
Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Waynesville, NC
What does the 'Emergency Heat' setting on your thermostat do? When should you use it? Answers for WNC homeowners. Proudly serving Waynesville & Haywood County.
Professional Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Waynesville, NC
When you need heat pump emergency heat — when to use it in Waynesville, NC, Quality Comfort Heating & Cooling is just 35 minutes west from our Asheville headquarters — meaning fast response times and reliable service. We've been the NATE-certified team that Waynesville area residents trust since 2005.
Nestled in the Smoky Mountains, Waynesville homeowners face cold winters that demand reliable heating systems. Quality Comfort provides full HVAC services to Waynesville and throughout Haywood County, including furnace repair, heat pump installation, and AC service. We're just a short drive down I-40 from our Asheville office.
Heating in Waynesville comes with unique demands. At 2,644 feet elevation, winters are longer and colder than lower-elevation communities. At nearly 2,650 feet, Waynesville averages 10–15°F colder than lower-elevation WNC towns in winter. Homes here log significantly more heating hours per season, making furnace efficiency critical to managing energy bills. The Hazelwood neighborhood's older housing stock frequently needs duct sealing and insulation upgrades to complement HVAC improvements. Our heating technicians factor in these Waynesville-specific conditions for every repair and installation.
What Is Emergency Heat?
Every heat pump thermostat has an "Emergency Heat" or "Em Heat" setting, and most homeowners in Asheville and Western North Carolina have no idea when to use it — or what it actually does. Emergency heat bypasses your heat pump entirely and relies solely on your backup heating system, which is typically electric resistance heat strips built into your air handler. This backup system is less efficient (and more expensive to operate) than your heat pump, which is why it's labeled "emergency" — it's meant for situations where the heat pump itself cannot operate.
When to Switch to Emergency Heat
Use emergency heat only when your heat pump has physically failed and cannot run — for example, if the outdoor unit is damaged, the compressor has failed, or the unit is completely iced over and the defrost cycle isn't working. Emergency heat keeps your home warm while you wait for repair. Do NOT switch to emergency heat just because it's cold outside. Modern heat pumps, especially cold climate models, are designed to heat efficiently even in sub-freezing temperatures. Running on emergency heat when the heat pump is functional wastes enormous amounts of electricity.
The Cost of Running Emergency Heat
Electric resistance heat is roughly three times more expensive to operate than a heat pump per unit of heating. If your heat pump has a COP (coefficient of performance) of 3.0, it produces three units of heat for every unit of electricity consumed. Emergency heat strips have a COP of 1.0 — they convert electricity to heat at a 1:1 ratio. Running emergency heat for even a few days during a WNC winter can add $100 to $300 to your electric bill. This is why prompt heat pump repair is critical.
Call Us Instead of Staying on Emergency Heat
If you've had to switch to emergency heat because your heat pump isn't working, call Quality Comfort right away. We provide emergency heat pump repair across Western North Carolina. The sooner we get your heat pump running again, the sooner your energy bills return to normal.
HVAC Challenges in Waynesville
At nearly 2,650 feet, Waynesville averages 10–15°F colder than lower-elevation WNC towns in winter. Homes here log significantly more heating hours per season, making furnace efficiency critical to managing energy bills. The Hazelwood neighborhood's older housing stock frequently needs duct sealing and insulation upgrades to complement HVAC improvements.
Seasonal Tip for Waynesville Homeowners
Waynesville's higher elevation means your heating season runs roughly 3 weeks longer than Asheville's. We recommend scheduling furnace maintenance by mid-September and delaying the spring AC switchover until late May to avoid unexpected cold snaps common at this altitude.

Serving Waynesville & Haywood County

Serving Waynesville
- 35 minutes west from our Asheville office
- Same-day appointments available
- 24/7 emergency response
- NATE-certified technicians
- Free estimates on installations
- Financing available, subject to credit approval
Neighborhoods We Serve
Downtown Waynesville · Frog Level · Hazelwood · Lake Junaluska · Maggie Valley Road
Need help now?
(828) 252-8544FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions About Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Waynesville
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Need Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Waynesville?
Quality Comfort is 35 minutes west away. Call today for fast, professional service.





