SEER2 replaced SEER as the US standard for measuring air conditioner and heat pump cooling efficiency in January 2023. If you are comparing mini-splits from before and after this change, or trying to understand why a unit's efficiency number looks lower on a newer spec sheet, this guide explains exactly what changed, why SEER2 is more accurate, and how to use it when shopping for a mini-split in 2026.
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What Is SEER?
SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio) measures how much cooling a system delivers per unit of electricity consumed over a full cooling season. Higher SEER = more cooling per dollar of electricity. The original SEER standard used test conditions that did not fully reflect real-world installation losses — particularly duct losses in central systems and external static pressure differences in ductless systems.
What Changed with SEER2
The US Department of Energy updated the test procedure in 2023. Key changes:
- Higher external static pressure in testing — reflecting real-world conditions where ductwork resistance reduces system efficiency
- More conservative airflow assumptions — closer to actual installation performance
- Result: SEER2 ratings are numerically 4–7% lower than SEER for the same equipment
How to Convert Between SEER and SEER2
| Old SEER Rating | Approximate SEER2 Equivalent | Efficiency Tier |
|---|---|---|
| 14 SEER | ~13.4 SEER2 | Minimum efficiency (pre-2023) |
| 16 SEER | ~15.2 SEER2 | Mid-efficiency |
| 18 SEER | ~17.2 SEER2 | High efficiency |
| 20 SEER | ~19.0 SEER2 | Premium efficiency |
| 25+ SEER | ~23.8+ SEER2 | Top tier — cold-climate models |
Current Federal Minimum Standards (2026)
As of 2023, the federal minimum SEER2 for split-system air conditioners and heat pumps in most US regions is 13.4 SEER2 (equivalent to approximately 14 SEER). Southern states (SE, SW) have higher minimums. Always check the current AHRI directory for your specific model and climate zone.
Frequently Asked Questions
My mini-split says 20 SEER — is that the same as 20 SEER2?
No. A 20 SEER rating converts to approximately 19.0 SEER2 under the new standard. If the spec sheet says "20 SEER" and was published before 2023, the equivalent SEER2 is about 19.0. If the spec sheet was published in 2023 or later and says "20 SEER2," that is already in the new units. Most manufacturers now publish SEER2 on all new product sheets.
Does SEER2 apply in Canada?
Canada uses EnerGuide ratings, which follow similar principles to SEER but use Canadian climate data for the seasonal calculation. SEER2 is a US-specific rating. Canadian buyers should reference the EnerGuide Energy Efficiency Rating for their specific model, which is listed on the product's EnerGuide label.
Related reading:
→ Mini-Split SEER Rating: What It Means and Why It Matters
→ Mini-Split HSPF Rating: What It Means for Heating Costs
→ Are Mini-Splits Worth It? Honest 2026 Cost-Benefit Analysis