A new Goodman furnace is only as good as its installation. Even the best equipment performs poorly if incorrectly sized, improperly vented, or poorly commissioned. This guide gives Minnesota homeowners a comprehensive checklist of what a quality installation should include — so you can verify the work and ask informed questions.
Pre-Installation: What Should Happen Before Work Begins
Load Calculation
A quality installer performs or references a Manual J heat load calculation to verify the correct BTU size for your home. Oversizing wastes money, causes short cycling, and reduces comfort. Undersizing means the furnace can't maintain setpoint in extreme cold. Ask your installer: "How did you determine the size?" If the answer is just "same as what you had," push back — especially if you've improved insulation or windows since the original install.
Permit
In Minnesota, most furnace replacements require a mechanical permit. The contractor should pull the permit before installation begins, not after. The permit triggers an inspection that verifies code compliance — which protects you.
Equipment Verification
Before installation starts, verify the delivered equipment:
- Correct model number (matches what was quoted)
- Correct BTU size
- Unit undamaged (inspect before installation — claims are easier to handle before the unit is installed)
Installation Checklist
Furnace Placement and Clearances
- Minimum clearances to combustibles met per installation label
- Minimum 24" service clearance in front of the furnace
- Furnace level (affects condensate drainage)
- Vibration isolation pad or legs installed correctly
Venting (High-Efficiency 96%+ AFUE)
- Correct PVC pipe schedule and diameter (typically 2" or 3" schedule 40)
- Proper slope on horizontal runs (toward furnace for condensate drainage)
- Intake and exhaust pipes properly separated at termination
- Termination locations meet code (12"+ above grade, away from windows and doors)
- All joints properly cemented — no dry-fit joints
- Pipe secured with hangers at proper intervals
Gas Line
- Manual shutoff valve installed within 6 feet and in line-of-sight of furnace
- Drip leg (sediment trap) installed at furnace connection
- Flexible connector approved for gas (not rubber hose)
- Gas pressure verified at manifold (should match furnace spec — typically 3.5" WC for natural gas)
- Leak test performed on all connections (soap bubble test or manometer)
Electrical
- Dedicated circuit verified (no daisy-chained connections)
- Correct voltage and amperage for the furnace model
- Ground wire properly connected
- Disconnect switch within sight of furnace
- Low-voltage thermostat wiring correctly labeled and connected
Condensate System
- Condensate trap properly installed (prevents combustion gas entry into drain)
- Drain line sloped toward drain (no traps or low spots)
- Drain terminates to proper location (floor drain, utility sink, or condensate pump)
- Float switch installed in drain pan (recommended)
- Condensate line protected from freezing in unconditioned spaces
Ductwork Connections
- Supply plenum properly sealed to furnace cabinet (no air leaks)
- Return air connection adequate size for furnace airflow
- All duct connections sealed with mastic or approved tape
- No new restrictions created in ductwork
Startup and Commissioning
After installation, the technician should:
- Verify correct heat mode operation on all stages
- Measure supply air temperature (should be 50–70°F above return temperature)
- Measure static pressure across the air handler
- Verify ignitor glows and flame establishes cleanly
- Verify flame sensor current (indicates sensor cleanliness)
- Check for any error codes stored in the control board
- Verify thermostat operation and smart thermostat pairing if applicable
- Walk the homeowner through thermostat operation, filter location, and emergency shutoff
Documentation You Should Receive
- Installation manual (leave it at the furnace)
- Warranty registration information
- Permit number and inspection schedule
- Invoice showing model number, serial number, and installation date
- Contractor's license number
Red Flags During Installation
- Technician refuses to show permit
- Installation completed in under 2 hours (a thorough install takes 3–6 hours)
- No combustion or pressure testing performed
- Gas leak test skipped ("we just use dish soap on obvious spots")
- Existing ductwork connections left unsealed
- Thermostat set up without explaining operation to homeowner
Warranty Registration
Register your Goodman furnace within 60 days of installation to activate the full warranty: lifetime heat exchanger, 10-year parts, 10-year unit replacement. See our warranty registration guide. The serial number and model number from your installation invoice are needed.
Buy Factory-Direct, Hire the Best Installer
When you purchase your Goodman furnace factory-direct through Furnace Direct, you can take the equipment savings and invest in a higher-quality installation. Buying wholesale means you're not paying contractor markup on the equipment — leaving more budget for a thorough, permitted installation with a quality contractor.
Related Resources
- What Your Installer Should Do: Goodman Guide
- Minnesota Furnace Permit Requirements
- Furnace Warranty Registration Guide
- How to Get Multiple HVAC Quotes
- Furnace Room Requirements and Code
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