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“Nearly all 5-star reviews cite specific staff members by name, with Sean, Oscar, and Laura mentioned across multiple testimonials. Positive reviewers…”
“Four of five detailed reviews award five stars, with customers specifically naming technicians Rodney and Brett and praising same-day or next-day response…”
“Of 355 reviews, the overwhelming majority award 5 stars with particular praise for technician communication…”
“With 115 reviews averaging 4.5 stars, Northwest Mechanical receives consistent praise for same-day service,…”
“All 50 five-star reviewers name Vlad or Stan, and their reviews cite diagnostic skill and transparency about…”
“All five-star reviewers mention specific technicians by name, with John Bassett appearing in two reviews for…”
“Nineteen reviewers collectively award this contractor 4.2 stars, with five-star feedback dominating the…”
Typical repair costs for Woodinville homeowners, by problem type.
| Service | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
Diagnostic / service call Usually credited toward repair | $83 | $132 | $220 |
Refrigerant recharge (R-410A) | $165 | $385 | $770 |
Capacitor replacement | $132 | $275 | $495 |
Fan motor replacement | $275 | $495 | $770 |
Compressor replacement | $880 | $1,980 | $3,080 |
Evaporator coil repair | $440 | $990 | $1,650 |
Labor (hourly rate) Per hour during business hours | $83 | $121 | $165 |
Prices reflect continental metro averages compiled from published industry cost guides, contractor surveys, and regional labor data. Last updated: April 2026.
Woodinville sits inside the Seattle metro, where mild, wet winters and summers that rarely climb past the mid-70s have traditionally prioritized heating over cooling. Recent heat waves, however, have accelerated AC adoption and pushed homeowners toward service and repairs. Local demand for ac-repair Woodinville is supported by six contractors serving the area, collectively holding an average rating of 4.8 from 9,833 reviews, and one firm offering round-the-clock response.
Specific line-item pricing from the supplied topCostItems was not available, so prospective customers should expect variability driven by diagnostics, replacement parts, refrigerant recovery, compressor work, and labor. Permits and inspections fall under city or county authority because Washington has no statewide HVAC license; local jurisdictions and utility rebate requirements can affect final costs. Ask for written estimates that separate parts, labor, and permit fees to compare bids accurately.
Customer highlight details were not provided with the dataset, but the large review volume and high average rating signal consistent positive experiences across the market. Review patterns to confirm technicians’ experience with heat pumps, emergency availability (one contractor is 24/7), warranties, and follow-up service. Prioritize contractors who document work, explain diagnostic findings, and supply references tied to the specific equipment you own.