Tennessee's mix of humid subtropical climate (Cfa) across most of the state and humid continental cold (Dfb) in the Great Smoky Mountains creates a strong cooling-dominant load with meaningful winter heating — the profile where ground-source heat pumps deliver dramatic year-round savings. The state has 50 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, TVA's EnergyRight rebate program plus the §48 commercial credit keep ground-source compelling.
- 50 verified contractors
- 34 cities covered
- ★ 4.8 avg rating (20,773 reviews)
- 28 WaterFurnace dealers
- 2 IGSHPA-certified
Top Tennessee cities for geothermal contractors
Coverage spans Nashville (the largest metro), Memphis (West Tennessee), Knoxville (East Tennessee), Chattanooga (Southeast), and the Tri-Cities area (Bristol-Kingsport-Johnson City). The Cumberland Plateau (Cookeville, Crossville) and Great Smoky Mountains regions have growing rural and exurban geothermal markets.
Featured Tennessee geothermal contractors
The contractors below are Tennessee's highest-rated on Geothermal Finder, ranked by review volume then overall rating.
Tennessee 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. Tennessee is unique as TVA's primary residential service territory — TVA's EnergyRight Solutions program is the largest geothermal incentive backbone in the state:
- TVA EnergyRight Solutions — partners with local power companies (LPCs) across Tennessee to offer rebates on qualifying ground-source heat pump installations. Rebate amounts vary by LPC and program tier; verify current rates with your local utility (NES Nashville, MLGW Memphis, KUB Knoxville, EPB Chattanooga, etc.) before signing.
- Local Power Companies — independent LPCs (153 of them across TVA territory) often layer additional rebates on top of EnergyRight. Ask your contractor which LPCs they regularly work with.
- Tennessee Energy Education Initiative — Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC) periodically funds residential energy efficiency programs.
- 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.
Tennessee climate and ground conditions
Tennessee climate ranges from humid subtropical (Cfa) in West Tennessee, the Central Basin, and the Cumberland Plateau lower elevations, transitioning to humid continental cold (Dfb) in the Great Smoky Mountains. Summer cooling load is dominant statewide; winter heating load is significant in higher elevations. Ground temperatures at typical loop depth stay around 58–62°F across most of Tennessee.
West Tennessee (Memphis) sits on Mississippi Embayment unconsolidated sediments — drilling is straightforward; horizontal loops viable on rural lots. The Central Basin (Nashville, Murfreesboro) has limestone bedrock with karst features in some areas — vertical drilling is common but requires careful grouting. The Cumberland Plateau (Cookeville, Crossville) sits on Appalachian Plateau sandstone with shallow dolomite — vertical bores work well at competitive cost. East Tennessee Valley (Knoxville, Chattanooga) has Valley & Ridge bedrock; deeper drilling premiums in some counties.
Tennessee permits, licensing, and inspections
Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC) regulates well drilling. Closed-loop geothermal drillers must hold a Tennessee well driller license. HVAC contractors require a Tennessee state contractor license issued by the Department of Commerce and Insurance. Local building permits cover the indoor heat pump unit and electrical service. Cookeville (per our existing Cookeville cluster) is a strong dolomite-bedrock geothermal market. For permit specifics see our geothermal permit lookup.
Frequently asked questions
How much does geothermal cost in Tennessee?
A typical 3-ton residential system in Tennessee runs $20,000 to $32,000 installed. Cumberland Plateau dolomite drilling is competitive; Central Basin karst can add cost premium. TVA EnergyRight + local power company rebates reduce out-of-pocket cost. Federal §25D no longer applies to 2026 residential installations.
What is TVA EnergyRight?
TVA EnergyRight Solutions is the Tennessee Valley Authority's residential energy efficiency program, administered through 153 local power companies (LPCs) across TVA's seven-state territory. The program offers rebates on qualifying ground-source heat pump installations. Rebate amounts and eligibility windows vary by LPC. Ask your contractor which LPC partnerships they have and verify current program tiers.
Is Tennessee a good state for geothermal?
Yes — Tennessee's humid subtropical climate creates strong summer cooling load (where ground-source's COP advantage over air-source is largest) and meaningful winter heating in higher elevations. The TVA EnergyRight rebate stack and the dolomite/sandstone bedrock across the Cumberland Plateau make installation cost competitive.
Vertical or horizontal loops in Tennessee?
Vertical bores dominate Nashville, Memphis, and Knoxville suburbs. Horizontal loops are viable on rural West and Middle Tennessee properties with adequate land area (1,500–3,000 sq ft per ton). Cumberland Plateau dolomite favors vertical bores at competitive cost. Pond loops work where shoreline access exists. An IGSHPA-trained designer matches loop type to lot, soil, and load.
Do I need a permit for geothermal in Tennessee?
Yes. Closed-loop installations require a TDEC-licensed well driller, a Tennessee state-licensed contractor (Department of Commerce and Insurance), and a local building permit covering the indoor unit and electrical service. Reputable Tennessee contractors handle the full permit pull.