Electric Furnace vs. Gas Furnace in Ontario: Complete Cost Comparison
·10 min read· Furnace Installation
S
Sarah ChenLicensed HVAC Technician
Published March 6, 2026
Key Takeaway
Electric vs gas furnace comparison for Ontario. Operating costs with Ontario Hydro rates, Enbridge gas pricing, cold-weather performance, and conversion cost analysis.
Electric Furnace vs. Gas Furnace in Ontario: Complete Cost Comparison
1. The decision in 30 seconds
If you live in a modern GTA, Southwestern Ontario, or Ottawa home built after 2000 with existing ductwork and gas lines, a high-efficiency condensing gas furnace remains the undisputed king of reliability and operational cost. However, if you reside in a rural Northern Ontario cabin or a cottage country property without natural gas infrastructure, an electric furnace or heat pump system is your only logical path. For legacy homes in the Niagara region, opt for dual-fuel hybrid systems to hedge against future carbon tax escalations.
EPA 608 Universal Certified, NATE Certified, 12+ years experience
Sarah Chen is an EPA 608 Universal Certified HVAC technician with 12 years of experience in heating, cooling, and ventilation systems. She has worked on over 3,000 residential installations and provides expert guidance on energy-efficient HVAC solutions.
3. Option A deep dive: High-Efficiency Natural Gas Furnaces
In the Ontario market, the 96%+ AFUE (Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency) condensing gas furnace is the gold standard for residential heating. These units operate by capturing heat from exhaust gases before they exit the flue, which is critical in Ontario’s climate zones where the heating season frequently lasts from October through late April.
The primary advantage of the modern gas furnace is the "output density." When a -30°C cold snap hits the Ottawa Valley or Timmins, a gas furnace provides instant, high-temperature air delivery. Unlike electric resistance heating, which relies on the kilowatt-hour (kWh) rate—which currently averages roughly 12.0¢/kWh to 18.0¢/kWh in Ontario depending on Time-of-Use (TOU) tiers—natural gas remains the most cost-effective BTU provider for space heating.
From a contractor’s perspective, the supply chain for gas furnaces in Ontario is robust. Because nearly 75% of Ontario homes utilize natural gas, every licensed HVAC technician in the GTA or Southwestern Ontario carries parts for brands like Lennox, Carrier, or Trane. This means a breakdown on a Tuesday in January doesn't mean a week-long wait for a proprietary electrical component.
However, you must account for the TSSA (Technical Standards and Safety Authority) requirements. Under O. Reg 212/01, any work involving the installation or alteration of a fuel-fired appliance must be performed by a G2 or G1 gas fitter. You cannot legally install this yourself. The upfront cost includes the unit, venting upgrades (usually switching to PVC intake/exhaust), gas piping adjustments, and the mandatory 13% HST. In the GTA, expect to pay on the higher end of the $5,500–$8,500 range due to labor market saturation and stricter municipal inspection fees in cities like Toronto or Mississauga. For homeowners in Northern Ontario, shipping costs for specialized equipment can push these prices toward the $9,000 threshold, but the long-term energy savings compared to electric resistance heating are immediate and measurable.
4. Option B deep dive: Electric Resistance Furnaces
Electric furnaces are simple beasts. They function like massive toasters: electricity passes through heating elements (resistors), and a blower fan pushes air across those hot coils. In the Ontario context, they are rarely chosen for primary heating in homes connected to the natural gas grid due to the prohibitive cost of electricity. However, for homes in Cottage Country—where natural gas pipelines are physically non-existent—or for condos and townhomes with limited venting options, they serve a specific purpose.
The installation cost is significantly lower than gas because there is no requirement for combustion venting, gas line pressure tests, or TSSA compliance for fuel lines. You are looking at a simpler electrical connection, usually requiring a heavy-duty 240V circuit and substantial panel upgrades. If your electrical panel is still 100 amps (typical for homes built before 1985 in Ontario), you will almost certainly need to upgrade to a 200-amp service to accommodate an electric furnace, adding approximately $2,500–$3,500 (incl. HST) to your project budget.
The "Cold Weather Performance" of an electric furnace is theoretically 100% efficient, meaning every joule of electricity becomes a joule of heat. However, the economic efficiency is abysmal. When the mercury drops to -20°C in the Muskoka region, your furnace will run constantly. If your home is not perfectly insulated to R-40 in the attic and R-20 in the walls, your Hydro One bill will skyrocket.
The ideal candidate for an electric furnace is someone living in a small, highly insulated, modern footprint home where the cost of running a gas line (often $3,000+ for trenching and permits) outweighs the operational cost gap. Alternatively, it is the fallback for homeowners who are completely ideologically committed to decarbonization and are pairing the unit with a large-scale solar array and battery storage. Without that renewable hedge, an electric furnace in Ontario is a one-way ticket to energy poverty during the winter months.
5. The Ontario factor: Infrastructure and Regulatory Realities
Ontario's energy landscape is uniquely shaped by our history and our geography. Unlike the United States, where heating oil or propane is common in rural areas, Ontario has a bifurcated reality: the Southern urban core is dominated by Enbridge Gas, while rural Ontario relies on either propane delivery or expensive grid-tied electricity.
The "Ontario Factor" is defined by three specific pillars:
The Carbon Tax & Rebates: The federal carbon pricing backstop has made natural gas slightly more expensive annually, but it remains significantly cheaper than electric resistance heating. Meanwhile, programs like the Canada Greener Homes Loan (providing up to $40,000 at 0% interest) heavily incentivize heat pumps over traditional electric furnaces. If you are considering an electric-based system, you should always pivot to an air-source heat pump rather than a pure electric resistance furnace to qualify for these major Ontario rebates.
The Freeze-Thaw Cycle: Ontario homes, particularly those in the Niagara Peninsula and Southwestern Ontario, endure extreme "freeze-thaw" cycles. This causes shifting foundations. A gas furnace installation requires a rigid, sealed PVC vent system that must be properly graded to shed condensate. If installed improperly by an amateur, the condensate will freeze in the intake pipe, triggering a pressure switch lockout. This is the #1 reason for service calls in January.
Utility Rates: Ontario’s Time-of-Use (TOU) rates are designed to discourage usage during peak times (7 AM – 11 AM and 5 PM – 7 PM). An electric furnace is a massive load-breaker. Running one during "on-peak" hours can easily cost you $0.24/kWh. A gas furnace is essentially immune to these pricing fluctuations, providing a stable, predictable monthly budget for the homeowner.
6. Real cost comparison: 5-year and 10-year outlook
Let’s look at the hard numbers for a standard 1,800-square-foot detached home in the GTA.
Note: The cost of electricity is modeled on an average usage of 20,000 kWh annually for heating. Any increase in provincial electricity rates or carbon-related surcharges on gas will alter these figures, but the delta—the gap between the two—will remain consistently in favor of gas unless heat pump technology is utilized.
7. Decision framework
Use this framework to make your final choice. If you meet three or more criteria in a category, that is your path.
Choose a High-Efficiency Gas Furnace if:
Grid Connectivity: You have a natural gas line within 50 feet of your mechanical room. The ROI of connecting to gas is usually realized in under 3 years.
Climate Zone: You live in Northern Ontario, Ottawa, or rural regions where temperatures stay below -15°C for extended periods.
Property Size: Your home is larger than 1,500 square feet. The heating load is too high for efficient electric resistance heating without immense electrical service upgrades.
Resale Strategy: You plan to sell in the next 5–7 years. A gas furnace is expected by buyers in the Ontario housing market; an electric furnace may be viewed as a "hidden cost" to upgrade.
Choose an Electric Furnace (or better, an Electric Heat Pump) if:
Infrastructure Constraints: You are in a remote area or an urban infill project where gas line extension costs exceed $5,000.
Environmental Mandate: You have invested in significant solar/battery infrastructure (e.g., Tesla Powerwall or similar) that allows you to offset peak grid usage.
Small Footprint: You are heating a small, highly efficient "Passive House" or a condo unit where the heating load is low.
Budget Limits: You absolutely cannot afford the upfront capital for a gas install, but you have adequate electrical capacity, and you are prepared to accept higher monthly utility costs.
Edge Case: If you are in a location with no gas, avoid the "Electric Furnace" (resistance). Instead, install a Cold Climate Air Source Heat Pump (ccASHP). It costs more upfront ($10,000–$16,000) but uses 300% less electricity, making it the only viable "all-electric" solution for Ontario winters.
8. Frequently asked questions
Q: Can I get a rebate for switching from gas to electric?
A: In Ontario, the Canada Greener Homes program generally prioritizes switching to Heat Pumps rather than pure electric resistance furnaces. You will likely be denied rebates if you simply install a basic electric resistance furnace. Always check the Enbridge Gas "Home Efficiency Rebate" portal for the most current codes.
Q: Is it true that electric furnaces last longer?
A: Yes. Because they lack burners, heat exchangers, and flame sensors, there is less that can go wrong. A gas furnace has a heat exchanger that—if cracked—can leak Carbon Monoxide (CO). This is why annual inspections are a TSSA requirement for gas units. Electric furnaces don't have this risk.
Q: Does my electrical panel need an upgrade for a gas furnace?
A: Generally, no. A gas furnace blower fan draws minimal power. However, if you are replacing an old electric furnace with a gas one, you will have a "spare" 240V circuit that can be repurposed for a high-efficiency heat pump or an EV charger.
Q: How does the Ontario Building Code (OBC) affect my choice?
A: OBC Section 9.33 covers HVAC requirements. If your home is in a region with a design temperature of -25°C or lower (common in Northern Ontario), the code requires your equipment to be sized based on a heat loss calculation (CSA F280). You cannot simply "guess" the size of the furnace you need.
9. Bottom line
The choice between electric and gas in Ontario is a balance of geography and infrastructure. If natural gas is available, the high-efficiency gas furnace is the most economically sound decision for 90% of Ontario homeowners. For those off-grid or in specialized low-energy homes, electric solutions—specifically air-source heat pumps—are the future. Visit GetAHomePro.co to connect with vetted Ontario contractors who can perform a heat-load calculation for your specific property today.