Trade certifications

Heat Pump Installer Certifications Beyond Licensing

State and local licenses tell you whether a contractor can operate in heat pump installer work, but they rarely show specialty depth. These certifications highlight safety training, manufacturer authorization, code knowledge, diagnostic skill, and third-party trade credentials homeowners can ask to verify before hiring.

Updated 2026-06-096 credentialsEspañol

Credentials to verify

NATE Heat Pump Service Certification

North American Technician Excellence

2 years
What it proves
This specialty credential tests heat pump sequence of operation, defrost controls, reversing valves, refrigerant diagnostics, airflow, auxiliary heat, controls, and cold-weather performance troubleshooting. It signals that the person or firm completed a recognized exam, training, or credentialing process and can explain the documented methods behind the work. It does not replace state licensing, permits, insurance, or manufacturer warranty requirements.
Who should have it
Technicians installing or troubleshooting air-source and ducted heat pump systems.
How to verify
Ask for the NATE ID and confirm the specialty shown in the NATE technician lookup.

EPA Section 608 Universal Technician Certification

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Lifetime
What it proves
This refrigerant credential proves knowledge of ozone-depleting and substitute refrigerants, leak repair, recovery cylinders, evacuation, recordkeeping, small appliances, high-pressure systems, and low-pressure systems. It signals that the person or firm completed a recognized exam, training, or credentialing process and can explain the documented methods behind the work. It does not replace state licensing, permits, insurance, or manufacturer warranty requirements.
Who should have it
Any technician attaching gauges, recovering, charging, or opening sealed refrigerant circuits.
How to verify
Ask for the certification card and certifying organization; EPA explains replacement and approved providers at https://www.epa.gov/section608.

BPI Air Conditioning & Heat Pump Professional

Building Performance Institute

3 years
What it proves
This credential covers residential cooling and heat pump performance, airflow, refrigerant diagnostics, duct impacts, equipment sizing concepts, electrical safety, and whole-home building science interactions. It signals that the person or firm completed a recognized exam, training, or credentialing process and can explain the documented methods behind the work. It does not replace state licensing, permits, insurance, or manufacturer warranty requirements.
Who should have it
HVAC technicians working in home performance, electrification, or utility rebate programs.
How to verify
Ask for the BPI ID and search the professional or company at https://bpi.org.

IGSHPA Accredited Installer

International Ground Source Heat Pump Association

3 years
What it proves
This geothermal credential covers ground-source heat pump loop design basics, piping, grouting, flushing, antifreeze, fusion practices, commissioning, and system troubleshooting. It signals that the person or firm completed a recognized exam, training, or credentialing process and can explain the documented methods behind the work. It does not replace state licensing, permits, insurance, or manufacturer warranty requirements.
Who should have it
Heat pump contractors installing or supervising geothermal loop and equipment projects.
How to verify
Ask for the IGSHPA accreditation card and confirm the installer through IGSHPA membership or training records.

Carbon Monoxide & Combustion Analyst

National Comfort Institute

2 years
What it proves
This credential verifies combustion testing, draft measurement, carbon monoxide diagnostics, combustion air evaluation, venting defects, appliance safety, and corrective recommendations using field instruments. It signals that the person or firm completed a recognized exam, training, or credentialing process and can explain the documented methods behind the work. It does not replace state licensing, permits, insurance, or manufacturer warranty requirements.
Who should have it
HVAC and gas technicians testing furnaces, boilers, water heaters, and other combustion equipment.
How to verify
Ask for the NCI certificate number and confirm two-year status with National Comfort Institute.

HVAC Excellence Professional Level Certification

ESCO Institute

5 years for most professional credentials
What it proves
This credential tests trade-specific HVAC knowledge for experienced technicians, including electrical circuits, components, diagnostics, system operation, safety, charging, installation, and service procedures. It signals that the person or firm completed a recognized exam, training, or credentialing process and can explain the documented methods behind the work. It does not replace state licensing, permits, insurance, or manufacturer warranty requirements.
Who should have it
Experienced HVAC technicians seeking third-party validation beyond an entry-level certificate.
How to verify
Ask for the ESCO Institute certificate and credential number, then confirm current status with ESCO support.
Emergency