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“Of five detailed reviews, four specifically mention emergency or same-day service, with three naming individual technicians (Charles Strunk and Tyler).…”
“All 644 reviews carry 5-star ratings with customers frequently citing same-day or same-hour response times and the presence of a live person answering calls…”
“Of 84 reviews, the rating distribution shows a notable split between highly positive and negative…”
Typical heating and cooling repair costs in Anderson, by component.
| Service | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
Diagnostic / service call | $83 | $132 | $220 |
Thermostat replacement | $165 | $303 | $550 |
Blower motor replacement | $440 | $715 | $1,210 |
Heat exchanger replacement | $1,650 | $2,420 | $3,850 |
Ignitor replacement (gas furnace) | $165 | $275 | $440 |
Control board replacement | $330 | $605 | $990 |
Full system repair (major) Multi-component failure | $550 | $1,320 | $3,300 |
Prices reflect continental metro averages compiled from published industry cost guides, contractor surveys, and regional labor data. Last updated: April 2026.
Anderson’s swings from humid 85°F summers to harsh Midwest winters around 21°F create heavy seasonal pressure on heating systems and significant cooling needs in July and August. That demand keeps five local HVAC contractors busy, averaging a 4.6 rating across 2,518 reviews; two companies advertise 24/7 availability for emergency hvac-repair Anderson calls during peak seasons.
Specific line-item costs weren’t provided, so homeowners should expect prices to vary with parts, labor, emergency dispatch fees, and the complexity of controls or ductwork; those are the usual top cost drivers in this market. Indiana lacks a statewide HVAC license, so local permits and municipal licensing requirements govern who can legally perform repairs and who must sign off on more extensive work.
There were no customer highlights supplied to cite individual technicians, so look for review patterns: responsiveness, clear estimates, warranty transparency, and punctuality recur as useful indicators. Verify technicians’ local credentials, ask about emergency response times (important given winter demand), and get written scopes that separate diagnostic fees from repair costs before authorizing work.