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48H EXPRESS SHIPPING | LIVE SUPPORT | ENERGY SAVING FEATURES
48H EXPRESS SHIPPING | LIVE SUPPORT | ENERGY SAVING FEATURES

Mini-Split for Home Addition vs Extending Ductwork

When adding a room to your home — whether a garage conversion, sunroom, attic bedroom, or attached addition — you face a fundamental HVAC decision: extend the existing ductwork from your central system, or install a ductless mini-split for the new space. Each approach has real advantages and limitations, and the right choice depends on your existing system's capacity, the distance from the main air handler, and your long-term plans for the space.

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Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor Extend Existing Ductwork Install a Mini-Split
Upfront cost $1,500–$4,000 (duct extension + registers) $3,000–$6,000 (single-zone installed)
Existing system capacity Requires system to have reserve capacity Fully independent — no impact on existing system
Independent temperature control No — shares main system thermostat Yes — fully independent thermostat
Energy efficiency Depends on duct quality — losses of 10–30% No duct losses; highly efficient
Heating and cooling If central system provides both Yes — both in one unit
Installation disruption Significant — requires routing ducts through walls/ceilings Minimal — one 3-inch wall penetration
Best when Existing system has capacity; short duct run; space is adjacent to main system Existing system is at capacity; long distance from main system; independent control desired

When Extending Ductwork Makes Sense

  • The addition is directly adjacent to the main air handler or existing duct trunk
  • Your HVAC contractor confirms the existing system has sufficient reserve capacity
  • You want a seamless, invisible HVAC system with no wall units visible
  • The duct run is under 20 feet and can be completed without major construction

When a Mini-Split Makes More Sense

  • Your existing central system is already running at or near capacity
  • The addition is detached or far from the main system (garage, outbuilding, far corner addition)
  • You want independent temperature control in the addition — running a home office at 68°F while the rest of the house is at 72°F
  • The addition will be used intermittently — a mini-split can be turned off when the room is unoccupied, saving energy vs extending the central system that conditions the whole house regardless
  • You want to avoid major duct construction through existing finished walls

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I extend my existing ductwork to a garage addition?

Technically yes, but garages have extremely high heat gain in summer and heat loss in winter due to large doors, minimal insulation, and poor air sealing. Conditioning a garage through a central system typically overwhelms the system's capacity for that zone. A dedicated mini-split for the garage is almost always the more effective and cost-efficient approach.

Will extending ductwork reduce airflow in existing rooms?

If the existing system does not have spare capacity, yes — adding new rooms to the duct system effectively splits the existing airflow, reducing pressure and flow in existing rooms. An HVAC contractor should perform a load calculation before recommending duct extension to ensure the system can support the additional square footage.

Related reading:
Mini-Split for Sunroom: Best Options for Glass Spaces
Mini-Split for a Room Addition: Sizing and Cost
Mini-Split Sizing Guide: How to Choose the Right BTU

Mini-Split for Home Addition vs Extending Ductwork

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