A Homeowner's Guide to Energy-Efficient Windows in 2026 (And the $600 Tax Credit Most People Miss)
If you're replacing windows this year, the difference between "Energy Star certified" and "Energy Star Most Efficient" is worth real money. Here's how to read a quote, what to actually ask for, and how to make sure the federal credit ends up in your refund.
If you're shopping for replacement windows in 2026, you're going to hear "Energy Star" a lot. Every quote you receive will claim Energy Star certification. Every brochure will have the blue logo prominently displayed. And almost every quote will, technically, be telling the truth — and almost none of them will be telling you the whole story.
Energy Star is a U.S. EPA certification with two distinct tiers. The first tier — plain "Energy Star Certified" — is the minimum required for federal tax credit eligibility, and it's the version 95 percent of replacement window quotes are written for. The second tier — "Energy Star Most Efficient" — is the top ~10 percent of certified windows, and it produces dramatically better annual savings. Most homeowners never hear about it because the people quoting them rarely sell it.
"Energy Star Certified" is the minimum tier. "Energy Star Most Efficient" is the top tier. Both qualify for the $600 federal tax credit. Only one saves you $600+ a year afterward.
What the federal credit actually covers
The Internal Revenue Code §25C credit — formally the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit — provides up to $600 per year for qualifying replacement windows and skylights. The credit was extended through 2032 under the Inflation Reduction Act, and it has a few rules that trip up homeowners regularly:
What qualifies for the $600 credit
- Energy Star Certified windows. Either tier is eligible — Certified or Most Efficient. Both work.
- Primary residence only. Vacation homes, rental properties, and new construction don't qualify. Resale primary residences do.
- 30% of the window cost back as a credit, capped at $600 per year.
- Annual reset. The cap is per tax year. If you replace half your windows in 2026 and half in 2027, you can claim up to $600 each year.
- Labor doesn't count. Only the windows themselves — not installation labor — count toward the 30% calculation.
- You need IRS Form 5695. Most homeowners forget to file it. The credit doesn't show up automatically.
The number on a quote that matters most
Most homeowners look at the price of a replacement window quote and stop there. The line that actually predicts your long-term cost — energy bill plus install — is the U-factor. This is a single number, usually printed on the NFRC sticker on each window, that measures heat loss through the unit. Lower is better.
To frame the spread you'll encounter on a typical quote:
That 0.10 difference in a single decimal — entirely invisible if you're shopping on quoted dollars — works out to almost $360 a year, every year, for the 25-year service life of the window. Over the warranty period of a quality triple-pane install, that's $9,000 in cumulative savings that the cheaper-quoted window will quietly leave on the table.
Why most quotes default to the worse tier
The honest answer is that most installers built their quoting infrastructure when the higher-tier units were significantly more expensive to source. That hasn't been true since about 2023. Triple-pane glazing and the surface coatings that produce 0.20-or-better U-factors are now manufactured at sufficient volume that the per-window cost premium has compressed from roughly $400 to roughly $180. But the quoting templates haven't caught up.
The practical implication: if you don't specifically ask for Energy Star Most Efficient units, you will not receive a quote for them. Most installers will happily produce that quote — they're not avoiding it — but they're not going to lead with it either. You have to ask.
Energy Star Most Efficient — as the default, not the upsell.
TrueView Windows builds triple-pane Energy Star Most Efficient units as the standard product, not an upcharge. They also handle the IRS Form 5695 paperwork for the $600 federal credit. Most homeowners save $400–$800 a year on heating and cooling.
See your savings estimate →The five questions to ask before you sign
Before you sign any window replacement contract, get written answers to all five of these:
The pre-signing checklist
- What is the U-factor on the specific units quoted? Look for 0.27 or lower for the minimum tier. Look for 0.22 or lower for Most Efficient.
- Is the unit Energy Star Most Efficient certified? Yes or no. There's no in-between.
- Are you providing the NFRC stickers for my records? You'll need them when you file your taxes.
- Will you provide IRS Form 5695 documentation? Some installers do this routinely. Others won't unless asked.
- Is the glazing argon-filled? Argon (or krypton in higher-end units) is a clear gas with three times the insulating value of air. It should be standard. It often isn't.
What it adds up to
The difference between accepting the first reasonable-looking quote and asking these five questions is, on average, roughly $9,000 over the lifetime of the install. That's not from haggling. It's from being slightly better informed than the average customer the quote was written for.
The windows aren't where most homeowners get fleeced. The information asymmetry is. Closing that gap takes about ten minutes of homework, and it's worth more per hour than almost anything else you'll do during the project.
This guide was produced in partnership with TrueView Windows as part of Consumer Home Guide's sponsored content program. Editorial standards apply: facts, sources, and recommendations are independent. Sponsors do not have copy approval prior to publication.