Maryland combines a strong residential geothermal contractor base with the most generous state-level rebate program east of New York. The Maryland Energy Administration (MEA) Residential Clean Energy Rebate Program offers a flat $3,000 grant for qualifying ground-source heat pump installations — and that program continues to operate after the federal §25D credit was terminated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21) on December 31, 2025.
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Top Maryland cities for geothermal contractors
Coverage spans the Baltimore metro (Baltimore, Cockeysville, Towson), the Washington DC suburbs (Rockville, Bethesda, Silver Spring, Gaithersburg), Howard and Anne Arundel counties, and the Eastern Shore. Maryland's mix of dense suburbs and rural counties means both vertical and horizontal loops have viable applications.
Featured Maryland geothermal contractors
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Maryland 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. Maryland's MEA program is now the cornerstone of residential geothermal economics in the state.
- Maryland Energy Administration (MEA) Residential Clean Energy Rebate — $3,000 grant for qualifying residential geothermal heat pump installations. Funded annually via the Strategic Energy Investment Fund (SEIF). Application is processed through MEA; verify program-year cap and eligibility windows on energy.maryland.gov.
- BGE (Baltimore Gas and Electric) — EmPOWER Maryland heat pump rebates have historically covered ground-source equipment. Verify current program tiers directly with BGE.
- Pepco (DC suburbs) — energy efficiency rebates for high-efficiency electric HVAC; ground-source qualifies under most program tiers.
- Potomac Edison and Delmarva Power — utility rebate programs in their respective Maryland service territories.
- Maryland Property Tax Credit (Anne Arundel, Baltimore County, Frederick, Howard, Montgomery, Prince George's) — selected counties offer property tax credits for high-efficiency heating systems including geothermal. Verify with your county assessor.
- C-PACE financing — Maryland authorizes Property Assessed Clean Energy in participating counties for commercial geothermal; pairs with the active §48 Investment Tax Credit.
For the live matrix see geothermal rebates by state, and use our geothermal tax credit calculator.
Maryland climate and ground conditions
Maryland straddles humid subtropical (Cfa) in the south and humid continental (Dfa) in the north and west. Summer cooling load is significant in DC suburbs and the Eastern Shore — geothermal pays back partly through reduced cooling cost as well as winter heating. Ground temperatures at typical loop depth stay around 55–58°F.
The Piedmont (central Maryland — Baltimore, Frederick, Howard) sits on schist and gneiss bedrock that drills reliably for vertical bores. Western Maryland (Garrett, Allegany counties) has Allegheny Plateau bedrock with similar drilling characteristics to western Pennsylvania. The Coastal Plain (Eastern Shore — Anne Arundel, Talbot, Worcester counties) has unconsolidated sand and clay over deeper aquifers — horizontal loops work where lot size allows; vertical bores are also straightforward. Pond loops are viable on properties with adequate water access.
Maryland permits, licensing, and inspections
- Well driller license — Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) regulates well drilling. Closed-loop geothermal drillers must hold a current MDE Master Well Driller or Apprentice license. Verify before signing.
- HVAC license — Maryland requires HVAC contractors to hold a state Master HVACR License issued by the Maryland Department of Labor. Geothermal installers operate under this license.
- Local building permit — county or city building departments require permits for the indoor unit and electrical service. Lead times in Montgomery and Howard counties run 2–4 weeks; Baltimore County is typically faster.
For permit specifics see our geothermal permit lookup. Confirm current requirements with MDE, the Maryland Department of Labor, and your local building department.
Frequently asked questions
How much does geothermal cost in Maryland?
A typical 3-ton residential system in Maryland runs $22,000 to $38,000 installed depending on loop type and location. After the MEA $3,000 rebate plus utility incentives (BGE, Pepco, Potomac Edison) and any applicable county property tax credit, net out-of-pocket commonly drops to $15,000–$28,000. The federal §25D credit no longer applies to 2026 residential systems.
What is the Maryland MEA geothermal rebate?
Maryland Energy Administration's Residential Clean Energy Rebate Program awards a $3,000 grant to qualifying residential geothermal heat pump installations. The rebate is per-system, processed through MEA, and funded annually via the Strategic Energy Investment Fund. Verify program-year eligibility and application windows directly on energy.maryland.gov before signing a contract.
Are there county tax credits for geothermal in Maryland?
Yes — Anne Arundel, Baltimore County, Frederick, Howard, Montgomery, and Prince George's counties have all historically offered property tax credits for high-efficiency heating systems including ground-source heat pumps. Credit amounts and eligibility windows vary by county and program year. Verify with your county assessor's office before relying on a specific dollar figure.
Do I need a permit for geothermal in Maryland?
Yes. Closed-loop installations require an MDE-licensed well driller, a Maryland Master HVACR Licensed contractor, and a county/municipal building permit covering the indoor unit and electrical service. Cockeysville, Towson, Rockville, and other Baltimore-DC suburb installations all follow the same three-permit structure. Reputable contractors handle the full permit pull.
How long does a Maryland geothermal installation take?
Typical residential vertical-bore retrofit in Maryland: 5–8 working days from drilling start to commissioning. Horizontal loops on Eastern Shore rural lots: 3–6 days. Permit lead times add 2–4 weeks in Montgomery/Howard counties; 1–2 weeks in less-busy jurisdictions. Year-round installation is common.
Vertical or horizontal loops in Maryland?
Vertical bores dominate dense Baltimore-DC suburbs (Rockville, Bethesda, Cockeysville). Horizontal loops are viable on Eastern Shore and Western Maryland rural properties with adequate land area. Pond/lake loops work where shoreline access is available. An IGSHPA-trained designer matches loop type to lot size, soil thermal conductivity, and load.