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“Of 8 sampled reviews, 5-star ratings cite professionalism, thorough clean-up, and on-time arrival. Both 1-star reviews mention billing concerns: one notes an…”
“517 reviewers collectively award Finzel's a 4.9-star average, with every review scoring 5 stars. Multiple reviews specifically reference the team's response…”
“Five of five sampled reviewers awarded 5 stars, with three specifically naming technicians (Brian, Garrett,…”
“All 75 reviewers award five stars, with emergency availability and owner Ambrose's personal involvement…”
Routine tune-up and maintenance plan pricing for Clinton Township homeowners.
| Service | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
Single AC tune-up | $72 | $129 | $206 |
Single furnace tune-up | $82 | $139 | $227 |
Full HVAC inspection | $155 | $283 | $412 |
Annual maintenance plan Includes 2 visits/year + discounts on repairs | $124 | $247 | $371 |
Premium maintenance plan Priority service + free diagnostics | $206 | $361 | $515 |
Duct cleaning (full home) | $309 | $489 | $824 |
Filter replacement (per filter) | $15 | $36 | $77 |
Prices reflect continental metro averages compiled from published industry cost guides, contractor surveys, and regional labor data. Last updated: April 2026.
Detroit’s Great Lakes continental climate—cold, lake-effect winters averaging about 22°F and humid summers that climb toward 84°F—keeps heating active five to six months and cooling in demand June through August. That weather makes regular upkeep essential; hvac-maintenance Clinton Township sees steady business from six local contractors averaging a 4.9 rating across 1,591 reviews, and three firms advertise 24/7 service for urgent winter or storm-driven failures.
The source data didn’t include numeric topCostItems, so specific dollar bands aren’t available in this brief. Still, customers should expect price variation tied to service type: preventive tune-ups are usually the lowest-cost maintenance, midseason repairs raise bills depending on parts, and full system replacements or conversions to heat-pump hybrids are the largest investments. Michigan lacks a statewide HVAC license, so homeowners need to confirm any required local licensing and ask about permits, warranties, and energy-efficiency estimates before work begins.
Customer-level highlights weren’t provided, but the area’s high aggregate rating suggests consistent strengths: prompt response, clear communication, and follow-through on seasonal checks. Review patterns buyers should seek include documented maintenance plans, transparent parts/pricing, technician certifications for heat-pump work, and references for winter-time reliability; these elements matter most for long-term system efficiency in Clinton Township’s climate.