Smart Thermostat: $150 That Saves $200+/Year
Ecobee or Google Nest pays back under 12 months in Upstate SC. Duke Energy offers rebates — check duke-energy.com/rebates. Available at Lowe's and Home Depot.
A smart thermostat in the Upstate pays for itself inside a year. Spartanburg summers run 95°F+ for weeks; winters drop into the 20s. Every degree of nighttime setback compounds.
Ecobee vs. Nest
Both work. Ecobee ships a remote room sensor — meaningful in multi-story Spartanburg homes where the hallway thermostat doesn’t reflect the upstairs bedroom. Nest learns your schedule without programming. For a single-story home either is fine; for a two-story go Ecobee.
Duke Energy rebate
Duke Energy Carolinas offers a $50-$75 instant rebate on qualifying smart thermostats purchased through their marketplace (duke-energy.com/rebates). Stacks with the retailer sale price.
Install
30 minutes if you have a C-wire (common wire). If you don’t — most Upstate homes built before 1990 don’t — you’ll need a C-wire adapter ($25) or an HVAC tech for about $150. Don’t skip this; without a C-wire the thermostat runs on battery scavenge and reboots unpredictably.
Settings that actually save money
Summer: 78°F when home, 82°F away, 76°F sleeping. Winter: 68°F home, 62°F away, 66°F sleeping. Every degree of setback is roughly 3% off the bill. An 8-hour daily 4° setback is 12-15% off the total — about $200/year on a typical Spartanburg HVAC bill.