Finder, ranked by review volume then overall rating.
Indiana geothermal incentives in 2026
The federal §25D Residential Clean Energy Credit was terminated for new residential expenditures completed after December 31, 2025 by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21). 2025 installations carry forward via IRS Form 5695. Indiana's residential incentive structure also changed: the previous Indiana property tax deduction for geothermal systems was repealed by Senate Enrolled Act 1 (2025), retroactive to January 1, 2025.
- AES Indiana (formerly IPL) energy efficiency rebates — Indianapolis-area utility incentives that have historically covered high-efficiency electric heating systems including ground-source heat pumps. Verify current program tiers directly with AES Indiana.
- CenterPoint Energy Indiana (formerly Vectren) — southwest Indiana service territory; energy efficiency programs include ground-source heat pump rebates in qualifying tiers.
- Indiana Michigan Power (I&M) — northeast Indiana (Fort Wayne service area) and northern Indiana — energy efficiency rebates for qualifying high-efficiency HVAC.
- Duke Energy Indiana — central Indiana service territory; rebate tiers vary annually.
- Federal §48 commercial credit remains active through 2034 with phase-down; widely used in third-party-owned residential leases.
- Note: Indiana property tax deduction for geothermal — REPEALED. Previously available via IC 6-1.1-12-26.1 / -34, the homestead property tax deduction for geothermal heating equipment was repealed by Senate Enrolled Act 1 (2025) effective for 2025 and forward. Do not rely on outdated guides citing this deduction.
For state-by-state matrix see geothermal rebates by state, and use our geothermal tax credit calculator.
Indiana climate and ground conditions
Indiana is humid continental (Köppen Dfa) statewide with cold winters, warm-humid summers, and significant heating-cooling balance. Ground temperatures at typical loop depth stay around 53–55°F. Indiana sits on extensive glacial drift — sandy loam over till in northern and central counties — making drilling predictable and cost-competitive across most of the state.
Northern Indiana (South Bend, Elkhart, Kosciusko County) has glacial moraine and outwash deposits with shallow water tables — horizontal loops work well where lot size allows, and pond loops are common given the state's many natural lakes. Central Indiana (Indianapolis, Lafayette, Bloomington) has glacial till over limestone bedrock; vertical bores work well. Southern Indiana (Evansville, the Hoosier Hills, Brown County) has thinner soil over Mississippian limestone; drilling encounters bedrock sooner. La Porte County (per our existing La Porte cluster) supports both open- and closed-loop systems.
Indiana permits, licensing, and inspections
- Well driller license — REQUIRED per Indiana Code 25-39 and 312 IAC 13-8-1. Closed-loop geothermal drillers must hold a current Indiana Department of Natural Resources Division of Water license. Verify before signing.
- HVAC contractor — Indiana does not require a statewide HVAC license; contractor licensing is handled at the county or municipal level. Many cities (Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, Evansville) require a local mechanical contractor license.
- Local building permit — municipal building departments require permits for the heat pump unit, ductwork modifications, and electrical service. Lead times typically 1–3 weeks.
For permit specifics see our geothermal permit lookup. Confirm current requirements with IN DNR Division of Water and your local building department.
Frequently asked questions
How much does geothermal cost in Indiana?
A typical 3-ton residential system in Indiana runs $19,000 to $30,000 installed — Indiana is on the lower end of national pricing because drilling conditions are favorable across most counties and the state has a deep contractor base. Utility rebates (AES Indiana, CenterPoint, I&M, Duke) reduce out-of-pocket cost. Federal §25D no longer applies to 2026 residential installations.
Is Indiana's property tax deduction for geothermal still available?
No. The Indiana property tax deduction for geothermal heating equipment (previously under IC 6-1.1-12-26.1 / -34) was repealed by Senate Enrolled Act 1 (2025), effective for 2025 forward. Older online guides may still reference this deduction — they're outdated. Utility rebates remain the primary residential incentive path in Indiana.
Are Indiana drillers licensed?
Yes — required by Indiana Code 25-39 and Indiana Administrative Code 312 IAC 13-8-1. Closed-loop geothermal drillers must hold a current license issued by the IN DNR Division of Water. Verify your driller's license is active before signing a contract; the IN DNR maintains a public list of currently licensed drillers.
Why is Fort Wayne a geothermal hub?
WaterFurnace International — one of the largest residential geothermal heat pump manufacturers in North America — is headquartered in Fort Wayne. The local installer ecosystem developed around WaterFurnace has 30+ years of experience, the highest WaterFurnace dealer concentration in the country, and deep technical training resources. Fort Wayne is one of the strongest single-city geothermal markets in the U.S.
Do I need a permit for geothermal in Indiana?
Yes. Closed-loop installations require a licensed IN DNR well driller, a local mechanical contractor (county/municipal license — varies), and a local building permit covering the indoor unit and electrical service. Reputable Indiana contractors handle the full permit pull. Lead times: 1–3 weeks.
Vertical or horizontal loops in Indiana?
Both work across most of Indiana. Vertical bores dominate dense Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, South Bend suburbs. Horizontal loops are cost-competitive on rural and exurban lots in northern and central Indiana where 1,500–3,000 sq ft of land per ton is available. Pond loops are common in lake counties. An IGSHPA-trained designer matches loop type to lot, soil thermal conductivity, and load.