Minnesota's cold continental climate (Köppen Dfa southern, Dfb northern) creates one of the strongest residential geothermal markets in the country — long winters with -20°F+ stretches make ground-source's stable-loop advantage over air-source dramatic. The state has 47 verified geothermal contractors. Even after the federal §25D residential credit was terminated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21) on December 31, 2025, Xcel Energy and Minnesota Power rebates plus the §48 commercial credit keep ground-source highly competitive against natural gas heating in MN's heating-dominated load profile.
- 47 verified contractors
- 39 cities covered
- ★ 4.8 avg rating (9,058 reviews)
- 12 WaterFurnace dealers
- 6 IGSHPA-certified
Top Minnesota cities for geothermal contractors
Coverage centers on the Twin Cities metro (Minneapolis, St. Paul, Bloomington, Plymouth, Eden Prairie), Rochester (Mayo Clinic region), Duluth and northern Minnesota, St. Cloud, and the Iron Range counties. Minnesota's lake-rich geography also favors pond loops where shoreline access exists.
Featured Minnesota geothermal contractors
The contractors below are Minnesota's highest-rated on Geothermal Finder, ranked by review volume then overall rating.
Minnesota 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. Minnesota's heating-dominated economics keep ground-source compelling on utility rebates alone:
- Xcel Energy — Minnesota's largest electric utility; energy efficiency rebates for high-efficiency electric heating systems including ground-source heat pumps. Twin Cities metro and most of central/southern Minnesota.
- Minnesota Power — northeastern Minnesota service territory (Duluth, Iron Range); energy efficiency rebate program.
- Otter Tail Power — west-central and northwestern Minnesota; rebate program for residential heat pumps.
- Minnesota electric cooperatives — Touchstone Energy member coops across rural Minnesota may offer rebates and on-bill financing for high-efficiency heat pumps.
- Minnesota Department of Commerce energy programs — periodic state-level grant or rebate programs for residential energy efficiency improvements.
- Federally-funded HOMES (§50121) and HEEHRA (§50122) rebates — administered through the Minnesota Department of Commerce. Income-tiered eligibility.
- Federal §48 commercial credit remains active through 2034 with phase-down.
For state-by-state matrix see geothermal rebates by state, and use our geothermal tax credit calculator.
Minnesota climate and ground conditions
Minnesota is humid continental — Dfa in the south (Twin Cities, Rochester), Dfb in the north (Duluth, International Falls, Iron Range). Heating load dominates with -20°F+ stretches common in northern counties; cooling load is modest. This is the strongest possible profile for ground-source efficiency. Ground temperatures at typical loop depth stay around 45–50°F across most of the state.
Minnesota sits on extensive glacial drift, especially in the southern and central regions — sandy loam over till — making drilling predictable. Northern Minnesota (Iron Range, Boundary Waters) has shallow Precambrian shield bedrock with deeper drilling premiums in some counties; pond loops are common given Minnesota's "10,000 lakes" abundance. Frost line in northern Minnesota requires horizontal trenches buried 6–7 feet deep — Minnesota-experienced drillers know this; ask before signing.
Minnesota permits, licensing, and inspections
Minnesota requires closed-loop geothermal installations to be performed under a Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry (DLI) plumbing license — Minnesota classifies closed-loop piping work as plumbing, similar to Illinois. Well drillers operate under Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) Well Management Section. HVAC contractors require state HVAC license. Local building permits cover the indoor unit and electrical service. Verify both plumbing and HVAC licensing on your contract. For permit specifics see our geothermal permit lookup.
Frequently asked questions
How much does geothermal cost in Minnesota?
A typical 3-ton residential system in Minnesota runs $22,000 to $35,000 installed. Northern Minnesota Iron Range bedrock can add cost premium; southern Minnesota glacial drift drills favorably. Xcel Energy + Minnesota Power + cooperative rebates plus federally-funded HOMES/HEEHRA (income-tiered) reduce out-of-pocket cost. Federal §25D no longer applies to 2026 residential installations.
Why does Minnesota require plumbing licenses for closed-loop geothermal?
Minnesota state law classifies closed-loop geothermal piping installation as plumbing work — the loop circulates fluid through buried pipes, which falls under Minnesota Statutes Chapter 326B. This is similar to Illinois (and distinct from many other states that classify geothermal as HVAC). The licensed plumber typically partners with an HVAC contractor for the indoor unit and refrigerant work. Verify both license types are present on your contract.
Is Minnesota a good state for geothermal?
Yes — Minnesota's extreme cold winter profile (-20°F+ in northern counties) is exactly where ground-source delivers the largest annualized COP advantage. Air-source heat pumps derate 20–30% at -10°F while ground-source maintains full COP. Long heating season + utility rebates + abundant pond-loop water access make MN one of the strongest residential geothermal markets in the country.
Vertical, horizontal, or pond loops in Minnesota?
Pond loops are highly cost-effective on Minnesota's many lake properties. Horizontal loops work on rural lots with adequate land area — but trenches must be 6–7 feet deep in northern MN (deeper than national 4-foot norm) to clear frost line. Vertical bores dominate Twin Cities suburbs. Iron Range Precambrian shield bedrock requires experienced drillers. An IGSHPA-trained designer matches loop type to lot, soil, water, and load.
Do I need a permit for geothermal in Minnesota?
Yes. Closed-loop installations require a Minnesota DLI plumbing license for the loop work, an MDH-registered well driller, a state HVAC license for the indoor unit, and a local building permit covering electrical service. Reputable Minnesota contractors handle the full permit pull. Verify all license types are present on your contract.