Understanding Your Home's HVAC System
Your home's HVAC system manages three things simultaneously: heating, ventilation, and air conditioning. Each component works together to maintain comfort, air quality, and energy efficiency — and when one fails, the others are often affected too.
The heating system is typically a furnace or heat pump. A gas furnace burns natural gas to produce warm air that's distributed through ducts. A heat pump works differently — it moves heat from outside air into your home (even in cold weather), and reverses in summer to cool. Heat pumps are significantly more energy-efficient than furnaces in mild climates but lose efficiency in extreme cold.
The cooling system uses refrigerant to absorb heat from indoor air and release it outside. The indoor evaporator coil (usually attached to your furnace or air handler) pulls heat out of air passing over it. That heat travels via refrigerant lines to the outdoor condenser unit, where it's expelled. The same refrigerant cycle powers both central air conditioners and heat pumps.
A clogged air filter is the single most common cause of HVAC inefficiency and breakdowns. Check your filter monthly — replace it every 1–3 months depending on type and household. A dirty filter restricts airflow, overworks the blower motor, and can freeze your evaporator coil.
HVAC problems fall into three main categories: mechanical failures (bad capacitors, failed motors, refrigerant leaks), airflow issues (dirty filters, blocked ducts, undersized equipment), and thermostat or control problems (wiring faults, bad sensors, outdated thermostats). Knowing the category helps you describe the problem accurately — and evaluate whether a technician's diagnosis actually makes sense.
Types of HVAC Services
HVAC isn't a single specialty. A technician who excels at furnace repair may not be the best choice for a new ductless mini-split install — and vice versa. Here are the main service categories.
Diagnosing and fixing furnaces, boilers, and heat pumps. Common repairs include ignitor replacement, heat exchanger inspection, and gas valve issues.
Fixing central air conditioners and heat pumps. Includes refrigerant recharge, capacitor replacement, coil cleaning, and compressor diagnostics.
Seasonal tune-ups for heating and cooling systems. Includes filter replacement, coil cleaning, lubrication, and safety checks — ideally twice per year.
Full replacement or new installation of central HVAC systems, ductless mini-splits, or heat pumps. Requires load calculation and proper sizing.
Inspection, sealing, cleaning, or replacement of ductwork. Leaky ducts can waste 20–30% of conditioned air before it reaches living spaces.
Installing whole-home air purifiers, UV germicidal lights, humidifiers, dehumidifiers, and energy recovery ventilators (ERVs).
Leak detection, evacuation, and recharge of refrigerant. Only EPA 608-certified technicians can legally handle refrigerants like R-410A and the newer R-454B.
Installing and programming Wi-Fi thermostats, zoning systems, and smart home integrations. Proper configuration can reduce energy bills 10–15%.
What HVAC Services Actually Cost
National average ranges below. Actual prices vary by region, system type, home size, and job complexity. Use these as a baseline for evaluating quotes — not a final budget number.
| Service | Typical Range | Key Cost Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| Service call / diagnosis | $75–$150 | Often applied to repair if booked same visit |
| AC tune-up / seasonal maintenance | $75–$200 | System age, number of units |
| Furnace tune-up | $80–$175 | Gas vs electric, heat exchanger condition |
| Capacitor replacement | $150–$400 | Single vs dual-run, brand, labor rate |
| Refrigerant recharge (per lb) | $150–$300/lb | Refrigerant type (R-22 is scarce/expensive) |
| Evaporator coil replacement | $600–$2,000 | Coil size, system brand, access difficulty |
| Compressor replacement | $1,200–$2,800 | Tonnage, brand; often triggers full system replacement |
| Furnace replacement (gas, avg home) | $2,500–$5,500 | BTU output, efficiency rating (AFUE), brand |
| Central AC replacement | $3,500–$7,500 | Tonnage, SEER rating, duct condition |
| Heat pump replacement | $4,500–$10,000 | Size, brand, electric panel upgrade if needed |
| Ductless mini-split (single zone) | $2,000–$5,500 | BTU capacity, brand, wall penetration complexity |
| Duct sealing / repair | $300–$1,500 | Duct access, linear footage, severity of leaks |
After-hours, weekend, and holiday calls typically add a $100–$300 surcharge. If the issue isn't actively causing damage or a safety risk, schedule during business hours. If your furnace fails in freezing weather or you smell gas — call immediately, regardless of cost.
When to Call an HVAC Tech — and When to DIY
Some tasks are solidly DIY territory. Others aren't — attempting them incorrectly can void your equipment warranty, create safety hazards, or violate EPA regulations around refrigerant handling.
DIY-appropriate: replacing air filters, programming your thermostat, clearing debris from around the outdoor unit, resetting tripped breakers or blown fuses, cleaning accessible return air grilles, and replacing batteries in your thermostat.
Gas smell near your furnace (evacuate and call gas company first) · Carbon monoxide alarm triggered · Complete heating failure in freezing temperatures · Refrigerant leak (oily residue on lines, hissing sounds) · Electrical burning smell from any HVAC equipment · Frozen evaporator coil with water flooding your air handler
Always hire a licensed technician for: any refrigerant work (legally required), gas line connections, electrical wiring to HVAC equipment, heat exchanger inspection (cracks release carbon monoxide), system sizing and load calculations, and pulling required permits for new installations or replacements.
Permits: What Requires One and Why It Matters
HVAC permits trigger inspections that verify equipment is sized correctly, gas and electrical connections are safe, and refrigerant handling was done by a certified technician.
Work that typically requires a permit: full system replacement (furnace, AC, heat pump), new ductwork installation, adding a new HVAC zone, installing a mini-split system, and any gas line modifications connected to heating equipment.
Work that typically does not require a permit: like-for-like component repair (capacitor, fan motor, ignitor), thermostat replacement, filter changes, duct cleaning, and refrigerant recharge on existing equipment in most jurisdictions.
If a contractor says a permit isn't needed for a full system replacement — or suggests skipping it to "save time and money" — walk away. Unpermitted HVAC work can void homeowner's insurance claims, fail home inspections at sale, and create carbon monoxide liability if a heat exchanger is installed incorrectly.
How to Hire the Right HVAC Contractor
The difference between a good hire and a bad one is rarely about price alone. It's documentation, certifications, and whether they actually size the system correctly for your home.
Ask for their state contractor license number and verify it on your state's licensing board. Any technician who handles refrigerants must also have EPA Section 608 certification — ask for it specifically. No certification means they cannot legally touch refrigerant.
Request a certificate of insurance showing general liability (minimum $1M) and workers' compensation. HVAC work involves electrical, gas, and rooftop equipment — the liability exposure is significant without proper coverage.
Any reputable contractor replacing your system will perform a Manual J load calculation — a formal assessment of your home's heating and cooling needs based on square footage, insulation, windows, and climate. "Same size as what you have" is not a proper sizing method.
For any job over $500, get at least two quotes. Each should itemize equipment model and SEER/AFUE ratings, labor, permit costs, and warranty terms. A vague flat-rate number without equipment specs is impossible to compare.
For AC: SEER2 rating (higher = more efficient; minimum 14.3 in most regions). For furnaces: AFUE percentage (80% standard, 95%+ high-efficiency). Higher efficiency costs more upfront but pays back in energy savings over 8–15 years — do the math for your climate.
Red Flags to Watch For
HVAC scams and low-quality contractors follow recognizable patterns. Watch for these before and during any job.
- Recommends full system replacement without proper diagnosis or load calculation
- Cannot provide EPA 608 certification when asked (required for any refrigerant work)
- Refuses to provide a written, itemized estimate with equipment model numbers
- Suggests skipping the permit to "save time and money" on a replacement job
- Diagnoses a refrigerant leak without using leak detection equipment
- Pressures you to decide immediately with "today only" pricing
- Cannot explain SEER rating, AFUE, or why they chose that equipment size for your home
- Has no verifiable online presence — no reviews, business address, or registered entity
If a technician tells you that you need a full system replacement on a system under 10 years old, get a second opinion. Compressors and coils can often be repaired. A professional will not pressure you. A scammer will.