Geothermal Heating & Cooling in Springfield
Geothermal is the most efficient way to heat and cool a home, and a long cooling season makes our area one of the better places to install it. Summit Air & Heating designs, installs, and services ground-source geothermal systems across Springfield, Riverton, and the wider area. A properly designed system can cut your heating and cooling costs 40 to 60 percent while running quieter and lasting longer than anything else on the market.
We’ve been keeping local homes comfortable since 1985, and geothermal is where decades of HVAC experience really pay off. Designing a ground loop, sizing the heat pump to the home, and dialing in the controls all take a level of expertise most contractors simply don’t have.
How a Geothermal Heat Pump Works
A geothermal (or ground-source) heat pump moves heat instead of burning fuel to make it. That single difference is why it sips electricity compared to a furnace or a standard air-source system.
The system has three parts:
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Ground loop. A sealed circuit of buried pipe carries a water-based solution underground. A few feet down, the earth holds a near-constant temperature all year. The loop trades heat with that stable ground: absorbing warmth in winter, shedding it in summer. The Department of Energy rates geothermal among the most efficient heating and cooling technologies available.
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Heat pump unit. This indoor unit concentrates the heat from the loop to warm your home in winter, then reverses in summer to pull heat out of your house and send it into the ground.
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Distribution. Existing ductwork carries the conditioned air through the home. Some systems also tie into radiant floor heating.
Because the ground temperature barely moves, a geothermal system never loses efficiency on the coldest morning or the most brutal August afternoon. An air-source unit, by contrast, struggles exactly when you need it most.
Why Our Climate Is Ideal for Geothermal
Our climate is the secret weapon. In cold regions, geothermal mostly earns its keep in winter. Around here, the system works hard in both directions, and that double duty is what makes the numbers so attractive.
Our summers are long, hot, and punishingly humid, so air conditioning runs for the better part of the year. A geothermal system dumps that heat into ground that sits in the mid-60s instead of fighting 95°F outdoor air, so it cools your home using a fraction of the energy. Then, when a winter cold front drops temperatures into the 30s overnight, the same loop is still pulling from stable soil. The result is comfortable, even temperatures year-round and a utility bill that drops noticeably the first month the system runs.
Real Energy Savings
A ground-source heat pump delivers a coefficient of performance most equipment can’t touch. For every unit of electricity it consumes, it moves 3 to 5 units of heating or cooling energy, which is why many systems earn ENERGY STAR certification. In practical terms, homeowners around here typically see heating and cooling costs fall 40 to 60 percent.
Those savings compound. The ground loop is rated to last 50 years or more, and the indoor unit commonly runs 20 to 25 years. Over the life of the system, the lower operating cost usually returns far more than the higher upfront price.
The 30% Federal Tax Credit
Geothermal qualifies for the federal Residential Clean Energy Credit, which covers 30 percent of the full installed cost, including the ground loop, the heat pump, and labor, with no upper limit. The credit is in effect through 2032 before it begins stepping down. That single incentive often takes thousands off the net cost of a system and shortens the payback period considerably. We supply the manufacturer certification you’ll need, and we recommend confirming the specifics with your tax professional.
Geothermal Loop Options
The right loop depends on your property, and we evaluate that during the site visit:
- Vertical loops drill straight down, so they need very little surface area. They’re the practical choice for the tighter lots common in newer Riverton and Lakeside subdivisions.
- Horizontal loops run in shallow trenches across the yard. They cost less to install when space allows, which suits larger rural properties around Springfield, Maplewood, and Fairview.
Design, Installation, Service, and Repair
We handle geothermal from the first load calculation to the final commissioning, and we stand behind it afterward. New installations start with a proper Manual J sizing and a loop design matched to your soil and lot. For homeowners who already have a system, we service and repair every component: compressors, refrigerant charge, circulator pumps, loop pressure, thermostats and staging, coils, and auxiliary heat. Geothermal controls and ground-loop behavior are unique, and an incorrect diagnosis from an inexperienced tech can turn a small fix into an expensive one.
Geothermal Service by City
We design, install, and repair geothermal throughout the area. Explore service in the communities where ground-source systems are growing fastest:
See all the communities we serve →
Learn More About Geothermal
Trying to decide whether the technology fits your home? One system handles both jobs: in summer the ground loop carries heat out of your home, and in winter it pulls stored ground warmth back in, which is why geothermal owners see savings in both seasons.
As a family-owned company with four decades of HVAC experience, Summit Air & Heating brings real depth to every geothermal project. Contact us or call (555) 123-4567 for a free geothermal evaluation, complete with an honest savings estimate and a clear comparison against conventional options.