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“Across the review sample, all five-star reviewers name specific technicians including Vitally, Mike, Marion, Tony, Kevin, and Luke Eichmann. Emergency service…”
“Twenty-three reviewers explicitly praise transparent pricing with phrases like 'price he gave was the price we paid' and 'no surprises.' Twelve customers…”
“307 reviews with a 4.9-star average demonstrate exceptional consistency. Reviewers frequently mention…”
After-hours, weekend, and holiday HVAC service pricing in Greer. Rates are typically 1.5-2x standard.
| Service | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
After-hours service call (weekday night) Base fee before labor | $150 | $200 | $300 |
Weekend service call | $175 | $225 | $325 |
Holiday / major holiday call | $225 | $300 | $450 |
Emergency labor (hourly) 1.5-2x standard hourly rate | $160 | $205 | $250 |
Emergency repair total (typical) Repair + after-hours surcharge | $300 | $700 | $1,200 |
Emergency repair (major) Compressor, heat exchanger failures | $1,200 | $2,200 | $3,500 |
Prices reflect humid subtropical metro averages compiled from published industry cost guides, contractor surveys, and regional labor data. Last updated: April 2026.
Greer's position in the Carolina Piedmont shapes urgent HVAC needs: summers reach about 90°F with 65% humidity for roughly 50 days, while winters dip to 33°F lows and occasional ice storms that can knock out power and strain backup heat. That seasonal swing keeps demand steady across the Greenville-Spartanburg metro and fuels search terms like emergency-hvac Greer. Five contractors serve the area, averaging a 4.8 rating; four advertise 24/7 availability.
Pricing for emergency service in Greer varies widely by the repair — compressor swaps, heat pump emergency calls, and electrical or blower failures differ in scope — and specific top-cost items were not provided in the dataset. South Carolina requires a Mechanical Contractor (Group 2 — HVAC) license from the Contractor’s Licensing Board for HVAC work, so always confirm a company’s CLB credential and ask for written estimates before authorizing emergency repairs.
Customer highlights were not included in the supplied data, so prospective callers should focus on patterns that matter: documented response times, verified 24/7 service, demonstrable experience with heat pumps and backup-heat scenarios, and clear communication about parts availability after ice storms. Request technician names, certifications, and recent references to gauge reliability in critical outages.