- This article only applies to a unique feature found in some heat pump systems.
- If you don’t have a heat pump but your home is cold, try our interactive troubleshooter to fix offline, power, and help messages on your Nest thermostat. If your furnace or radiators aren’t working, you may need to have a local HVAC professional service your system.
- If you have a heat pump but the Emergency Heat option doesn't appear on your Nest thermostat, refer to the troubleshooting section.
Heat pump basics
- Heat pumps are typically located outside of the home and look like an air conditioner.
- Contrary to their name, heat pumps can provide both heating and cooling.
- If you don’t know if you have a heat pump, follow these instructions.
- Some heat pump systems include a feature called emergency heat that can be manually turned on if the primary heating system isn’t working or keeping your home warm enough.
- You shouldn’t need to use emergency heat often, typically only in very cold weather. But if you need to run it regularly, your system may need servicing from a qualified HVAC technician.
- Emergency heat and Auxiliary Heat are different types of backup heating and operate differently. Emergency heat must be turned on manually while Nest thermostats can use Auxiliary Heat automatically as needed.
How to tell if your system has Emergency Heat
There are a few ways to tell if your system has Emergency Heat:
- Your current thermostat has a switch or a button labeled “Emergency.”
- Your current thermostat has a terminal labeled E, and there’s a wire in it.
- Your heat pump’s manual or manufacturer says your model has it.
- Contact a local professional. They’ll be able to tell if your system has Emergency Heat, install your Google Nest thermostat, and set it up correctly.
Important: Emergency Heat and Auxiliary Heat are different types of backup heating and operate differently. Emergency Heat must be turned on manually while Nest thermostats can use Auxiliary Heat automatically as needed.
Set up Emergency Heat
- If you have a heat pump system with emergency heat, the app will walk you through setup during installation.
- The app will ask you to enter the wires that your current thermostat uses. Then it will give you a Nest thermostat wiring diagram that’s customized for your system. Always follow this diagram to put the emergency heat wire into the right Nest thermostat terminal.
- After you’ve connected the emergency heat wire, the app will ask you for more information. Check the troubleshooting section below for the correct settings, if needed.
Turn Emergency Heat on or off
- You can manually switch your heat pump’s emergency heat on or off with your Nest thermostat. You'll only find this option if your system has emergency heat.
- Running emergency heat is usually expensive and inefficient. If you find that you need to use it often, your heat pump may not be working as well as it should. Have a local HVAC technician test your system to diagnose and fix possible problems.
Emergency heat switching instructions depend on the thermostat model you have. Select your thermostat below.
Nest Thermostat and Nest Learning Thermostat (4th gen)
Home app
- Open the Home app .
- Tap and hold your device's tile.
- At the top right, tap Settings Thermostat Emergency Heat.
- Tap the switch to turn it on or off.
On your thermostat
- Go to Settings Emergency Heat .
- Select Continue Yes to turn it on. If Emergency Heat is already running, select Turn off or Leave on.
Nest Learning Thermostat and Thermostat E
Turn emergency heat on
- Press the thermostat ring to bring up the Quick View menu.
- Go to Settings Equipment.
- Select Continue when the wire diagram appears.
- Select Continue a second time when you find a summary of your system.
- Select Emer. Heat.
- Select Emer. Heat again (Nest Learning Thermostat) or Turn On (Nest Thermostat E) to confirm that you’d like to turn emergency heat on.
Your Nest thermostat will use Emergency Heat to reach your set temperature as needed until you manually turn it off.
Turn Emergency Heat off
- Press the thermostat ring to bring up the Quick View menu.
- Select Thermostat .
- Then select Turn Off.
Your Nest thermostat will then resume heating normally.
If your heat pump's emergency heat feature isn't working after you’ve finished installation, or there's no Emergency Heat option for your Nest thermostat:
- Your system doesn’t have Emergency Heat. Go to the first section of this article for steps on how to check.
- The thermostat’s wires aren’t in the right terminal. Double check your wiring diagram and that the wires are in the correct terminal on your Nest thermostat.
- Your Nest thermostat isn’t set up right. The correct settings depend on your Nest thermostat model:
Select the thermostat you have: Nest Learning Thermostat
(4th gen)
Nest Thermostat
Nest Thermostat E
Nest Learning Thermostat
(3rd gen or earlier)
How to tell which thermostat you have Nest Thermostat and Nest Learning Thermostat (4th gen)
- Pull off your thermostat’s display to check if there’s a wire in the Star OB terminal.
- Next, open the Home app .
- Tap and hold your device's tile.
- At the top right, tap Settings Thermostat.
- Emergency Heat should be listed under Equipment. If it is, it will say Off or On. There should also be Emergency heat type and Emergency heat source listed under "System details."
- If Emergency Heat doesn't appear, tap on Wiring. The Star OB terminal should say Heat pump next to it. If it doesn’t, either you don’t have a heat pump, your thermostat is wired incorrectly, or the wires weren’t configured properly during setup.
Nest Learning Thermostat (3rd gen or earlier)
- Go to Settings Equipment for a diagram of the wires that are connected to your thermostat. You’ll also find which function they control.
- If there's a wire in the Star terminal, make sure it says Emergency Heat in the thermostat’s Equipment menu.
- If there are no wires in the Star terminal or O/B terminal, you either don’t have a heat pump system or your thermostat is wired incorrectly. Both of these wires are needed for emergency heat.
- If there are wires in the Star terminal and O/B terminal, pull of your thermostat display and make sure the wires aren't corroded, fully inserted into the terminal, and that the terminal button stays down.
- If the Star terminal is not set as Emergency Heat, and you’re not sure if you should have Emergency Heat, contact a local professional for help.
If you’re sure your system has emergency heat, double check the Star terminal's setting.
- Choose Settings from the main menu.
- Turn to Equipment.
- Select Continue when the wire diagram appears.
- Select Continue a second time when you find a summary of your system.
- Choose Wire Type.
- Select E: Emergency.
- The Emer. Heat option will now be available in the Equipment menu.
If there's no option for E: Emergency, the Nest thermostat does not detect an O/B wire. Emergency heat is only compatible with Heat Pump systems. Check to make sure that your O/B wire is fully inserted.
Nest Thermostat E
Check in Settings Equipment. You’ll find a picture of which wires are connected to your Nest thermostat and which function they control.
- If there are no wires in the O/B terminal or W1 terminal, make sure they haven’t come unplugged. Both of these wires are needed for Emergency Heat.
- If there's a wire in the W1 terminal, make sure it says AUX heat.
Note: If Alt heat (not AUX heat) appears, your Nest Thermostat E is configured to work with a dual fuel system. You won’t find an option to use Emergency Heat, but your thermostat will automatically use alternate heat when needed.- If there's a wire in the O/B terminal, make sure it says Heat Pump.