GoodmanR-32

Goodman R32 40000 BTU 80% Multi-Speed ECM Gas Furnace Upflow / Horizontal (GR9S800403AN)

40000 BTU • Upflow • Model GR9S800403AN
Goodman R32 40000 BTU 80% Multi-Speed ECM Gas Furnace Upflow / Horizontal (GR9S800403AN)
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$1,144.00
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Key features

  • 40,000 BTU heating output suited for smaller homes or zone applications
  • 80% AFUE single-stage gas heat with standard venting, no condensate drain required
  • Multi-speed ECM blower motor reduces fan energy consumption versus PSC motors
  • Upflow and horizontal installation configurations supported
  • R-32 refrigerant platform for future system compatibility
  • Compatible with Goodman's standard communicating and non-communicating thermostat controls

About this system

The Goodman GR9S800403AN is a 40,000 BTU, 80% AFUE upflow/horizontal gas furnace built around the newer R-32 refrigerant platform. At 80% AFUE, roughly one-fifth of the fuel you burn exits as flue gas rather than heat, which is an honest mid-tier efficiency rating. It is not a 96% condensing unit, so expect annual fuel bills to reflect that gap versus high-efficiency models, but installation is simpler because it does not require a condensate drain line or PVC venting. The multi-speed ECM blower motor is the standout feature here: unlike a single-speed PSC motor, the ECM varies airflow to match the heating load, which cuts fan electricity use meaningfully and tends to improve comfort and humidity control compared to older fixed-speed designs.

At 40,000 BTU this is a compact output, appropriate for smaller homes, tight zones, or climates where supplemental or backup heat is the primary use case rather than whole-home primary heating in a cold region. The upflow/horizontal configuration gives installers flexibility in tight mechanical rooms or attic applications, but proper sizing and static pressure calculations remain critical. This unit is squarely aimed at budget-conscious homeowners who want a named brand with dealer support at a price point 15 to 25 percent below Carrier, Trane, or Lennox equivalents, and who are comfortable accepting that long-term performance will depend heavily on who installs and maintains it.

The HVAC.best Review
Reviewed by Dave Watson, HVAC.best
Score 3.3/5

The GR9S800403AN delivers solid entry-level value for smaller heating loads: the ECM blower is a genuine upgrade over basic fixed-speed furnaces, and the 80% AFUE keeps installation simple. The trade-off is that Goodman's real-world reliability record is uneven after year 7, and long-term ownership costs depend heavily on install quality and proactive maintenance.

Efficiency3.0
Value4.0
Reliability2.5
Warranty3.5
Install-friendliness3.5

Overall score is the average of the five ratings above.

What we like

  • Price typically 15 to 25 percent below comparable Carrier, Trane, and Lennox units
  • Multi-speed ECM blower cuts fan electricity use and improves comfort over single-speed motors
  • 80% AFUE with standard flue venting keeps upfront installation cost lower than 96% condensing units
  • Upflow and horizontal configurations offer genuine flexibility for different mechanical room layouts
  • Widely available dealer and parts network across the US makes service calls practical

Trade-offs

  • 80% AFUE means roughly 20% of fuel cost is lost to exhaust, a real long-term expense versus 95-96% units
  • Goodman's ConsumerAffairs score sits around 2.5 out of 5, with repair costs climbing noticeably after roughly year 7
  • Dual-run capacitors are the most commonly reported failure point across Goodman equipment, typically a 300 to 600 dollar repair
  • Performance and longevity are unusually sensitive to installation quality, meaning a poor install can undermine the value proposition entirely
Best for: Homeowners in mild to moderate climates with smaller square footage who prioritize lower upfront cost and straightforward installation over peak long-term efficiency. Look elsewhere if If you are heating a larger home in a cold climate, plan to stay in the house long-term, or want a unit that is less sensitive to installation variables, stepping up to a 95-plus AFUE unit from Carrier, Trane, or Lennox is worth the premium.

What homeowners and pros say about Goodman

Homeowners who have owned Goodman furnaces tend to split into two camps, and the GR9S800403AN sits in the same conversation. On Google dealer reviews Goodman equipment earns around 3.8 out of 5 across hundreds of reviews per location, with affordability cited most often as the reason buyers chose it. On ConsumerAffairs the picture is rougher, closer to 2.5 out of 5, though that platform skews heavily toward owners who had problems rather than owners who are satisfied. The consistent thread in negative feedback is repair costs that start to accumulate after roughly year 7, which lines up with documented failure patterns across the brand: dual-run capacitors are the single most commonly reported part to fail on Goodman equipment, typically a 300 to 600 dollar fix that a competent technician can handle in a short visit. Less routine are evaporator coil leaks, which appear in a meaningful share of owner accounts and can be considerably more expensive to address.

HVAC technicians who work on Goodman equipment regularly tend to hold a pragmatic view: the units are straightforward to service, parts are widely available, and the lower upfront cost is real. The caveat they raise most often is that Goodman’s longevity leans harder on installation quality than premium brands do. A careful, properly sized install with correct static pressure and clean ductwork can get solid years out of one of these furnaces. A rushed or poorly matched installation tends to accelerate the wear patterns that show up in the complaint forums. For this specific 40,000 BTU model, the multi-speed ECM blower is a genuine step up from the most basic fixed-speed alternatives at this price tier, but the 80% AFUE rating means it will always carry a fuel cost disadvantage against condensing units over a long ownership horizon.

Sources: ConsumerAffairs Goodman owner reviews, AHRI Directory of Certified Product Performance, U.S. DOE appliance and equipment efficiency standards, Goodman product specification sheets.

How it compares

Brand Comparable model SEER2 Stage Price position
Goodman GR9S800403AN N/A (gas furnace) Single-stage Value pick
Carrier Performance 80 (58TP series) N/A (gas furnace) Single-stage 15 to 25 percent above Goodman
Trane S8X1 (80% AFUE single-stage) N/A (gas furnace) Single-stage 15 to 25 percent above Goodman
Lennox Merit ML180 (80% AFUE) N/A (gas furnace) Single-stage 20 to 30 percent above Goodman

Competitor rows are comparable single-stage units at similar efficiency; price is relative position, not a quote.

Questions about this system

Is 40,000 BTU enough to heat my house?

At 40,000 BTU this furnace is sized for smaller homes, typically under 1,000 to 1,400 square feet depending on climate, insulation quality, and ceiling height. A proper Manual J load calculation from your HVAC contractor is the only reliable way to confirm sizing before purchase, and oversizing or undersizing both cause real problems.

Why does this furnace list R-32 if it is a gas furnace?

The R-32 designation on this product line refers to the refrigerant used in Goodman's broader system platform and coil compatibility, not the combustion process itself. The furnace burns natural gas or propane; R-32 becomes relevant if you pair it with a matched Goodman air handler or coil in a split system.

What does 80% AFUE actually cost me compared to a 96% model?

On a 100-dollar gas bill, an 80% AFUE furnace loses about 20 dollars to flue exhaust, while a 96% unit loses roughly four dollars. Over a full heating season that gap adds up, and in colder climates the payback period for a higher-efficiency unit is often five to eight years. In mild climates or for low heating loads the math is less compelling.

What are the most common repairs I should budget for?

Across Goodman equipment broadly, dual-run capacitors are the most frequently reported failure, typically costing 300 to 600 dollars to replace and usually a straightforward fix. Evaporator coil leaks also show up in a meaningful share of owner reports, which can be a more expensive repair, so keeping up with annual maintenance and filter changes is practical self-protection.

Does the ECM blower motor make a noticeable difference versus a standard motor?

Yes, in two practical ways: ECM motors use significantly less electricity at partial speeds compared to PSC single-speed motors, which shows up in monthly utility bills. They also ramp airflow gradually rather than blasting full speed immediately, which most homeowners find quieter and which helps distribute heat more evenly before the blower reaches full output.

Specifications

Furnace output 40000 BTU
Configuration Upflow
Refrigerant R-32
Model GR9S800403AN
Image, specs, price and configurable options read from the AC Direct product page