Goodman 3.5 Ton AC And 100000 BTU 80% AFUE Gas Furnace System | 15.2 SEER2 AC | Multi-Speed ECM Low NOx Furnace | Horizontal | R32





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Key features
- 3.5-ton cooling capacity with 15.2 SEER2 efficiency rating
- 100,000 BTU output gas furnace at 80% AFUE with multi-speed ECM blower
- Horizontal configuration for attic, crawlspace, or side-discharge installations
- R-32 refrigerant with lower global-warming potential than R-410A
- Low NOx burner design for compliance in emissions-restricted regions
- Multi-speed ECM motor improves dehumidification and airflow consistency
About this system
This Goodman bundle pairs a 3.5-ton, 15.2 SEER2 air conditioner with a 100,000 BTU, 80% AFUE multi-speed ECM gas furnace in a horizontal configuration, making it a practical fit for homes with attic or crawlspace installations where upflow or downflow units simply won’t work. The horizontal layout is less common than vertical configurations, so the narrower parts availability and fewer installers comfortable with the orientation are worth factoring into your planning before purchase. R-32 refrigerant gives this system a lower global-warming potential than older R-410A equipment and is increasingly the industry standard going forward.
At 15.2 SEER2, the air conditioner lands at the entry level of federally compliant efficiency. It will consume noticeably more electricity over a cooling season than a 17 or 18 SEER2 system, but it costs meaningfully less upfront. The 80% AFUE furnace means 20 cents of every heating dollar exits through the flue, so homeowners in colder climates with long heating seasons may find a 95% or 96% AFUE unit pays back the price difference within a few years. For mild to moderate heating climates, the 80% unit is a reasonable economic choice. The multi-speed ECM blower motor does improve airflow efficiency and humidity control compared to a single-speed PSC motor, which is a genuine comfort upgrade at this price tier.
This Goodman bundle delivers code-compliant cooling and adequate heating at a price point roughly 15 to 25 percent below comparable Trane, Lennox, or Carrier systems. The horizontal configuration limits the installer pool, and long-term ownership costs can close the upfront savings gap if capacitor, coil, or compressor issues arise after year seven. It is a workable buy when paired with a skilled installer and realistic expectations about the brand's mid-tier reliability track record.
Overall score is the average of the five ratings above.
What we like
- Priced 15 to 25 percent below comparable premium-brand systems
- Multi-speed ECM blower motor improves comfort and humidity control over single-speed alternatives
- R-32 refrigerant is lower GWP and increasingly well-supported by technicians
- Low NOx burner broadens compliance in stricter emissions jurisdictions
- 15.2 SEER2 meets 2023 federal minimums, so the equipment is current-generation
Trade-offs
- 80% AFUE is the lowest efficiency tier; significant long-term fuel cost disadvantage in colder climates
- Compressor lifespan averages 10 to 14 years versus 15 to 20 years for premium brands
- Horizontal-only configuration reduces the number of qualified installers and available replacement parts locally
- ConsumerAffairs reviews average around 2.5 out of 5, with repair costs after year 7 as a recurring complaint
What homeowners and pros say about Goodman
Homeowners who have purchased Goodman equipment tend to land in two camps. Those who had a skilled installer and caught any early refrigerant or charge issues in the first year often report years of uneventful service. Those who experienced problems cite repair costs that climb noticeably after the seven-year mark, a pattern reflected in Goodman’s roughly 2.5 out of 5 score on ConsumerAffairs, a channel that skews toward complaints but is nonetheless consistent in its themes. Google dealer reviews across Goodman installers average around 3.8 out of 5, where the most common positive note is the lower purchase price compared to Trane, Carrier, or Lennox systems of similar capacity.
HVAC technicians generally describe Goodman as serviceable equipment with predictable weak points. Dual-run capacitors are the most common call-back item and are inexpensive to fix, but evaporator coil leaks and a compressor lifespan that tends to run 10 to 14 years rather than the 15 to 20 years typical of premium brands mean that ownership costs can narrow the upfront savings over a long installation life. For this horizontal-mount configuration specifically, technicians add a caution: the installer’s experience with horizontal setups matters more than usual, because improper slope, drain routing, or airflow restriction in a horizontal unit can accelerate coil and blower issues regardless of brand. A minority of first-year refrigerant leak reports point back to charge and installation quality rather than manufacturing defects, reinforcing that technician selection is as important as equipment selection with this brand.
Sources: ConsumerAffairs Goodman owner reviews, AHRI Directory of Certified Product Performance, U.S. DOE appliance and equipment efficiency standards, Goodman product specification sheets.
What it costs to run
At 15.2 SEER2, cooling this 3.5-ton system for a typical 1200-hour cooling season at the U.S. average electricity rate of $0.17/kWh works out to roughly $564 per year in cooling, about $75 less per year than a minimum-efficiency 13.4 SEER2 unit of the same size. Your real cost depends on your climate and local rate.
Method: (42,000 BTU/hr ÷ 15.2 SEER2) × 1200 hours ÷ 1000 × $0.17/kWh. Rate source: U.S. EIA average; cooling hours: moderate-climate estimate.
How it compares
| Brand | Comparable model | SEER2 | Stage | Price position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goodman | GMEC96 + GSX16 3.5T Horizontal Bundle | 15.2 | Single-stage AC / Multi-speed furnace | Value pick |
| Carrier | Comfort 15 (24ACC6) with 58MCA furnace | 15.2 | Single-stage | 15 to 25 percent higher than this Goodman bundle |
| Trane | XR15 (4TTR5) with S8X1 80% furnace | 15.0 | Single-stage | 15 to 25 percent higher than this Goodman bundle |
| Lennox | Merit ML15XC1 with ML195 80% furnace | 15.2 | Single-stage | 20 to 30 percent higher than this Goodman bundle |
Competitor rows are comparable single-stage units at similar efficiency; price is relative position, not a quote.
Questions about this system
Why is this listed as horizontal only, and does that limit who can install it?
Horizontal configuration means the air handler sits on its side, drawing air in one end and discharging it out the other, which suits attics, crawlspaces, and tight mechanical closets where a vertical cabinet won't fit. It does limit your installer pool because fewer technicians work with horizontal units regularly, and some local distributors stock fewer horizontal-specific parts. Confirm your chosen contractor has horizontal installation experience before purchasing.
Is R-32 refrigerant easy to service, and what should I know about it?
R-32 is increasingly common in new residential equipment and most established HVAC technicians are certified to handle it. It has a lower global-warming potential than R-410A and operates at similar pressures, so transition costs for the service industry have been manageable. One practical note: R-32 is mildly flammable, so it requires A2L-rated equipment and handling procedures, which your installer should already be set up for.
What are the most common repair issues I should budget for with this Goodman system?
Dual-run capacitors are the most frequently reported failure, typically costing 300 to 600 dollars to repair and usually a straightforward fix. Evaporator coil leaks appear in a meaningful share of owner reports and are more expensive to address. Compressor life tends to average 10 to 14 years on Goodman equipment, shorter than the 15 to 20 years often seen on premium-brand compressors, so budgeting for a potential compressor replacement or system swap in that window is realistic.
Will the 80% AFUE furnace cost significantly more to run than a 96% unit?
In practical terms, an 80% AFUE furnace loses 20% of fuel energy through the flue versus about 4% for a 96% unit. In a moderate heating climate where you spend around 1,200 dollars a year on gas heating, the difference is roughly 190 to 220 dollars annually. In a colder climate with higher gas bills, the gap widens and the payback period on upgrading to high efficiency shrinks, sometimes to under five years.
Does Goodman's warranty actually cover the compressor and coil for the full stated term?
Goodman's registered warranty covers the compressor and functional parts for 10 years and the heat exchanger for a longer period, but registration must be completed within a defined window after installation or coverage defaults to a shorter unregistered term. The warranty covers parts only, not labor, so an out-of-warranty repair on a coil or compressor means you absorb the service call and labor costs entirely, which can be substantial.
Specifications
| Cooling capacity | 3.5 Ton |
| Efficiency | 15.2 SEER2 |
| Furnace output | 100000 BTU |
| Furnace efficiency | 80% AFUE |
| Configuration | Horizontal |
| Refrigerant | R-32 |