If you're building a new home in Minnesota, the HVAC decisions you make during construction will affect your comfort and energy bills for 20+ years. You have far more influence at this stage than you ever will after the walls are closed. Here's what to know and what to push for.
New Construction vs. Retrofit: Why It's Different
In new construction, you have options that don't exist in existing homes:
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- Ductwork can be properly designed and sized from scratch (no existing constraints)
- Insulation and air sealing can be done right, dramatically reducing your heating load
- Equipment can be sized accurately with a proper Manual J before framing is complete
- Radiant floor heating loops can be embedded in concrete slabs at minimal additional cost
- PEX plumbing and radiant tubing can be run during rough-in at a fraction of retrofit cost
Questions to Ask Your Builder About HVAC
Most production builders use a house HVAC subcontractor who installs the same basic system in every home. Push back on this with these questions:
- "Will you do a Manual J load calculation, or are you sizing by square footage rule of thumb?"
- "What brand and model furnace and AC are included in the base package?"
- "What is the AFUE rating of the included furnace and SEER rating of the included AC?"
- "Can I upgrade to a variable-speed/two-stage system, and what is the cost difference?"
- "What type of ductwork will you use — sheet metal trunk with flex branches, or all flex?"
- "Will the ductwork be sealed with mastic before drywall?"
- "Where will the air handler be located, and is there access for future service?"
What to Insist On for Minnesota New Construction
| Item | Minimum Standard | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Furnace efficiency | 96% AFUE minimum | Minnesota energy code may require 90%+ anyway; 96% is the federal tax credit threshold |
| Furnace type | Two-stage with variable-speed ECM blower | Better comfort, lower operating cost, better air filtration |
| AC efficiency | 16 SEER minimum; 18+ preferred | Incremental cost in new construction is lower than retrofit upgrade |
| Duct sealing | Mastic or Aeroseal before drywall | Leaky ducts in new construction are common and hard to fix later |
| Manual J sizing | Required; not rule-of-thumb | Prevents oversized equipment that short-cycles and wears prematurely |
| ERV/HRV ventilation | Strongly recommended for tight new construction | Minnesota requires mechanical ventilation in tight new homes; an ERV/HRV recovers heat from exhaust air |
| Air handler location | Conditioned space (not unconditioned attic) | HVAC equipment in unconditioned attics loses significant efficiency and has harder working conditions |
The ERV/HRV: What Is It and Do You Need It?
An Energy Recovery Ventilator (ERV) or Heat Recovery Ventilator (HRV) brings fresh outdoor air into a tight new home while recovering 70–80% of the heat from the outgoing stale air. Minnesota's 2020 Energy Code effectively requires mechanical ventilation in new construction because homes are built so tight that natural air infiltration is insufficient for healthy air quality. An HRV is the right tool for Minnesota's climate — it handles heat recovery efficiently in cold weather, unlike ERVs which are optimized for humid climates.
Upgrading the Builder's Base Package
If your builder's base furnace is an 80% single-stage PSC model, the upgrade to a 96% two-stage variable-speed unit often costs $800–$1,500 as a builder upgrade. But the same upgrade done after closing by a contractor costs $2,000–$3,000. Upgrades are almost always cheaper during construction — negotiate them in at contract time.
Buying Your Own Equipment for New Construction
Yes, you can supply your own HVAC equipment for new construction — some builders allow it, some don't. If your builder's subcontractor uses builder-grade equipment and won't upgrade, ask if you can supply the equipment yourself and have them provide labor only. The argument for doing this is strongest when the builder's markup on equipment is high and their included equipment spec is low.
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