GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01) vs State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2)

The GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01) is the more efficient unit: UEF 4.5 versus 3.84 — about 15% less energy for the same hot water. At national average rates that works out to about $187/year for the GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01) against $220/year for the State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2) — a $33 annual difference. The State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2) delivers more hot water in the peak hour (83 gal first-hour rating vs 75 gal).

GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01) State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2)
Uniform Energy Factor (UEF) 4.5 3.84
Fuel Electric Electric
First-hour rating 75 gal 83 gal
Rated storage volume 50 gal 68 gal
Draw pattern High High
Annual electricity use 1102 kWh/yr 1292 kWh/yr
Heat pump type 240 Volt Integrated HPWH 240 Volt Integrated HPWH
Input voltage 240 240
Max current draw 23 A 22 A
Recovery efficiency 491 % 435 %
Smart / connected capable Yes Yes
Refrigerant (GWP) R1234YF R-134a (GWP:1430)
Compressor low-temp cutoff 35 °F 37 °F
Height 48.1 in 61 in
Diameter 18.5 in 23 in
ENERGY STAR certified Yes Yes

Frequently asked questions

Which costs less to run, the GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01) or the State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2)?

The GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01): about $187/year versus $220/year for the State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2) at national average rates — a $33 annual difference.

Are the GE Profile Heat Pump 50-Gallon (PH50S10BNY01) and State Heat Pump 65-Gallon (HPAX-66-DHPT 2) both ENERGY STAR certified?

Yes — every water heater in this database is drawn from the U.S. EPA ENERGY STAR certified water heater datasets.