When you're buying a home in Minnesota, the furnace and HVAC system are among the most important — and expensive — things to evaluate. A 20-year-old furnace heading into its last winter isn't visible on a showing, but it could mean a $3,000–$5,000 replacement expense in year one. Here's what to look for and ask about before you close.
During the Showing: What to Check
- Look at the furnace: Is it rusted, discolored, or showing soot? Check the age on the data plate (manufacture date is on the sticker inside the door or on the cabinet side).
- Look at the AC condenser: Bent or damaged fins, rust on the cabinet, refrigerant lines that look corroded or are missing insulation
- Check the vents: Are there registers in every room? Any rooms with no HVAC at all?
- Notice the filter slot: A brand new filter before a showing can mask ongoing neglect — but it's a good sign if there's a quality filter installed
How to Read the Equipment Age
Every furnace and AC unit has a manufacture date encoded in the serial number. Goodman's format: the first two digits of the serial number are the year, the next two are the week (e.g., 1823XXXXX = manufactured in week 23 of 2018). Other brands vary. A home inspector or your real estate agent can help decode it.
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| Equipment Age | What It Means | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 0–5 years | New or nearly new — no near-term concerns | Note warranty status; register if not done |
| 6–10 years | Mid-life — reliable, good remaining life | Standard inspection; budget minor repairs |
| 11–15 years | Mature — may need repairs, watch closely | Inspect carefully; factor potential replacement into offer |
| 16–20 years | Near end of life — replacement likely within 1–5 years | Budget $3,000–$6,000 for replacement; negotiate in offer |
| 20+ years | Beyond typical lifespan — replacement imminent | Request replacement as condition of sale, or price reduction |
What a Home Inspection Covers (and Doesn't)
Your home inspector will typically: turn on the furnace and AC, observe operation, note visible condition, and flag obvious defects. What they won't do: full combustion analysis, heat exchanger inspection with a camera, refrigerant pressure check, or Manual J sizing review. For a 15+ year old system, consider also scheduling a pre-purchase HVAC inspection from a licensed HVAC contractor — this typically costs $100–$150 and can reveal issues a generalist inspector would miss.
The Minnesota-Specific Concerns
- Furnace size: Was the furnace properly sized for the home? Ask the inspector — an oversized furnace that short-cycles has had more stress cycles on its heat exchanger
- 80% vs. 96% AFUE: 80% units vent through the chimney or metal flue; 96% units vent through PVC sidewall pipes. Confirm the venting is intact and code-compliant for whichever type is installed
- R-22 refrigerant: If the AC condenser is pre-2010 and uses R-22, factor in the cost of eventual refrigerant service or replacement
- Ductwork: Older homes may have ductwork issues — asbestos wrap (pre-1980), disconnected runs in the basement, or flex duct that has collapsed or kinked
Using HVAC Age in Negotiations
A 20-year-old furnace that's in working condition today isn't a disqualifier — but it is a negotiating chip. Reasonable approaches:
- Request a price reduction equal to 50–75% of replacement cost to account for expected near-term replacement
- Ask the seller to replace the furnace before closing (gives you a new unit with full warranty)
- Request a home warranty that covers HVAC for the first year (buys you time)
After You Close: HVAC First Steps
- Change all air filters (you don't know when the previous owner last did it)
- Register any existing equipment under your name if still under manufacturer warranty
- Locate the thermostat, circuit breakers, furnace power switch, and gas shutoff
- Schedule a tune-up if the equipment is 5+ years old and no service records are available
- Install or test all CO detectors — required by Minnesota law
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