Winslow, Maine · Est. 2026 Kerosene · Oil · Propane → Cold-Climate Heat Pumps
Mobile Home Heat Pumps Mainemobilehomeheatpumpsmaine.com
A Maine field report on home heating

Burning kerosene is the costliest way to stay warm.

An 80% AFUE furnace turns roughly a fifth of every gallon into waste heat. A cold-climate heat pump burns nothing — it moves heat, delivering up to 30 BTU per watt. For income-qualified Maine mobile homes, the switch can cost little or nothing after rebates.

Fig. 1 — A single-wide with an exterior cold-climate heat pump; the indoor head delivers heat room-side.
20%
Of an 80% furnace's fuel lost as waste heat — at best
300%+
Effective efficiency of a cold-climate heat pump
$9,000
Top Efficiency Maine rebate for a low-income home
$0–$75
Per month for a qualifying mobile-home install
01 The premise

Move heat. Don't make it.

Every fuel furnace works the same way: it sets fire to something you paid for and captures most — never all — of the resulting heat. An 80% AFUE rating is the good case. The rest goes up the flue, and aging units drift lower still.

A heat pump refuses that trade. It runs a refrigerant cycle that gathers heat already present in the outdoor air and concentrates it indoors. Because it relocates energy instead of combusting fuel, it returns three or more units of heat for every unit of electricity it draws.

In a single-metered mobile home — where the heating bill is the household's largest utility line — that ratio is the difference between a hard winter and a manageable one.

The rest of this report lays out the case, the science, and the money, with sources you can verify.

Same dollar of energy in. Three times the heat out.
02 The ledger

Old furnace vs. new heat pump

80% Fuel Furnace

  • Up to ~20% of every gallon lost as waste heat
  • Fuel price rides the winter market
  • Fumes, deliveries, a tank to keep filled
  • No cooling in summer
  • Efficiency falls as the unit ages

Cold-Climate Heat Pump

  • Up to 30 BTU/watt — ~3× heat per dollar
  • HSPF2-rated for Maine winter output
  • Heats and air-conditions from one unit
  • No flame, no fuel deliveries
  • Rebates and 0% financing close the gap
03 Two documented paths

Free heat pumps, or $75 a month

Income-qualified mobile homes

Up to 3 free Seville heat pumps

Households on MaineCare, HEAP, SNAP, or TANF — or meeting Efficiency Maine's low-income threshold — can qualify to have up to three Seville cold-climate heat pumps installed at no out-of-pocket cost, rebates handled for them.

Check eligibility
Any qualifying home

Keen units — up to 30 BTU/watt

$75per month × 60 months · 0% APR

Prefer top-tier Keen equipment? BRF Services and Maine Energy Services offer it at a fixed $75/month for 60 months at 0% interest — not a teaser rate.

Meet the installers
04 Why this resource exists
A.

Mobile homes get more

Manufactured (mobile) homes are a priority housing type in Maine's federally funded HEAR program — stacked on top of standard Efficiency Maine rebates.

B.

Real registered installers

Rebates only run through a registered vendor. We point to BRF Services and Maine Energy Services, who handle paperwork and financing.

C.

Facts, sourced

Efficiency figures and rebate tiers come from public Efficiency Maine information, with the caveats stated plainly.

No cost · No obligation

The facts point one way. Get your numbers.

A registered Maine installer will size the system, confirm your rebate tier, and quote the net cost — at no charge.