Single-wide, double-wide, modular, or prefab — if yours runs on kerosene, oil, or propane, you're paying to burn money. Cold-climate heat pumps deliver up to 30 BTU per watt, and for many Maine homes the out-of-pocket cost is little or nothing after rebates.
Manufactured homes come in many shapes — a compact single-wide, a roomy double-wide, a multi-section modular, or a factory-built prefab on a foundation. Each has its own heating challenge, and each has a heat pump layout that solves it. The common thread: you stop burning fuel and start moving heat, for roughly three times the warmth per dollar.
One long section. Often one or two well-placed heads cover the whole home.
Two joined sections. Multiple zones keep both ends evenly warm.
Factory-built to state code on a permanent foundation. Ducted or ductless both work.
Panelized or factory-built homes. Tight envelopes make heat pumps shine.
Households enrolled in MaineCare, HEAP, SNAP, or TANF (or who meet 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. The deepest stacks apply to single-family manufactured (mobile) homes.
Check if you qualifyPrefer top-tier Keen units rated up to 30 BTU/watt HSPF2? Get them for $75/month for 60 months at 0% interest through BRF Services or Maine Energy Services — available for any manufactured home type.
See the installersGet a free, no-obligation estimate from a registered Maine installer and find out exactly which rebates your manufactured home qualifies for.
Get a quote from BRF Services Maine Energy Services