According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, roughly 70% of Midwest households rely on natural gas for space heating, the highest share of any U.S. census region. U.S. Energy Information Administration. In cold-weather states like Wisconsin, that statistic tracks. The trickier question for most homeowners is not whether to heat with gas; it is which type of system works for the home. Furnaces and boilers are both gas-powered options built to handle a Wisconsin winter, but they run on different mechanics, call for different infrastructure, and deliver heat in ways that feel nothing alike.
A gas furnace heats air. Cold air gets drawn in, passes over a heat exchanger fed by a gas burner, and a blower motor moves that warmed air through the home’s duct system. Heat arrives at registers in each room. Modern high-efficiency gas furnaces, including the Bryant models available through Pharo Heating’s gas furnace installation services, reach AFUE ratings as high as 98.3%.
A boiler does something different. It heats water and circulates that water through pipes to radiators, baseboard units, or radiant floor tubing. Warmth radiates outward from surfaces rather than blowing through vents. This hydronic approach produces a steadier heat distribution and cuts out the drafty feeling that forced-air systems often create.
Both systems can get through a Dane County cold snap. The gap shows up in how each one delivers heat and holds up over a long Wisconsin winter.
Gas furnaces heat fast. When overnight temperatures slide into single digits, a high-efficiency furnace gets a cold room back up to temperature quickly. That speed counts during Wisconsin’s worst stretches in January and February. Furnaces also share ductwork with central air conditioning, giving homeowners one distribution network for both heating and cooling.
Boilers take longer to warm up but stay warmer longer. Hydronic heat does not cycle on and off the way forced air does, so room temperatures stay steadier throughout the day. Radiant floor heating, which draws from a boiler, is a strong fit for Wisconsin homes with hardwood or tile floors where cold surfaces are a daily reality from November through March.
| Gas Furnace | Boiler | |
| Upfront cost | Lower to moderate | Moderate to higher |
| Efficiency range | 80%–98.3% AFUE | 80%–97% AFUE |
| Heat distribution | Forced air through ducts | Heated water through pipes |
| Comfort feel | Fast; can feel drafty | Even and consistent |
| Cooling compatible? | Yes, shares ductwork | Separate A/C needed |
| Average lifespan | 15–20 years | 20–30 years |
Pharo’s gas furnace lineup reaches up to 98.3% AFUE; the boiler installation options top out at 97% AFUE. At those ratings, the monthly operating cost gap between the two narrows considerably for most Wisconsin households.
What already exists in the home usually settles this faster than any other consideration.
A gas furnace tends to fit best when:
A boiler tends to fit best when:
Many older Madison and Waunakee homes were built with boiler and radiator systems already in place. Swapping an aging boiler for a high-efficiency model in those cases typically costs less than converting the whole structure to forced air. Homes built in the last few decades almost always come with ductwork already installed, which tips the scales toward a gas furnace from the start.
Pharo Heating and Cooling has served Madison and the surrounding Dane County area since 1983. The team installs and services both gas furnaces and boilers, working with homeowners to identify which system fits their home’s structure, budget, and comfort needs. With factory-trained technicians and 24/7 emergency service for existing customers, Pharo carries over 40 years of local HVAC experience into every installation.
Ready to pick the right system for your home? Contact Us to schedule a consultation today.
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