Is it cheaper to heat with oil or gas?
It depends on local fuel prices, your equipment’s efficiency, and how you buy your oil. When compared on a cost-per-BTU basis (rather than price per gallon vs. price per therm), heating oil is often more competitive than the headline numbers suggest, especially for homeowners who shop around, pre-buy, or use a price-cap contract. Natural gas customers pay a fixed utility rate with no ability to comparison shop.
What are the disadvantages of oil heating?
The main drawbacks of heating oil are the need to monitor your tank level and schedule deliveries (though a Smart Oil Gauge and automatic delivery programs solve both), price volatility tied to the oil market, and slightly lower AFUE efficiency ratings compared to the best gas condensing boilers. On the other side of the ledger, oil systems last longer, produce more heat per unit, and give homeowners more control over where they buy their fuel.
Is oil heat safer than natural gas?
Yes, in most meaningful ways. Heating oil is non-explosive in liquid form and only combusts under controlled conditions inside a burner. Natural gas is highly flammable, can accumulate to explosive concentrations from even small leaks, and carries greater carbon monoxide risk due to odorless combustion byproducts. Oil systems also produce visible indicators (smoke, soot) when something is wrong, making problems easier to catch.
How long do oil furnaces last compared to gas furnaces?
Oil furnaces and boilers typically last 20–30 years or longer with proper annual maintenance. Gas systems generally have a lifespan of 10–15 years. Over a 30-year period, a gas homeowner may replace their system twice while an oil homeowner replaces theirs once — an important factor in total cost of ownership calculations.
Should I switch from oil to gas heating?
For most homeowners, the math doesn’t favor conversion. The upfront cost of switching is $5,000–$15,000+, the payback period often exceeds 10–20 years, and you give up fuel independence in exchange for utility pricing you can’t control. If your oil system is old and inefficient, upgrading to a modern high-efficiency oil system is usually the better financial decision.
Can heating oil be used in a gas furnace?
No. Oil and gas furnaces use fundamentally different combustion systems and are not interchangeable. An oil-fired system has a burner, nozzle, and fuel pump designed specifically for liquid fuel; a gas system uses a different type of burner and heat exchanger. Using the wrong fuel in either system would be dangerous and would destroy the equipment.