If you just got a quote for a 4-ton AC replacement and the number felt high, you are not alone. A 4-ton unit is one of the larger residential sizes, rated at 48,000 BTU per hour, and the price tag reflects it. Most 4-ton replacements land between $4,500 and $9,500 installed, but contractor quotes for the same job can vary by $3,000 or more depending on brand, efficiency tier, and where you live. This guide covers exactly what a 4-ton AC replacement costs in 2026, which brands and SEER2 ratings are worth paying extra for, whether 4 tons is even the right size for your home, and what hidden add-on costs to watch for in your quote.
How Much Does a 4-Ton AC Replacement Cost in 2026?
A 4-ton central AC split system costs $4,500 to $9,500 installed in 2026, covering equipment, labor, refrigerant, and standard permits for a straight swap-out (HomeGuide, Modernize, 2026). Heat pump systems at 4 tons run $6,000 to $12,000. The wide range reflects the gap between budget and premium equipment, plus regional labor variation. Most homeowners replacing an existing 4-ton system with a mid-efficiency model land between $6,000 and $8,500 all-in. Use the free HVAC cost estimator to get a range based on your location and system type.
| System Type | Equipment Cost | Labor | Total Installed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central AC (14.3 SEER2 minimum) | $2,000–$3,600 | $1,800–$3,200 | $4,500–$8,000 |
| Central AC (16–18 SEER2 mid-efficiency) | $2,800–$4,800 | $1,800–$3,400 | $5,800–$9,500 |
| Central AC (20+ SEER2 premium/inverter) | $4,200–$6,800 | $2,000–$3,800 | $7,500–$12,000 |
| Air-source heat pump (14–17 SEER2) | $3,200–$5,600 | $2,000–$3,800 | $6,000–$11,000 |
| Air-source heat pump (18+ SEER2) | $4,500–$7,800 | $2,200–$4,200 | $8,000–$12,000 |
Sources: HomeGuide 2026, Modernize 2026, contractor quote analysis. All installed costs include equipment, labor, refrigerant, and standard permits. Ductwork replacement not included.
Equipment accounts for 40 to 55% of your installed quote at the 4-ton size. Labor runs 25 to 35%, and permits plus materials make up the remaining 10 to 15%. A 4-ton condenser is physically larger and heavier than a 3-ton unit, so labor costs run slightly higher on average due to additional handling time. When a contractor’s quote looks high, it is usually the equipment tier driving the difference rather than the labor charge. See our full HVAC cost breakdown guide for a line-by-line explanation of every quote component.
What Does a 4-Ton AC Cost by Brand?
Brand choice is the single biggest variable in 4-ton AC pricing. A Goodman 4-ton AC system runs $3,200 to $6,000 installed, while a comparable Lennox system with a similar SEER2 rating costs $6,200 to $10,500 installed (contractor quote data, 2026). That $3,000 to $4,500 spread is real, but it does not reflect a proportionate gap in reliability or system life. The labor charge to install either unit is nearly identical.
| Brand | 4-Ton Unit Cost (Equipment Only) | Typical Installed Cost | Brand Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goodman | $1,300–$2,800 | $3,200–$6,000 | Budget |
| Rheem / Ruud | $1,500–$3,200 | $3,600–$6,800 | Budget-mid |
| American Standard | $1,800–$3,800 | $4,600–$8,200 | Mid |
| Carrier | $2,000–$4,200 | $5,200–$9,800 | Mid-premium |
| Trane | $2,200–$4,400 | $5,500–$10,200 | Mid-premium |
| Lennox | $2,500–$5,200 | $6,000–$10,500 | Premium |
Equipment-only prices from distributor and contractor data, 2025 to 2026. Installed costs add $1,800 to $3,800 depending on labor market and installation complexity. Ranges reflect 14.3 SEER2 entry to 18 SEER2 mid-tier models per brand.
The brand premium at the 4-ton tier is partially explained by warranty terms. Goodman offers a 10-year parts warranty with no authorized dealer requirement, keeping it contractor-agnostic. Carrier and Trane provide 10-year parts warranties that require authorized-dealer registration, which can affect future repair costs if you switch service providers. At the 4-ton size, the equipment cost gap between brands is larger in absolute dollars than at 3 tons, so the savings from choosing a budget brand are more substantial. For a deeper comparison, see our Goodman HVAC cost guide and Carrier replacement cost breakdown.
How Does SEER2 Rating Affect the Price of a 4-Ton Unit?
Moving from the federal minimum (14.3 SEER2) to a mid-tier system (16 to 17 SEER2) adds $700 to $1,600 in equipment cost for a 4-ton unit. Stepping up to 18 to 20 SEER2 adds another $900 to $1,800. The efficiency premium pays back through lower electricity bills, but the payback timeline depends on how many months per year you run the system and your local electricity rate.
| SEER2 Tier | 4-Ton Unit Premium vs 14.3 SEER2 | Est. Annual Savings vs 14.3 | Payback (avg climate) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14.3 SEER2 (federal minimum) | Baseline | Baseline | N/A |
| 16–17 SEER2 | +$700–$1,600 | $100–$190/yr | 5–11 years |
| 18–20 SEER2 | +$1,600–$3,200 | $190–$340/yr | 6–12 years |
| 20+ SEER2 (inverter/variable) | +$2,800–$4,500 | $300–$480/yr | 7–14 years |
A 4-ton system consumes more electricity per hour than a 3-ton unit, so the dollar savings from a higher SEER2 rating are proportionally larger. In hot southern climates (Florida, Texas, Georgia) where a 4-ton system runs 8 to 10 months per year, the efficiency premium pays back in 4 to 6 years for a 16 to 17 SEER2 upgrade. In mixed-climate Midwest markets where cooling season is 4 to 5 months, the same upgrade takes 9 to 13 years. Variable-speed or inverter systems (20+ SEER2) deliver the best return in high-runtime markets. See our AC replacement cost by SEER2 rating guide for a full payback analysis across all efficiency tiers.
What Size Home Needs a 4-Ton AC System?
A 4-ton AC system covers 2,000 to 2,500 square feet in most US climates, but the range shifts by climate zone (ACCA Manual J guidelines, NOAA climate zone data). In Zone 1 and 2 states like Florida and coastal Texas, where heat and humidity loads are intense, 4 tons serves closer to 1,600 to 2,000 square feet. In cooler Zone 5 and 6 states like Ohio and Michigan, the same 4-ton system can handle a 2,400 to 2,800 square foot home.
| Climate Zone | States / Region | 4-Ton Covers Approx. |
|---|---|---|
| Zone 1–2 (Hot-humid) | FL, Gulf Coast TX, Southern AZ | 1,600–2,000 sq ft |
| Zone 3 (Warm-humid) | GA, SC, NC, AR, TN | 1,800–2,200 sq ft |
| Zone 4 (Mixed) | VA, KY, MO, KS, CO | 2,000–2,500 sq ft |
| Zone 5 (Cool-mixed) | OH, IN, IL, PA, NY | 2,200–2,800 sq ft |
| Zone 6–7 (Cold) | MN, WI, ME, MT | 2,500–3,000 sq ft |
Square footage is a starting point, not a final answer. Several factors push a home toward 4 tons even when square footage alone might suggest 3.5 tons:
- Two-story layout: Heat rises, and a two-story home with a single system often needs more capacity than a single-story home with the same total square footage
- Open floor plans: Large connected living spaces are harder to cool evenly than segmented rooms with doors, which increases the effective cooling load
- South- or west-facing windows: Significant solar heat gain during afternoon hours can add 10 to 20% to the cooling load, depending on window area and glazing
- Poor insulation or older construction: Homes built before 1990 without insulation upgrades typically have higher envelope losses, pushing toward larger capacity
- High ceilings (9 ft or more): More air volume per square foot of floor area means the system conditions more cubic footage than the square footage implies
- Hot, humid climate: Units work harder removing both heat and moisture when outdoor temps regularly exceed 95°F
Why oversizing is a real problem at the 4-ton size: an oversized 4-ton system in a home that only needs 3.5 tons will short-cycle. It cools the space quickly and shuts off before completing a full dehumidification cycle, leaving indoor humidity higher than it should be. That leads to clammy air, mold risk, and compressor wear that shortens system life by 20 to 30% (ACCA, 2025). At 4 tons the risk is greater because the unit moves significantly more air than a 3-ton system, so the margin between “just right” and “too much” is narrower. A licensed HVAC contractor can run a Manual J load calculation to confirm the right size. It is often included free with a replacement quote. Read our HVAC sizing guide for the full Manual J explanation, or see HVAC cost by home size to understand how sizing and cost interact at common residential square footage ranges.
4-Ton vs 3.5-Ton vs 5-Ton: When Does Sizing Change the Price?
Each half-ton step in AC sizing adds $250 to $700 in equipment cost and minimal additional labor. Going from a 3.5-ton to a 4-ton condenser at the same brand and efficiency tier typically adds $300 to $600 to the equipment price. The installed cost gap between consecutive sizes is smaller than most homeowners expect.
| Tonnage | Typical Home Coverage | Mid-Range Installed Cost | Equipment vs 4-Ton |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-ton (36,000 BTU) | 1,400–2,100 sq ft | $4,200–$9,500 | $500–$1,000 less |
| 3.5-ton (42,000 BTU) | 1,800–2,400 sq ft | $4,800–$10,000 | $300–$600 less |
| 4-ton (48,000 BTU) | 2,000–2,500 sq ft | $4,500–$9,500 | Baseline |
| 4.5-ton (54,000 BTU) | 2,400–3,000 sq ft | $5,500–$11,000 | $400–$700 more |
| 5-ton (60,000 BTU) | 2,800–3,500 sq ft | $6,000–$12,500 | $700–$1,200 more |
The cost difference between sizing steps is modest. The performance difference if you pick the wrong size is not. When a contractor suggests 4 tons and you are considering whether 3.5 tons is sufficient (or whether 5 tons provides more headroom), ask for the Manual J numbers. Size up only if the load calculation supports it. For homes under 2,200 sq ft, see our 3.5-ton AC replacement cost guide. For a comparison of smaller systems, see our 3-ton HVAC replacement cost guide.
How Does a 4-Ton Heat Pump Compare to a 4-Ton AC in Cost?
A 4-ton air-source heat pump costs $6,000 to $12,000 installed, compared to $4,500 to $9,500 for a 4-ton central AC system. The premium runs roughly $1,200 to $3,000. The heat pump handles both heating and cooling in a single unit, which means you can eliminate a separate furnace. In Climate Zones 1 through 4, a heat pump can be the lower total-cost option over a 15-year system life when you account for removing furnace replacement from the equation.
The IRA Section 25C federal tax credit covers up to $2,000 for qualifying heat pump installations in 2026 (IRS.gov, 2026). That credit applies per tax year, and it can offset most of the heat pump premium at the 4-ton size. Qualifying systems must meet ENERGY STAR certification and efficiency thresholds. Check energystar.gov for the current qualifying model list.
A heat pump at 4 tons makes the most sense when your home is in Zones 1 through 4, when you want to eliminate gas service entirely, or when you have electric resistance heating (baseboard or strip heat) that you want to replace with a more efficient alternative. In Zone 5 and colder, a dual-fuel heat pump (heat pump plus gas furnace backup) is typically more practical than a standalone heat pump. See our heat pump replacement cost guide for a full comparison.
What Other Costs Should You Budget for a 4-Ton AC Replacement?
The installed cost range for a 4-ton system assumes your ductwork, electrical panel, and refrigerant lines are in acceptable condition. In practice, several add-on costs come up regularly on 4-ton replacement jobs.
- Ductwork repairs ($500–$2,500): If existing ducts have significant leaks or disconnected sections, sealing and minor repairs are commonly recommended alongside equipment replacement. Leaky ducts reduce effective system capacity by 20 to 30%.
- Full ductwork replacement ($4,500–$9,000): Homes with original ducts from the 1970s or 1980s, or ductwork not sized for a 4-ton system, may need full replacement. This is the largest single add-on cost on many 4-ton jobs. Duct sizing matters more at 4 tons because undersized ducts restrict the higher airflow volume and reduce efficiency.
- Concrete equipment pad ($100–$400): A 4-ton condenser is larger and heavier than smaller units. If the existing pad is cracked, unlevel, or undersized, the contractor will replace it.
- Refrigerant lineset replacement ($300–$800): Older linesets may be the wrong diameter for a new 4-ton system. If the existing lineset is copper and in good condition, most contractors flush and reuse it.
- Electrical disconnect and breaker ($300–$700): A 4-ton condenser draws more amperage than a 3-ton unit. Many older homes need a larger disconnect box or breaker upgrade to meet code requirements for the new equipment.
- Smart thermostat ($150–$350 installed): Optional but widely recommended for a system this size. Compatible smart thermostats improve efficiency and enable remote monitoring.
- Permits and inspections ($150–$500): Required for all HVAC replacements in most states. Usually pulled by the contractor and included in the quote, but confirm before signing.
- Old unit removal and disposal: Covered by most contractors at no added charge. Confirm it is included in your quote, especially for older R-22 refrigerant systems that require certified handling.
If your home needs both a new 4-ton system and ductwork replacement, budget $10,000 to $20,000 total for a mid-efficiency installation. That range is wide because ductwork complexity varies significantly by home layout, number of zones, and crawlspace or attic access. For help managing the total project cost, see our HVAC financing options guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a 4-ton AC system?
A 4-ton AC system has a cooling capacity of 48,000 BTU per hour. The term “ton” refers to cooling power, not the weight of the equipment. A 4-ton unit is typically sized for homes between 2,000 and 2,500 square feet in moderate climates. It is one of the larger residential sizes and is common in two-story homes, open floor plan layouts, and southern states where heat loads are higher.
How much does a 4-ton AC replacement cost in 2026?
A 4-ton central AC split system costs $4,500 to $9,500 installed in 2026. Heat pump systems at 4 tons run $6,000 to $12,000. Budget brands like Goodman start around $3,200 to $6,000 installed. Premium brands like Carrier and Trane run $5,800 to $10,500. Ductwork replacement adds $4,500 to $9,000 if needed.
What size home needs a 4-ton AC?
A 4-ton AC covers roughly 2,000 to 2,500 square feet depending on climate. In Florida and coastal Texas (Climate Zones 1 and 2), it covers closer to 1,600 to 2,000 square feet. In the Midwest and Northeast (Zones 5 and 6), it can handle up to 2,800 square feet. A Manual J load calculation from a licensed contractor is the only reliable way to confirm the right size for your specific home.
Is a 4-ton AC too big for a 2,000 square foot home?
It depends on your climate and home characteristics. In Florida or coastal Texas (Climate Zones 1 and 2), 4 tons is often the right size for a 2,000 square foot home because of high heat and humidity loads. In the Midwest or Northeast (Zones 4 and 5), a 4-ton system would likely be oversized for 2,000 square feet. Oversizing causes short-cycling, high indoor humidity, and premature compressor wear. Get a Manual J calculation before agreeing to any sizing recommendation.
How does a 4-ton heat pump compare in cost to a 4-ton AC?
A 4-ton heat pump costs $6,000 to $12,000 installed versus $4,500 to $9,500 for a 4-ton central AC, a premium of roughly $1,200 to $3,000. The heat pump handles both heating and cooling, eliminating a separate furnace. The IRA Section 25C tax credit covers up to $2,000 for qualifying heat pump installations, which can offset most of the premium for eligible homeowners.