Heat Pumps in Winter: Do They Really Work When It’s Cold?
Quick answer
Yes. Modern heat pumps work very well in winter — including in cold climates — when they are properly designed and installed.
Most winter performance problems come from undersized systems, poor insulation, or incorrect system design, not from the technology itself.
Why winter performance worries people
Many people associate heat pumps with mild climates.
This came from:
- older technology
- poorly designed early installations
- misunderstanding how heat pumps operate
Modern cold-climate heat pumps are specifically engineered to extract heat from very cold air.
How heat pumps work in cold weather
Even cold air contains heat energy.
Modern systems:
- use advanced compressors
- manage frost through defrost cycles
- maintain output at very low temperatures
- adjust performance automatically
Efficiency drops as temperatures fall — but output remains reliable when systems are correctly sized.
What affects winter performance most
- insulation quality
- heat loss of the home
- system capacity
- heat emitter design
- defrost strategy
- control systems
The colder the climate, the more important proper design becomes.
When heat pumps struggle in winter
Heat pumps can struggle when:
- insulation is very poor
- systems are undersized
- heat emitters are unsuitable
- air leakage is high
- installers lack cold-climate experience
These are design issues, not technology limits.
How to ensure good winter performance
- carry out professional heat-loss calculations
- improve insulation and draught sealing
- choose cold-climate rated systems
- size systems conservatively
- design radiators or underfloor heating properly
- ensure correct controls are used
What to do next
If winter performance matters to you:
- ask installers about low-temperature capacity
- review past cold-climate installations
- request design documents
- compare heat output, not just efficiency ratings
FAQs
Do heat pumps work below freezing?
Yes. Many operate well below -15°C.
Are they less efficient in winter?
Efficiency drops, but output remains effective.
Do they need backup heating?
Sometimes in very cold climates.
Why do some people complain about winter performance?
Usually due to poor system design.
Can ground source perform better in winter?
Often yes, due to stable ground temperatures.
Will my house feel cold?
Not with a properly designed system.
Do they run constantly in winter?
Often they run steadily, which is normal.
Is winter the worst time to install?
Installations are usually easier outside extreme cold.