ACiQR-454B

ACiQ 24000 BTU Mini Split Heat Pump AC System | Heats Down to -22° F & Beyond | Single Zone | R454B

24000 BTU
ACiQ 24000 BTU Mini Split Heat Pump AC System | Heats Down to -22° F & Beyond | Single Zone | R454B
Complete system
Complete system
Condenser
Condenser
Gas furnace
Gas furnace
Evaporator coil
Evaporator coil
Detail
Detail
✓ In stock, ships nationwide
Price
$3,239.00
Your total$3,239.00
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Key features

  • 24,000 BTU capacity covers large single zones up to approximately 1,000-1,500 sq ft
  • Rated for heating operation down to -22 degrees F for year-round use in cold climates
  • Uses R-454B refrigerant, a lower-GWP next-generation alternative to R-410A
  • Inverter-driven variable-speed compressor for modulating output and quieter operation
  • 12-year warranty included, sold factory-direct with no dealer markup added
  • Single-zone ductless configuration with wall-mount indoor air handler

About this system

The ACiQ 24,000 BTU single-zone mini split heat pump is a ductless system sized for large rooms, open-concept living areas, or garage workshops running roughly 1,000 to 1,500 square feet depending on insulation and climate. It runs on R-454B, a lower-global-warming-potential refrigerant that is increasingly the industry standard as older R-410A systems are phased out, so this unit is already aligned with near-future regulations. The heat pump function is rated to operate in outdoor temperatures as low as -22 degrees Fahrenheit, which puts it in the same cold-climate category as hyper-heat systems from the major Japanese brands, making it a realistic primary heating source in colder northern climates rather than just a shoulder-season supplement.

ACiQ is AC Direct’s house brand, and the value proposition is straightforward: the company sells factory-direct without dealer markup, passes much of that savings to the buyer, and backs the unit with a 12-year warranty. The actual manufacturer has not been publicly disclosed, though forum discussion frequently points toward connections to the ICP and Carrier family of brands. That lineage is unconfirmed, but early owner feedback consistently notes quiet indoor unit operation, solid cooling and heating performance, and responsive customer support. The trade-off is that the brand is relatively new, independent long-term reliability data is limited, and the direct-sale model means you source your own installer rather than leaning on a dealer network.

The HVAC.best Review
Reviewed by Dave Watson, HVAC.best
Score 3.8/5

The ACiQ 24,000 BTU mini split offers a compelling combination of cold-climate heat pump capability, next-generation refrigerant, and a 12-year warranty at a price well below name-brand competition. Early owner reports are positive, but the brand is new enough that long-term reliability data simply does not exist yet, so buyers are making a bet on an unproven track record in exchange for meaningful upfront savings. For cost-conscious buyers who are comfortable sourcing their own installer and accepting some uncertainty, it is a strong option; for those who prioritize proven reliability above all else, established Japanese brands remain the safer call.

Efficiency4.0
Value4.5
Reliability3.0
Warranty4.5
Install-friendliness3.0

Overall score is the average of the five ratings above.

What we like

  • Factory-direct pricing undercuts Mitsubishi, Daikin, and Fujitsu by a meaningful margin
  • Genuine cold-climate rating to -22 degrees F supports primary heating use in northern regions
  • R-454B refrigerant is forward-compatible with evolving EPA regulations
  • 12-year warranty without dealer markup is longer than most competitors offer at this price tier
  • Early owners consistently report quiet indoor operation and responsive customer support

Trade-offs

  • Consumer Reports has not yet ranked ACiQ due to insufficient long-term field data
  • Undisclosed manufacturer makes it harder to cross-reference parts availability or service history
  • No dealer network means you must independently find and vet a qualified installer
  • Brand is new enough that long-term compressor and coil durability remain unproven in the field
Best for: Budget-minded homeowners heating or cooling a large room or open-plan space in a cold climate who are comfortable arranging independent installation and accepting a newer brand's unestablished long-term track record. Look elsewhere if If you want a brand with decades of documented field reliability, a local dealer for service support, and Consumer Reports rankings to reference, look at Mitsubishi's Hyper-Heat MXZ or Daikin's Aurora series instead.

What homeowners and pros say about ACiQ

Homeowners who have purchased ACiQ systems generally report satisfaction with day-to-day operation, calling out low noise levels from the indoor unit and reliable temperature control as consistent strengths. Because Consumer Reports has not yet ranked the brand due to insufficient long-term data, those early impressions are the most substantial independent signal available. The specific failure modes that buyers should be aware of are the ones inherent to the brand’s structure rather than documented mechanical defects: the undisclosed manufacturer makes it genuinely harder to source parts or find a technician with prior experience on the platform, and service depends on independent contractors since there is no dealer network to fall back on. Neither issue is a dealbreaker, but both add friction compared to calling a local Mitsubishi or Daikin dealer.

HVAC professionals who have worked on ACiQ equipment tend to note that the hardware itself appears well-assembled and that the inverter-driven systems behave similarly to other variable-speed mini splits in the field. The recurring professional concern mirrors the homeowner one: because the OEM is not named, ordering replacement components or verifying part compatibility requires extra legwork. Contractors also note that customers sometimes underestimate installation complexity on a 24,000 BTU unit, particularly when longer line set runs or challenging mounting locations are involved, so budgeting labor carefully matters as much as the equipment price. The 12-year warranty is consistently cited as a genuine differentiator for a direct-sale brand at this price position.

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 24,000 BTU Single-Zone Mini Split Heat Pump (R-454B) Not published in provided specs Variable Value pick
Mitsubishi MSZ-FS24NA / MUZ-FS24NAH Hyper-Heat ~20 SEER2 Variable Significantly higher than ACiQ
Daikin Aurora Series FTXV24WVJU / RXV24WVJU ~18-20 SEER2 Variable Moderately higher than ACiQ
Fujitsu XLTH Series ASU24RGLX / AOU24RLXFZ ~19 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 this unit actually heat my home when outdoor temps drop below zero?

ACiQ rates this system for heating operation down to -22 degrees Fahrenheit, which is consistent with what the industry calls hyper-heat or cold-climate heat pump performance. Real-world output does decrease as temperatures fall, so you should size the system with a load calculation that accounts for your coldest design days rather than assuming full rated BTU output at extreme low temps.

Who actually makes ACiQ equipment, and does it matter?

ACiQ is AC Direct's house brand and the underlying manufacturer has not been publicly disclosed. Forum speculation links it to the ICP and Carrier family of brands, but that is unconfirmed. It matters primarily for parts sourcing and service: because the OEM is not named, cross-referencing replacement components or finding a technician already familiar with the platform is harder than with a Mitsubishi or Daikin unit.

Is R-454B refrigerant going to cause service problems or extra costs down the road?

R-454B is a next-generation refrigerant designed to replace R-410A as EPA regulations tighten, so buying a unit that already uses it avoids the retrofit situation that buyers of older R-410A systems will eventually face. Service technicians will need R-454B certification and equipment, which is becoming standard, but availability and pricing for the refrigerant are still normalizing compared to the well-established R-410A supply chain.

How do I find someone to install this if ACiQ does not have a dealer network?

Because the system is sold direct, you are responsible for finding a licensed HVAC contractor in your area independently. Look for contractors with EPA 608 certification and experience with ductless mini split installations specifically; not all HVAC technicians are equally comfortable with mini split line sets, flaring, and commissioning. Getting two or three quotes is advisable since labor pricing for mini split installs varies widely.

What does the 12-year warranty actually cover, and are there registration requirements?

ACiQ's 12-year warranty is one of the longer coverage periods available at this price point and is offered without dealer markup. You should confirm the exact terms directly with ACiQ or AC Direct, including whether registration within a specific window is required to activate the full term, what labor coverage if any is included, and how warranty service claims are processed given the direct-sale model.

Specifications

Furnace output 24000 BTU
Refrigerant R-454B
Image, specs, price and configurable options read from the AC Direct product page