A ductless mini-split installation costs $3,000–$8,000 per zone in the US, with the outdoor condenser typically supporting 1–5 indoor heads. Multi-zone systems cost less per zone than single-zone setups. The 25C tax credit covers 30% up to $2,000 if the system meets ENERGY STAR Most Efficient criteria. In Poland, single-zone mini-splits run PLN 5,000–10,000 installed. In the Netherlands €2,500–€5,000 per zone with ISDE rebates.
Mini-split cost by zone count
| System | Typical cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| Single-zone (1 indoor + outdoor) | $3,000–$5,000 |
| Dual-zone | $5,000–$8,000 |
| Triple-zone | $7,000–$11,000 |
| Quad-zone | $9,000–$14,000 |
| 5-zone whole-house | $12,000–$18,000 |
Cost in the Netherlands
Per-zone cost is €2,500–€5,000 installed. Most homes do 2–3 zones for €6,000–€12,000 total. The ISDE subsidy (€500–€1,500 per zone for heat-pump-capable mini-splits) makes whole-home conversion affordable.
What affects the cost?
- Number of zones — each indoor head adds $800–$2,000
- Refrigerant line length — long runs require pump-down and extra material
- SEER rating — high-efficiency units (20+ SEER) cost 20–40% more upfront
- Heat-pump capability — heating + cooling units cost more than cooling-only
- Brand — Mitsubishi and Daikin are premium; Pioneer and Senville are budget options
How to save
- Cool only what you use — mini-splits shine in zone control; don't over-spec
- Multi-zone shares the outdoor unit — buy fewer condensers, not more
- Mid-tier SEER (18–20) hits the rebate sweet spot vs premium 22+ models
- Off-season install — installers offer 5–15% discounts in spring/fall