Mini-split and ductless heat pump are the same thing — the terms describe identical technology from two different angles. A mini-split is a ductless heat pump; a ductless heat pump is a mini-split. This is the source of significant confusion for homeowners shopping for HVAC equipment, and this article explains exactly why the terms are interchangeable and when each term tends to be used.
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Why the Terms Are Identical
| Term | What It Describes | Emphasis |
|---|---|---|
| Mini-split | A split system (separate indoor + outdoor units) in compact "mini" size — always ductless | Physical configuration |
| Ductless heat pump | A heat pump (heats and cools) without ductwork — always a mini-split in residential context | Technology function |
| Ductless AC | Same mini-split — sometimes used when only the cooling function is being discussed | Cooling application |
| Ductless mini-split | Redundant but common phrasing — "ductless" is already implied by "mini-split" | Redundant emphasis |
When Each Term Gets Used
"Mini-split" is the term used by HVAC contractors, installers, and manufacturers when discussing the equipment. It is the industry-standard technical term in North America.
"Ductless heat pump" is more commonly used in policy and incentive contexts — government rebate programs, energy efficiency standards, and utility rebate documentation often use "ductless heat pump" to describe the same equipment because it emphasises the heating function and the absence of ductwork as an energy-waste source.
"Ductless AC" appears in cooling-focused marketing and in regions where air conditioning is the primary need — the southeastern US, for example, where heating is less of the value proposition.
The Key Distinction That Does Exist
The one meaningful distinction in the broader category: not all heat pumps are mini-splits. Heat pumps also come in ducted central configurations (connecting to a conventional duct system) and geothermal (ground-source) configurations. A mini-split is specifically a ductless air-source heat pump — compact, wall-mounted indoor unit, separate outdoor compressor, no ductwork.
Frequently Asked Questions
If I search "ductless heat pump rebate," will the results apply to mini-splits?
Yes — rebate programs that list "ductless heat pump" as eligible equipment apply to mini-splits. The qualifying requirement is typically a minimum HSPF2 or SEER2 efficiency rating, which your mini-split either meets or does not — the term used in the program description (mini-split, ductless heat pump, air-source heat pump) does not change what equipment qualifies.
Related reading:
→ Mini-Split vs Ductless: Is There Any Difference?
→ Mini-Split Heat Pump: How It Works, Costs and Best Brands
→ What Is a Mini-Split? Complete Beginner's Guide