Residential Central Air Conditioners & Heat Pumps
OEMs producing residential split-system AC and heat pump equipment.
Market snapshot
These figures describe Residential HVAC Equipment (5.7.6), the segment that Residential Central Air Conditioners & Heat Pumps sits within — not Residential Central Air Conditioners & Heat Pumps on its own.
Part of NAICS 333415, which combines residential and commercial HVAC and commercial/industrial refrigeration in one Census code (~$40B combined); residential HVAC is not separately disclosed and so is not separately sized here.
Business model & economics
Revenue model
Equipment sales (mostly replacement) through contractors
Key economics
- Recurring revenue
- Moderate–High
- EBITDA margin
- Healthy
- Capex intensity
- High
recurring replacement and parts
brand- and replacement-driven
Characteristics
- Replacement of a huge installed base drives demand.
- Heat-pump electrification (IRA-incentivized) transformative.
- Low-GWP refrigerant transition reshaping product lines.
M&A deal context
Who’s acquiring
- HVAC majors
- Electrification & heat-pump acquirers
- PE-backed component platforms
What’s driving deals
- Heat-pump electrification and IRA incentives.
- Refrigerant-transition product cycles.
- Brand, distribution, and replacement strength.
Find Residential Central Air Conditioners & Heat Pumps acquisition targets
Search Acquisera’s index for companies classified under Residential Central Air Conditioners & Heat Pumps (5.7.6.2) and build a targeted deal pipeline.
Search companies