North Carolina's humid subtropical climate creates significant summer cooling load — exactly where ground-source heat pumps deliver their largest annualized cost advantage over conventional air-source equipment. The state has 79 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, Duke Energy utility rebates plus the §48 commercial credit keep ground-source competitive across the Piedmont, Coastal Plain, and Mountain regions.
- 79 verified contractors
- 61 cities covered
- ★ 4.9 avg rating (22,816 reviews)
- 57 WaterFurnace dealers
- 3 IGSHPA-certified
Top North Carolina cities for geothermal contractors
Coverage centers on the Charlotte metro (Charlotte, Concord, Gastonia, Huntersville), the Research Triangle (Raleigh, Durham, Cary, Chapel Hill), the Triad (Greensboro, Winston-Salem, High Point), Asheville and the Mountain region, and Wilmington on the coast. North Carolina's diverse geography and rapid suburban growth make it one of the fastest-growing geothermal markets in the southeast.
Featured North Carolina geothermal contractors
The contractors below are North Carolina's highest-rated on Geothermal Finder, ranked by review volume then overall rating.
North Carolina 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. North Carolina does not currently offer a state income tax credit specifically for residential geothermal, so utility rebate programs and the §48 commercial pathway carry the residential incentive load:
- Duke Energy Carolinas — central and western North Carolina service territory. Energy efficiency rebate programs have historically covered ground-source heat pumps in qualifying tiers.
- Duke Energy Progress — eastern North Carolina service territory (formerly Progress Energy). Similar energy efficiency rebate structure to Duke Energy Carolinas.
- Dominion Energy North Carolina — northeastern NC counties; energy efficiency programs may include geothermal in qualifying tiers.
- North Carolina Electric Cooperatives (Touchstone Energy member coops) — many rural NC coops offer rebates and on-bill financing for high-efficiency heating systems including ground-source.
- NC Sustainable Energy Association financing — NCSEA-affiliated programs may offer low-interest energy improvement loans through participating credit unions and banks.
- Federally-funded HOMES (§50121) and HEEHRA (§50122) rebates — administered through the NC Department of Environmental Quality. Eligibility is income-tiered. Verify program-year availability.
- Federal §48 commercial credit remains active through 2034 with phase-down; widely used in third-party-owned residential leases.
For state-by-state matrix see geothermal rebates by state, and use our geothermal tax credit calculator.
North Carolina climate and ground conditions
North Carolina spans humid subtropical (Cfa) across most of the state — Coastal Plain, Piedmont, and lower Mountain counties — transitioning to humid continental cold (Dfb) only in the highest Blue Ridge elevations (Boone, Banner Elk, parts of Asheville). Summer cooling load is dominant; winter heating load is moderate. This profile gives ground-source a strong cooling-side payback even when winter heating savings alone wouldn't justify the upfront cost. Ground temperatures at typical loop depth stay around 58–62°F.
The Piedmont (Charlotte, Triangle, Triad) sits on schist, gneiss, and granite bedrock — drilling is reliable but vertical bores hit rock relatively shallowly. Suburban density across the Piedmont requires vertical loops; horizontal trenches viable on rural lots. The Coastal Plain (Wilmington, New Bern, Greenville) has unconsolidated sand and clay over deeper aquifers — both vertical and horizontal loops work, with horizontal trenches cost-effective on rural lots. The Mountain region (Asheville, Boone, Brevard) has variable bedrock with deeper drilling premiums in some counties; pond/lake loops work where shoreline access exists.
North Carolina permits, licensing, and inspections
- Well driller certification — North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) Division of Water Resources regulates well drilling. Closed-loop geothermal drillers must hold a current NC certified well contractor license.
- HVAC contractor license — North Carolina requires a state HVAC contractor license issued by the State Board of Examiners of Plumbing, Heating, and Fire Sprinkler Contractors. Geothermal installation falls under the H-1, H-2, or H-3 license depending on project scope.
- Local building permit — county or city building departments require permits for the indoor heat pump unit, ductwork, and electrical service. Lead times in Mecklenburg, Wake, and Buncombe counties typically 2–4 weeks; rural counties faster.
For permit specifics see our geothermal permit lookup. Confirm current requirements with NC DEQ and your local building department.
Frequently asked questions
How much does geothermal cost in North Carolina?
A typical 3-ton residential system in North Carolina runs $20,000 to $33,000 installed depending on loop type and location. Mountain region installations may run higher due to drilling complexity. Utility rebates (Duke Energy Carolinas, Duke Energy Progress, rural cooperatives) reduce out-of-pocket cost. Federal §25D no longer applies to 2026 residential installations.
Is North Carolina a good state for geothermal?
Yes — NC's humid subtropical climate creates dominant summer cooling load, and ground-source heat pumps deliver dramatic cooling efficiency gains over conventional air-source AC. Stable underground temperatures of 58–62°F at loop depth mean NC geothermal systems hold full efficiency through July-August heat waves that derate air-source equipment by 5–15%.
Are there North Carolina tax credits for geothermal?
North Carolina does not currently offer a state income tax credit specifically for residential geothermal. Federal §25D was terminated December 31, 2025 (P.L. 119-21). Utility rebates (Duke Energy Carolinas, Duke Energy Progress, rural cooperatives) and federally-funded HOMES/HEEHRA rebates (income-tiered, administered through NC DEQ) remain the primary residential incentive paths.
Do I need a permit for geothermal in North Carolina?
Yes. Closed-loop installations require an NC DEQ-certified well contractor, a state-licensed HVAC contractor (H-1/H-2/H-3 issued by the State Board of Examiners of Plumbing, Heating, and Fire Sprinkler Contractors), and a local building permit covering the indoor unit and electrical service. Reputable NC contractors handle the full permit pull. Lead times: 2–4 weeks in dense counties; 1–2 weeks rural.
How long does a NC geothermal installation take?
Typical residential vertical-bore retrofit in North Carolina: 5–8 working days from drilling start to commissioning. Coastal Plain horizontal-loop installations: 3–6 days. Permit lead times add 1–4 weeks depending on jurisdiction. Year-round installation is common; mild NC winters don't disrupt drilling schedules.
Vertical or horizontal loops in North Carolina?
Vertical bores dominate Charlotte, Triangle, and Triad suburbs. Horizontal loops are cost-competitive on Coastal Plain and rural Piedmont properties with adequate land area (1,500–3,000 sq ft per ton). Pond/lake loops work where shoreline access exists, particularly in the Mountain region. An IGSHPA-trained designer matches loop type to lot, soil thermal conductivity, and load.