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“Every reviewer awarded 5 stars, with technicians Jamison, Jason L., Finn, Dallin, and Todd each called out by name for specific expertise. Four reviews mention…”
“All 61 reviews award 5 stars, with technicians Jaime and Jamie named in multiple positive accounts for same-day response, transparent pricing, and personalized…”
“All 13 reviews award 5 stars, with reviewers consistently praising Kevin by name for answering calls…”
“Four of six reviewers award 5 stars”
“Their single review awards 5 stars, with the customer highlighting technician Able's Saturday emergency…”
Typical heating and cooling repair costs in West Haven, 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.
Ogden anchors the northern Wasatch Front and West Haven shares its climate patterns: low-humidity, high-desert summers, a humid monsoon window, and prolonged, cold winters with lake-effect snow and inversions. Those extremes make heating the dominant seasonal load and create steady demand for hvac-repair West Haven. Eight contractors serve the area, averaging a 4.8 rating across 2,787 reviews.
Repair costs vary widely by job — from simple thermostat or blower fixes to combustion tuning, heat pump defrost controls, or duct sealing — with labor, parts, diagnostics and any permits driving price. Exact top-cost figures weren’t provided, but altitude and cold-climate equipment needs often increase scope; technicians must be prepared to rate heat pumps for sub-freezing efficiency and adjust furnace combustion for elevation. Utah requires the S350 HVAC Contractor license through DOPL.
Customer-specific highlights weren’t included, so focus on market patterns: reviewers consistently praise timely diagnostics, transparent estimates and experience with older mid-century duct systems. Prioritize technicians with S350 licensing, solid online ratings, experience with duct sealing and cold-rated heat pumps, and at least one contractor who offers 24/7 availability for winter failures. Ask for references on altitude-related combustion adjustments and inverter heat-pump performance.