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HomeCost GuidesHVAC Technician Cost › Salt Lake City, UT

❄️ Cost Guide · Salt Lake City, UT

Average HVAC Technician Cost in Salt Lake City, UT (2026)

A hvac technician in Salt Lake City charges $75/hour for a standard service call — that's +3% above the US median of $73/hour. The differential reflects the UT cost-of-living composite of 103.2 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 49-9021.

HVAC Technician project costs in Salt Lake City, UT

ProjectTimeTypical costRange
Diagnostic service call (no parts) 45–90 min $75 $62 – $90
Annual AC or furnace tune-up 60–90 min $138 $113 – $166
AC repair (capacitor / contactor / minor part) 1–3 hours $336 $275 – $403
Refrigerant recharge (R-410A, residential) 1–2 hours $402 $329 – $482
Smart thermostat install 1 hour $298 $245 – $358
Gas furnace replacement (80% AFUE, 80k BTU) 1 day $3,077 $2,523 – $3,693
Heat pump replacement (3-ton, 16 SEER) 1–2 days $7,036 $5,770 – $8,444
Mini-split install (single zone, 12k BTU) 1 day $2,561 $2,100 – $3,073
Whole-home duct cleaning 3–5 hours $362 $297 – $435

Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 49-9021), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 103.2 for UT, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.

How Salt Lake City compares

At an effective contractor rate of $75/hour, Salt Lake City sits right around the national median for hvac technician work. Homeowners here will see higher-than-average prices on labor-intensive jobs (re-pipes, panel upgrades, full system replacements) where labor is the bulk of the cost. Materials-heavy jobs (water-heater swaps, furnace replacements, large appliance installs) will track somewhat above the national figure because regional materials inflation in UT runs about 3% above the US benchmark.

What the work involves

A residential HVAC technician services, repairs, and installs forced-air furnaces, central AC, heat pumps, mini-splits, and ductwork. A diagnostic visit typically includes static-pressure measurement, refrigerant pressure (for cooling systems), temperature differential between supply and return, electrical-component testing (capacitor microfarad, contactor pull-in, transformer voltage), and ignition or burner inspection on heating equipment. Installations require Manual J / Manual D / Manual S calculations to size the equipment correctly — beware any installer who skips these and recommends "the same size you have now."

Six questions to ask any hvac technician in UT

  1. Are you NATE-certified, and is your company licensed and insured in this state?
  2. For a replacement: did you run a Manual J load calculation, and can I see it in writing?
  3. What SEER2/HSPF2 is the equipment you're quoting, and what's the AHRI match number?
  4. Does the quote include duct sealing, thermostat, condensate pump (if needed), and permit?
  5. What's the labor warranty, and is the manufacturer warranty registered in my name?
  6. Will you provide commissioning data (subcooling/superheat, static pressure) at completion?
"Same-size replacement" without a load calc, refrigerant-only quotes that don't address the leak, and any installer who pushes the largest unit without explaining why.

Featured hvac technicians in Salt Lake City

Hometown Comfort Air

📍 708 Willow Ct, Salt Lake City, UT 84111
★ 4.5 / 5 · 170 reviews · 7 yrs
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Salt Lake City HVAC

📍 7364 Spring Pl, Salt Lake City, UT 84101
★ 4.2 / 5 · 354 reviews · 38 yrs
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Seasonal hvac checklist

Spring

  • Schedule an AC tune-up before May; pros are 30–40% cheaper in shoulder season than during the first July heatwave.
  • Replace HVAC filters (every 30–90 days depending on type and pets).
  • Hose down the outdoor condenser coil and clear at least 2 feet of vegetation around it.
  • Test the AC by setting it to 5°F below indoor temperature; it should kick on within 30 seconds and the supply registers should blow noticeably cool air within 5 minutes.

Fall

  • Schedule a furnace or heat-pump tune-up before October.
  • Replace HVAC filters again going into heating season.
  • Clear leaves from around the outdoor condenser/heat pump and cover the top only (never wrap the sides).
  • Test CO detectors near gas-burning appliances; replace batteries.
  • Run the furnace for 10 minutes before the first cold snap; address any odd smells, banging, or short-cycling now.

Winter

  • Keep furniture and rugs at least 6 inches off supply registers and return-air grilles.
  • Inspect attic insulation; less than R-30 is the #1 reason heating bills run high in older homes.
  • Defrost outdoor heat-pump coils once every 2–3 weeks during sustained cold.
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