Wisconsin's cold continental climate (Köppen Dfa southern, Dfb northern) creates significant winter heating load — air-source heat pumps derate 20–30% in -10°F+ Wisconsin winters while ground-source maintains full COP. The state has 45 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, Wisconsin's Focus on Energy program plus utility rebates and the §48 commercial credit keep ground-source highly competitive against natural gas heating.
- 45 verified contractors
- 38 cities covered
- ★ 4.9 avg rating (16,722 reviews)
- 22 WaterFurnace dealers
- 7 IGSHPA-certified
Top Wisconsin cities for geothermal contractors
Coverage spans the Milwaukee metro (Milwaukee, Waukesha, Racine, Kenosha), the Madison metro and southwest Wisconsin, the Fox Valley (Green Bay, Appleton, Oshkosh), the Chippewa Valley (Eau Claire, Chippewa Falls), and the Northwoods. Wisconsin's lake-rich freshwater geography also favors pond loops in many counties.
Featured Wisconsin geothermal contractors
The contractors below are Wisconsin's highest-rated on Geothermal Finder, ranked by review volume then overall rating.
Wisconsin 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. Wisconsin's incentive structure is anchored by Focus on Energy, the statewide energy efficiency program:
- Focus on Energy — statewide program funded by Wisconsin's investor-owned utilities. Per-ton rebates for ground-source heat pump installations meeting AHRI efficiency thresholds. Verify current program tiers at focusonenergy.com.
- We Energies — southeast Wisconsin (Milwaukee metro); energy efficiency rebates layered on top of Focus on Energy.
- Wisconsin Public Service (WPS) — northeast and central Wisconsin; energy efficiency program coordinates with Focus on Energy.
- Madison Gas & Electric (MGE) — Dane County (Madison metro); energy efficiency rebates including geothermal.
- Wisconsin rural electric cooperatives — Touchstone Energy member coops across rural Wisconsin may offer rebates and on-bill financing.
- 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.
Wisconsin climate and ground conditions
Wisconsin is humid continental statewide — Dfa in the south (Milwaukee, Madison) and Dfb in the north (Wausau, Eau Claire, Superior). Long, cold winters with -20°F+ extremes in the Northwoods make ground-source's stable-loop advantage dramatic. Heating load dominates; cooling load is moderate. Ground temperatures at typical loop depth stay around 48–52°F.
Wisconsin sits on extensive glacial drift across the southern two-thirds — sandy loam, silt loam, and till — making drilling predictable. The Driftless Area in southwest Wisconsin has thinner soil over Cambrian sandstone with karst features in some counties; experienced drillers grout carefully. Northern Wisconsin (Northwoods) has shield bedrock with deeper drilling premiums in some counties; pond loops are particularly common given freshwater abundance. Lake-effect frost lines in eastern Wisconsin (Door County, Lake Michigan shoreline) may require horizontal trenches buried 5–6 feet rather than the 4-foot national norm.
Wisconsin permits, licensing, and inspections
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) regulates well drilling under NR 812 and NR 113. Closed-loop geothermal drillers must hold a current Wisconsin well drilling and pump installation license. HVAC contractors require a Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services (DSPS) HVAC contractor license. Local building permits cover the indoor unit and electrical service. For permit specifics see our geothermal permit lookup.
Frequently asked questions
How much does geothermal cost in Wisconsin?
A typical 3-ton residential system in Wisconsin runs $20,000 to $32,000 installed. Northwoods bedrock and Driftless Area karst can add cost premium. Focus on Energy rebates plus utility incentives (We Energies, WPS, MGE, rural cooperatives) reduce out-of-pocket cost. Federal §25D no longer applies to 2026 residential installations.
What is Focus on Energy?
Focus on Energy is Wisconsin's statewide energy efficiency program, funded by the state's investor-owned utilities and administered by an independent program administrator. It offers per-ton rebates for ground-source heat pump installations meeting AHRI efficiency thresholds. Rebate amounts and eligibility windows vary by program year; verify current tiers at focusonenergy.com before signing.
Is Wisconsin a good state for geothermal?
Yes — Wisconsin's heating-dominated load profile (long, cold winters with -20°F+ in northern counties) is exactly where ground-source delivers the largest annualized COP advantage over air-source heat pumps. The state's lake-rich freshwater geography also favors cost-effective pond loops on properties with adequate water access.
Vertical, horizontal, or pond loops in Wisconsin?
Horizontal loops are cost-competitive on rural lots with adequate land area (1,500–3,000 sq ft per ton) — note Wisconsin-experienced drillers bury horizontal loops 5–6 feet deep in eastern WI lake-effect frost zones. Vertical bores dominate dense Milwaukee and Madison suburbs. Pond loops work on properties with adequate water access. An IGSHPA-trained designer matches loop type to lot, soil, and load.
Do I need a permit for geothermal in Wisconsin?
Yes. Closed-loop installations require a WDNR-licensed well drilling and pump installation contractor, a Wisconsin DSPS HVAC contractor license, and a local building permit covering the indoor unit and electrical service. Reputable Wisconsin contractors handle the full permit pull.