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Gas vs. Electric vs. Tankless Water Heaters: Which One Should You Choose?

Are you unsure which water heater is right for your home?

Gas vs. Electric vs. Tankless Water Heaters: Which One Should You Choose?

Recommend this Article:

Scott Merritt

Revised:

July 11th, 2025

Are you unsure which water heater is right for your home?

Do you know what makes one type better—or worse—based on how your family lives?

By the end of this article, you’ll know the pros and cons of gas, electric, and tankless water heaters. You’ll also learn how installation mistakes, water quality, and even smart technology affect long-term performance.

We’ve installed and serviced thousands of water heaters in Central Ohio homes, and we’ve seen every success—and every horror story—firsthand. Let’s make sure you’re in the first group.

We’ll cover:

  • Key differences between gas, electric, and tankless models
  • What goes wrong (and how to avoid it)
  • Field-tested pros and cons you won’t find on a product label
  • What “smart” water heaters can do
  • How to match the system to your home—not someone else’s opinion

The Basics: How Each System Works

Gas Water Heaters

Gas heaters use a burner to heat water in a tank. They run on natural gas or propane.

Best for: Homes with existing gas lines
Why choose it: Faster recovery, still works in outages, familiar technology

Electric Water Heaters

These heat water using internal electric elements.

Best for: Smaller homes or where gas lines aren’t available
Why choose it: Simple, affordable install, fewer moving parts

Tankless Water Heaters

Also called on-demand systems, these heat water only when needed—no tank required.

Best for: High-use households, energy-conscious upgrades
Why choose it: Endless hot water, lower standby energy costs, saves space


What Homeowners in Columbus Actually Experience

Gas: Fast But Needs Maintenance

Pros:

  • Fast heat recovery
  • Cheaper to operate if gas is available
  • Most homes are already set up for it

Cons:

  • Needs proper venting
  • Combustion system requires annual checks
  • Can become dangerous if installed improperly

Electric: Simple But Slower

Pros:

  • Easier and cheaper to install
  • No venting or gas lines
  • Very few parts that fail

Cons:

  • Slower to reheat
  • Not ideal for big households
  • Won’t run in a power outage

Tankless: High-Tech, High-Stakes

 Pros:

  • No standby heat loss
  • Ideal for big families and back-to-back showers
  • Compact design frees up space

Cons:

  • Needs exact installation conditions (venting, flow rate, gas line, etc.)
  • Hard water? It needs filtration
  • More expensive upfront—and sensitive to maintenance

Pro Tip: Tank Water Heaters Provide Emergency Water Storage

During outages, tank water heaters hold 30–50 gallons that can be used for hygiene or even drinking (with proper filtration). We’ve had Central Ohio customers thank us after winter storms for this unexpected but critical benefit.


Field Story: A Tankless Mistake We Had to Fix

One Worthington homeowner upgraded to tankless but didn’t get:

  • A gas line upgrade
  • A circulator pump for long pipe runs
  • Water treatment for high mineral content

The result? Lukewarm showers and high frustration. We corrected the system, added filtration, and saved the install.

Bottom line: Great equipment can’t overcome a bad install. Always match the system to your home.


Smart Features in Modern Water Heaters

Today’s models from brands like Rheem and Navien are smarter than ever:

  • Wi-Fi control: Adjust temps and get alerts
  • Leak detection: Automatic shut-off to prevent flood damage
  • AI learning: Adapts to your usage patterns

Especially on tankless systems, these features boost comfort and efficiency—and help avoid emergencies.


Which Water Heater Is Right for You?

Here’s a simple breakdown:

Situation

Best Option

Low hot water needs, budget-focused

Electric tank

Family of 4+, already have gas

Gas tank

Want high-efficiency & unlimited hot water

Tankless (if installed right)

Prepping for emergencies

Traditional tank (water storage)


Avoid These 3 Common Mistakes

  1. Choosing based on price only
    Low-cost installs skip the critical stuff—like venting and water quality checks.
  2. Assuming tankless is always better
    It’s not magic. It has to match your home and habits.
  3. Hiring a contractor who skips inspection
    If they don’t ask about your water, pipe runs, or hot water habits—walk away.

What’s Next?

Want a Price Quote?

We’ll walk your home, test your water, and give an exact quote—no sales games.

Prefer to Talk to a Pro?

Schedule your appointment with Fire & Ice, Cooling, Plumbing & Electrical today.


Final Thought

This isn’t just about hot water. It’s about choosing a water heater that works for your life—and a contractor who gets it right the first time.

At Fire & Ice, we measure everything, test water quality, inspect venting, and match systems to your home. Because the install is what truly makes—or breaks—your investment.

 

 

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