ACiQ 18000 BTU 2 Zone / Room Mini Split Heat Pump AC System | Heats Down To -22°F & Beyond | Choose Your Indoor Units | R454B






Check current price on AC Direct →
Key features
- 18,000 BTU total capacity split across two independently controlled zones
- Inverter-driven variable-speed compressor for modulating output and quieter operation
- Cold-climate heat pump rated for heating operation down to -22°F ambient
- Uses R-454B refrigerant, a lower-GWP alternative to R-410A
- Flexible indoor unit selection lets buyers choose air handler styles per zone
- Includes a 12-year warranty with no dealer markup added to the base coverage
About this system
The ACiQ 18,000 BTU 2-zone mini split heat pump is a dual-zone ductless system designed for homeowners who want to condition two separate rooms or areas without running ductwork. At 18,000 BTU total capacity, it is well suited for two modest-sized spaces, such as a pair of bedrooms, a garage and a home office, or a bonus room combined with a living area, where independent temperature control in each zone is a practical priority. The system uses R-454B refrigerant, a lower-global-warming-potential alternative to R-410A that is now entering the market as the industry transitions away from older refrigerants.
One of the more compelling aspects of this system is the ability to choose your indoor air handler configuration, so buyers can mix and match wall-mount cassette styles to fit the layout of each zone. The outdoor unit handles both zones from a single compressor, and the inverter-driven variable-speed technology means the system modulates output rather than cycling on and off at full blast, which supports quieter operation and more stable room temperatures. The heat pump function is rated to operate in heating mode down to negative 22 degrees Fahrenheit, which puts it in the cold-climate capable tier alongside more expensive hyper-heat competitors, though buyers should verify published low-ambient capacity data before relying on it as a sole heat source in extreme climates.
The ACiQ 18,000 BTU 2-zone system offers a genuinely competitive entry point into multi-zone ductless heating and cooling, backed by a strong warranty and capable cold-climate specs that punch above its price class. The trade-offs are real: the undisclosed manufacturer makes long-term parts sourcing less predictable, and the direct-sales model means you are responsible for finding qualified installation and service contractors yourself. For buyers who are comfortable with that independence and want to avoid name-brand markups, this system is worth serious consideration.
Overall score is the average of the five ratings above.
What we like
- Lower purchase price than comparable Mitsubishi, Daikin, or Fujitsu 2-zone systems
- 12-year warranty included without dealer network markup
- Cold-climate rated to -22°F, competitive with premium hyper-heat units
- Variable-speed inverter operation supports quiet running and stable temperatures
- R-454B refrigerant is forward-compatible with tightening environmental regulations
Trade-offs
- Manufacturer identity is not disclosed, making parts cross-referencing and service history harder to verify than with established name brands
- No dealer network means finding a qualified installer and future service technician falls entirely on the buyer
- Consumer Reports has not yet ranked ACiQ due to insufficient long-term reliability data
- Long-term compressor and component durability is unproven compared to brands with decades of field data
What homeowners and pros say about ACiQ
Early owners of ACiQ systems, including this multi-zone format, frequently highlight quiet indoor unit operation and responsive customer support through the AC Direct direct-sales channel as the standout positives in their feedback. Consumer Reports has not yet assigned ACiQ a reliability score due to the brand being too new to accumulate the long-term field data that ratings require, and that gap is an honest limitation buyers should weigh. The specific failure modes worth watching in any mini split of this class include refrigerant coil leaks at connection points if the installation is not done cleanly, compressor longevity under heavy low-ambient heating loads over many seasons, and control board reliability, all of which are areas where the ACiQ’s actual long-term record is still being established rather than confirmed.
HVAC contractors who have worked on ACiQ equipment note that the units generally install and commission without unusual complications, but the undisclosed manufacturing origin creates real friction when a technician tries to cross-reference a part number or look up service bulletins compared to working on a Mitsubishi or Daikin where documentation and parts availability are well established. The direct-to-consumer model also means the contractor you hire has no prior relationship with the brand and no factory training behind them, so technician familiarity varies. For buyers who do their homework, find a contractor willing to work on the brand, and understand that they are accepting some uncertainty in exchange for meaningful upfront savings, the ACiQ 2-zone system represents a legitimate option rather than a reckless one.
Sources: Consumer Reports heat pump ratings, HVACDirect on the ACiQ brand, AHRI Directory of Certified Product Performance, U.S. DOE appliance and equipment efficiency standards.
How it compares
| Brand | Comparable model | SEER2 | Stage | Price position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACiQ | 18,000 BTU 2-Zone Mini Split Heat Pump (R-454B) | Not published in provided specs | Variable | Value pick |
| Mitsubishi | MXZ-2C18NAHZ2 (H2i Multi-Zone) | 18+ SEER2 | Variable | Significantly higher than ACiQ |
| Daikin | 2MXS18NMVJU (Multi-Zone) | 18 SEER2 | Variable | Moderately higher than ACiQ |
| Fujitsu | AOU18RLXFZH (Halcyon Multi-Zone) | 18+ SEER2 | Variable | Moderately to significantly higher than ACiQ |
Competitor rows are comparable single-stage units at similar efficiency; price is relative position, not a quote.
Questions about this system
Can each of the two indoor zones be set to a different temperature at the same time?
Yes, each indoor air handler operates independently, so one zone can run heating while the other runs cooling or a different temperature set point, within the limits of what a shared single outdoor unit can deliver simultaneously.
What size rooms will 18,000 BTU across two zones actually cover?
As a rough starting point, 18,000 BTU total is commonly matched to roughly 700 to 900 square feet of combined conditioned space, though insulation quality, ceiling height, window area, and climate zone all affect the real answer. A Manual J load calculation from your installer will give you a reliable number for your specific rooms.
Does this system qualify for the federal 25C energy efficiency tax credit?
To qualify for the 25C credit, the system must meet the current efficiency thresholds set by the IRS and ENERGY STAR for ductless heat pumps. You should verify the published SEER2 and HSPF2 ratings on the specific model you purchase and confirm with a tax professional, since eligibility depends on the rated specs of the exact configuration you buy.
If something breaks after installation, how do I get it serviced if ACiQ does not have a dealer network?
You will need to hire an independent HVAC contractor who is certified to work on mini split systems and handle R-454B refrigerant. ACiQ's customer support can assist with warranty claims and parts, but sourcing a local technician is your responsibility, which is an important logistical difference from buying through a brand with an authorized dealer network.
Will the system actually heat effectively at -22°F or is that a peak rating under ideal conditions?
Published low-ambient ratings typically reflect the minimum operating temperature rather than full rated capacity output, meaning heating capacity and efficiency both drop as outdoor temperatures fall. You should review the manufacturer's published heating capacity curves at low ambient temperatures and not assume full BTU output at the extreme low end of the operating range.
Specifications
| Furnace output | 18000 BTU |
| Refrigerant | R-454B |