Not ready to call? Tell us what you need and we'll connect you with top-rated contractors.
“Across nearly 12,000 reviews at 4.9 stars, named technicians Nathan, Jeffrey, Thomas, Josh, Tyler, and Rodney all appear with consistent praise. Same-day water…”
“Long-term customers describe 20+ years of consistently professional service. Jonathan Condrey is praised for methodical diagnosis that finds root causes rather…”
“Technician Jamie stands out in reviews for providing a load-calculation-based proposal — the only bidder of…”
“Owner Larry is praised by name across multiple long-term customer reviews spanning up to 17 years. Reviewers…”
“Every reviewer describes professionalism from first contact through completion. Josh is specifically named…”
“Technicians Cody and Josh are individually praised for installation quality and repair speed. Office staff…”
“Technician Zack is praised for persistent diagnostic work that found a difficult electrical fault other…”
“Every review names Oscar directly, and the pattern is consistent: responsive, honest, correctly diagnoses on…”
“Tyler appears by name in positive reviews for professional, prompt, reasonably priced residential repairs.…”
“Two reviews explicitly compare Dallas Plumbing, Heating & Air's pricing favorably against other quotes…”
Typical repair costs for Dallas homeowners, by problem type.
| Service | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
Diagnostic / service call Usually credited toward repair | $75 | $120 | $200 |
Refrigerant recharge (R-410A) | $150 | $350 | $700 |
Capacitor replacement | $120 | $250 | $450 |
Fan motor replacement | $250 | $450 | $700 |
Compressor replacement | $800 | $1,800 | $2,800 |
Evaporator coil repair | $400 | $900 | $1,500 |
Labor (hourly rate) Per hour during business hours | $75 | $110 | $150 |
Prices reflect humid subtropical metro averages compiled from published industry cost guides, contractor surveys, and regional labor data. Last updated: April 2026.
AC repair in Dallas, Georgia taps into a well-developed contractor base that serves the broader northwest Atlanta area. Twelve contractors are active in this market with a 4.7-star average across 14,652 reviews — a large review pool for a suburb, reflecting spillover from Atlanta-area operators. Four of the twelve offer 24/7 service, appropriate for the region's hot, humid summers.
Diagnostic fees run $75–$200, refrigerant recharges (R-410A) cost $150–$700 depending on system size, and capacitor replacements — a common summer failure — come in at $120–$450. Georgia contractors must hold a Class I or Class II license from the State Board of Conditioned Air Contractors.
Ragsdale Heating, Air, Plumbing & Electrical brings near 12,000 reviews at 4.9 stars, with named technicians Nathan, Jeffrey, Thomas, Josh, Tyler, and Rodney each cited for consistent work. Precision Heating & Air's Jonathan Condrey appears in reviews for diagnostic thoroughness, catching root causes other contractors miss. Kirkland Heating & Air Conditioning's technician Matthew is mentioned repeatedly for honest, low-pressure service across repair visits.