Right-sized zones
Match indoor units to the rooms and comfort problems you want to solve.
Plan a ductless mini split installation around the rooms you actually use. Start with a clear planning estimate, then confirm equipment sizing, access, electrical needs, and final scope.

A more focused comfort plan
A mini split can be a practical fit for additions, garages, studios, older homes, and rooms that never feel comfortable. The right plan starts with the space, not a one-size-fits-all equipment list.

Designed around your space
Match indoor units to the rooms and comfort problems you want to solve.
Plan wall locations, outdoor equipment, drainage, and line routing before work begins.
Review access, electrical capacity, and local requirements before the final quote.




From idea to installation plan
Select your zones, access, line-set distance, and likely add-ons.
Tell us about the rooms, existing equipment, and preferred timeline.
Equipment sizing and site conditions are reviewed before pricing is final.
Choose the next step after the plan and final scope make sense.
Your project, your estimate
Use approximate details. Your result is a planning estimate; equipment sizing and final scope are confirmed before work begins.
Choose the zones and project details you know now. The estimate updates as you refine the plan.
This is a planning estimate, not a binding quote. Equipment sizing, electrical capacity, access, drainage, permits, and final scope are confirmed before work begins.
Planning range only. Final pricing follows equipment sizing and confirmation of access, electrical capacity, drainage, permits, and scope.
Plan for the real space
The best result balances equipment, placement, access, drainage, and the way each space is used.


Common questions
A zone generally represents one independently controlled room or area. The right count depends on layout, room use, exposure, and equipment sizing.
No. It is a planning estimate based on the details you provide. Final pricing follows equipment sizing and confirmation of access, electrical capacity, drainage, permits, and scope.
Ductless mini splits are designed to condition rooms without extending a traditional duct system. The specific installation approach depends on the building and selected equipment.
Placement depends on clearances, service access, line routing, drainage, sound considerations, and local requirements. Those details are confirmed during scope review.
Possibly. Requirements vary with the equipment, existing electrical capacity, property, and local rules. The planner lets you flag these items without treating them as confirmed.
Start with a clearer plan
Build a planning estimate in a few minutes, then decide whether a scope review makes sense.