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Comparison

Mini-Split vs Central AC: Cost, Efficiency & When Each Wins

Quick answer

  • The decision hinges on ductwork. No usable ducts → a mini-split is usually cheaper and more efficient. Good ducts already in place → central AC often wins upfront.
  • Mini-splits run ~$2,000–$7,000 per zone ($3,000–$12,000+ for a typical multi-zone install).
  • Mini-splits are more efficient — they skip the 20–30% energy lost through ducts, and premium units exceed 30 SEER2.
  • Central AC wins on whole-home simplicity and hidden equipment when ducts already exist.

Short answer: choose a ductless mini-split if your home has no ductwork, you want room-by-room control, or you’re cooling an addition, garage, or ADU. Choose central AC if you already have good ducts and want even, whole-home cooling at a lower cost per ton. The deciding factor is almost always whether you already have usable ducts.

Comparison of mini-split ductless versus central ducted air conditioning systems
Mini-split vs. central air at a glance.

Quick verdict

Your situationBetter choice
No existing ductworkMini-split
Good existing ducts, want whole-home coolingCentral AC
Cooling an addition, garage, ADU, or one hot roomMini-split
Want different temps in different rooms (zoning)Mini-split
Lowest cost per ton across a large homeCentral AC
Highest efficiency / lowest billsMini-split
Want equipment hidden out of sightCentral AC

How each works

Central AC (ducted): one outdoor condenser and one indoor coil cool air in a single place; a blower pushes it through ducts to every room, usually on one thermostat. Mini-split (ductless): an outdoor unit connects by a small refrigerant line to one or more wall/ceiling “heads,” each cooling its own room — no ducts. Multi-zone systems run several heads off one outdoor unit, each at its own temperature.

Cost compared (2026)

SystemTypical 2026 installed costBest-case scenario
Mini-split, single zone~$3,000 (12,000 BTU)One room, addition, or garage
Mini-split, multi-zone~$2,000–$7,000/zone; $3,000–$12,000+ totalWhole home with no ducts
Central AC, ducts already exist~$3,500–$14,000Replacing an existing ducted system
Central AC + new ductworksystem + $5,000–$15,000+ for ductsAlmost never the cheaper path

If you’d have to add ductwork, the mini-split usually wins on cost; if good ducts already exist, central air is often cheaper upfront (cost-per-ton drops as you scale a single ducted system). Operating cost follows efficiency: a single-zone mini-split runs ~$30–$60/month in cooling vs. ~$80–$120/month for central air in comparable space. See our AC replacement cost guide for full central-AC pricing.

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Efficiency compared

Mini-splits hold a real edge: no duct losses (ducted systems lose 20–30% of cooling energy to leaks and heat gain), higher peak ratings (premium mini-splits exceed 30 SEER2 vs. 18–20 for high-end central), and zoning (cool only the rooms you use). That advantage matters most when you’d otherwise cool unused space or your ducts are leaky; a tight home with good ducts narrows the gap.

When a mini-split wins

  • Your home has no ductwork (older homes especially).
  • You’re cooling an addition, garage, sunroom, ADU, or converted attic the main system doesn’t reach.
  • You want room-by-room control, or one or two rooms are always too hot.
  • Efficiency and low bills are the priority and you’re fine seeing the indoor heads.

When central AC wins

  • You already have good ductwork — replacing a ducted system means no expensive duct install.
  • You want even, whole-home cooling from one system and one thermostat.
  • You prefer equipment out of sight (no wall-mounted heads).
  • You’re cooling a large home where central’s cost-per-ton advantage adds up.

FAQ

Are mini-splits cheaper than central AC?
Only when you’d otherwise have to install ductwork. Without ducts, a mini-split usually wins on total cost; with good existing ducts, central AC is often cheaper upfront.
Are mini-splits worth it?
Often yes for ductless homes, additions, zoning, or efficiency-focused buyers. They cost more per zone but skip duct losses and let you cool only the rooms you use.
Can I mix both?
Yes — many homes keep central AC for the main living space and add a mini-split for a hot room, garage, or addition the ducts don’t reach.
About this guide. HVACFixPro is an independent information and referral resource — not a contractor. Cost ranges reflect 2026 pricing and vary by home, region, and number of zones. We connect homeowners with licensed, independent professionals; all work is performed by licensed contractors.
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