Should You Invest in One?

May 2024 · 5 minute read

If your house was built according to current codes, it’s well-insulated and pretty much airtight. That means you’re warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer and you conserve energy, but there’s one problem: Air circulation.

To be healthy, your house needs to breathe as much as you do. You need oxygen-rich outside air moving through the house and stale indoor air moving out.

Keeping one or more windows open is one solution, but it isn’t practical in winter unless you’re like me and love sleeping in freezing temperatures. Even so, an open window only benefits that room.

Here’s a better idea: Installing an energy recovery ventilator (ERV). It’s an HVAC component that works on its own or in conjunction with your forced-air central heating and cooling system. It provides the entire house with fresh outdoor air while exhausting stale air. In most cases, it’s a good investment for anyone in a well insulated home.

What Is an Energy Recovery Ventilator?

Opened Air Recuperator, Filtration and ventilation systembrizmaker/Getty Images

If you live in a recently built home, you may already have an energy recovery ventilator and not know it. Some codes, like the 2020 New York City Energy Code, require ERVs or heat recovery ventilators (HRVs) in new buildings.

Go into the basement or furnace room and look for a rectangular metal box measuring about two-and-a-half feet by two feet. If it’s there, you’ll find two ports on either side for ducts that run throughout the building as well as to the outside.

If you open the cover, you’ll probably see a pair of fans and a central core made of engineered cellulose or composite resin. This is a fixed plate or stationary core ERV, and it’s the most common residential type.

Here’s how it works:

Fans simultaneously suck air from indoors and outdoors through intake ports and direct it through the core, engineered to allow the two air streams to exchange heat and moisture. After passing through the core, exhaust ports carry indoor air outdoors and outdoor air into the house.

The air coming into the house after passing though an ERV is conditioned. It’s warmer than outdoor air during the winter and cooler during the summer. The conditioned air retains some moisture, but it’s drier than the outdoor air.

Types of Energy Recovery Ventilators

When you open the cover of the ERV in your new house, you may not find a stationary core. That’s just one type. There are three others that differ by the type of heat exchanger they employ.

Not all these heat exchange technologies allow for moisture exchange, so sometimes the ERV features a desiccant to absorb moisture from the air.

ERV vs. HRV

Like an ERV, a heat recovery ventilator (HRV) exchanges heat between the incoming air streams, but it doesn’t exchange moisture. Instead of a moisture-absorbing core, it comes with a metal one. Excess moisture condenses on the metal and drips into a tray.

An HRV transfers heat more efficiently than an ERV, and works better in Northern climates where the air is colder and drier.

ERV Benefits and Drawbacks

heat recovery ventilation system installation in new house. ronstik/Getty Images

An ERV is a useful HVAC component for several reasons, but there are also reasons why you might not want one.

Benefits

Drawbacks

Cost To Install an ERV

The average cost to purchase an ERV runs between $1,000 and $1,900. To install one, you also need to purchase ductwork and other materials. These cost between $800 and $1,900 depending on the size and configuration of your house.

If you do the installation yourself, that’s all you’ll have to pay. If you opt for professional installation, you’ll pay an extra $3 to $10 per linear foot of ductwork.

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7p63MoqOyoJGjsbq5wKdlnKedZK6zwMico55nlaOys7PYZqmem5%2BrsrPFjK%2Bcp6yZoa61u9Fmnq6hlJp8