Moss Heating and Cooling
11145 Morrison Ln , Dallas, TX 75229-5608
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Contractors, Air Duct Cleaning ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
Ductless Mini-Split Repair repair in Dallas — fast diagnosis, honest pricing, and lasting fixes. Compare 57 local repair specialists and get back to normal without overpaying.
Typical cost in Dallas
$1,500–$8,000 / project
57 contractors in Dallas
11145 Morrison Ln , Dallas, TX 75229-5608
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Contractors, Air Duct Cleaning ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
911 Maryland Dr , Irving, TX 75061-5748
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Air Conditioning Contractors, Plumber, Heating and Air Conditioning ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
10120 Cayuga Dr Ste 107 , Dallas, TX 75228-3289
Air Conditioning Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Repair ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
209 W Clarendon Dr , Dallas, TX 75208-6704
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Plumber, Heating and Air Conditioning, Bathroom Remodel ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
13339 N Central Expy Ste 103 , Dallas, TX 75243-1145
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Air Conditioning Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Repair ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
3918 Peachtree St , Dallas, TX 75227-3212
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Air Conditioning Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Repair ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
9734 Skillman St , Dallas, TX 75243
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Air Conditioning Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Repair ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
4311 Belmont Ave Ste 125 , Dallas, TX 75204-3032
Air Conditioning Contractors, Plumber, Electrician ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
10763 Mapleridge Dr , Dallas, TX 75238-2346
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Air Conditioning Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Repair ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
2727 Lyndon B Johnson Fwy Ste 224 , Dallas, TX 75234-7478
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Residential Air Conditioning Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
5930 Lyndon B Johnson Fwy STE 250 , Dallas, TX 75240-6375
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Air Conditioning Repair, Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
822 Woodlawn Ave , Dallas, TX 75208-4066
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Heating and Air Conditioning, Air Conditioning Contractors, Air Conditioning Repair ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
HVAC repair in Dallas typically runs $150–$550 for most common service calls. A full central air conditioning system replacement for a typical Dallas single-family home costs $5,500–$13,000 installed, depending on system tonnage, efficiency tier, and whether the furnace is also being replaced. Dallas's combination of blazing summers (100°F+), significant swing-season humidity from Gulf moisture, and occasional severe winter ice storms makes HVAC one of the highest-priority home systems in Collin, Dallas, and Tarrant Counties.
| Service / Repair | Typical Dallas Cost |
|---|---|
| Service call + diagnostic | $75–$150 |
| Capacitor replacement | $90–$200 |
| Contactor replacement | $150–$300 |
| Refrigerant recharge (R-410A, per pound) | $80–$175 per pound |
| Blower motor replacement | $300–$600 |
| Evaporator coil replacement | $700–$1,500 |
| Condenser coil replacement | $900–$2,000 |
| Compressor replacement | $1,200–$2,500 |
| Gas furnace heat exchanger | $600–$1,500 |
| Ductwork repair (per section) | $150–$500 |
| Duct sealing (Aeroseal, whole house) | $1,500–$3,500 |
| System Type | Size | Efficiency | Installed Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central AC only | 3 ton | 15 SEER2 | $4,500–$7,500 |
| Central AC + gas furnace (80%) | 3 ton / 80,000 BTU | 15 SEER2 / 80 AFUE | $6,000–$11,000 |
| Central AC + high-efficiency furnace (96%) | 3 ton | 17 SEER2 / 96 AFUE | $8,000–$14,000 |
| Heat pump system | 3 ton | 16 SEER2 / HSPF2 8.0 | $7,000–$13,000 |
| Mini-split (ductless, 1 zone) | 18,000 BTU | 22 SEER | $2,800–$5,500 installed |
| Mini-split (multi-zone, 3 zones) | 36,000 BTU | 18 SEER | $8,000–$14,000 installed |
Prices based on Dallas-Fort Worth metro contractor quotes for 2025 and BLS Dallas-Plano-Irving metro area HVAC technician wage data (SOC 49-9021, median $26–$36/hr).
1. Dallas's summer cooling demand
The Dallas-Fort Worth metro averages 220+ cooling degree days annually, with sustained temperatures above 100°F from June through mid-September. DFW HVAC systems run 10–14 hours per day during peak summer, accumulating more annual operating hours than systems in moderate-climate cities. This heavy use accelerates capacitor, contactor, and blower motor wear — these components are the most common Dallas HVAC service calls and should be replaced proactively every 7–10 years.
2. Texas SEER2 minimum requirement
Effective January 1, 2023, the DOE requires a minimum 15 SEER2 efficiency for new central AC systems installed in Texas. Equipment below this minimum cannot legally be installed. Higher efficiency (17–21 SEER2) costs more upfront but delivers meaningful savings on Oncor electricity bills. At Dallas's electricity rates (Oncor delivery charge plus competitive retail electric provider charges totaling $0.12–$0.18/kWh for most DFW households), a 3-ton system at 21 SEER2 uses approximately 40% less electricity than a 15 SEER2 system for the same cooling output — a savings of $400–$700/year in a Dallas home running AC heavily from May through October.
3. Oncor and ERCOT market — no utility rebates, market-rate electricity
Unlike San Antonio's CPS Energy (a municipal utility with significant rebate programs), Dallas electricity is served by competitive retail electric providers through Oncor's delivery system. There are no standard Oncor rebates for HVAC upgrades comparable to Texas municipal utilities. However, some retail electric providers offer demand-response programs or smart thermostat incentives — and Atmos Energy (natural gas provider for most DFW) periodically offers rebates on high-efficiency gas furnaces. Check current program availability when replacing.
4. DFW winter freeze events
Dallas experienced severe winter weather in February 2021 (Winter Storm Uri) when temperatures dropped to 0°F for multiple consecutive days — far below most HVAC systems' design parameters. Heat pump systems without low-ambient kitting or auxiliary electric heat backup failed. Homeowners replacing HVAC in DFW after freeze events should:
5. Attic temperatures and equipment placement
Dallas summer attic temperatures reach 140–160°F. HVAC air handlers installed in the attic (common in DFW ranch-style homes) operate in this extreme heat, stressing electrical components and reducing efficiency. Attic ductwork insulation below R-8 leaks heat into attic air before reaching living spaces. When replacing an attic-installed air handler in DFW, upgrading attic insulation to R-38+ and sealing duct connections is a high-ROI, often-overlooked co-investment.
Texas has strong HVAC licensing requirements administered by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). Any company or individual performing HVAC installation, repair, or maintenance as a business in Dallas must be appropriately licensed through TDLR. Unlicensed HVAC work in Texas is a Class B misdemeanor.
The TACL (Texas Air Conditioning Contractor License) is the company-level license required for all HVAC contracting businesses in Texas. Individual technicians operating commercially must hold a TACA (Technician License). These are separate from the federal EPA Section 608 certification required for any refrigerant handling.
Verify any Dallas HVAC company at tdlr.texas.gov/verify/:
A company that cannot or will not provide a TACL license number before signing a contract should be disqualified.
EPA Section 608 certification is federal (not Texas-specific) and required for any refrigerant work. Request to see technician EPA 608 cards for any service involving refrigerant addition, recovery, or recharge.
The City of Dallas Development Services and municipal jurisdictions in surrounding cities (Plano, Irving, Garland, McKinney, Frisco, Allen) all require mechanical permits for HVAC system replacements and new installations. Key permit requirements:
Any licensed TACL contractor will pull all required permits — if a contractor says permits aren't needed for a full system replacement, they either don't understand Texas requirements or are attempting to avoid the inspection process. Either way, this is disqualifying.
The ACCA Manual J load calculation standard is mandatory for Texas residential HVAC — it is referenced directly in the Texas Energy Code (Title 28 TAC Chapter 78). A properly performed Manual J for a Dallas home accounts for:
System tonnage in Dallas homes is frequently sized incorrectly. Oversized systems short-cycle (turn on and off rapidly) and fail to dehumidify properly — a significant comfort problem in DFW's humid summers. Undersized systems run continuously and cannot maintain setpoint on worst-case days. Both are avoidable with a proper Manual J.
Dallas HVAC contractors experience peak demand surges during June–August. During multi-day heat events when temperatures stay above 105°F, demand for emergency service exceeds contractor capacity citywide. Preparation strategies:
The ACCA and Texas TDLR both provide consumer resources for verifying HVAC contractor credentials and filing complaints against unlicensed or underperforming contractors in the Dallas area.
Making the wrong call on HVAC repair vs. replacement is one of the most expensive mistakes Dallas homeowners make. Repair a system that fails again in August — and you're paying $200–$500 on top of the discomfort of a 106°F day without AC. Replace a system prematurely — and you've spent $8,000–$13,000 unnecessarily. This guide gives you the Dallas-specific framework to make the right decision.
| Factor | Repair | Replace |
|---|---|---|
| System age | Under 10 years | 14+ years for AC; 18+ for furnace |
| Repair cost | Under 25% of replacement cost | 50%+ of replacement cost |
| Refrigerant type | R-410A (current) | R-22 (phased out; expensive supply) |
| Failure type | Capacitor, contactor, minor electrical | Compressor, evaporator coil, cracked heat exchanger |
| Energy bills | Near original baseline | 15–25%+ above comparable new system |
| Comfort complaints | None | Humidity problems, uneven temps, struggles on peak days |
| Winter Storm Uri assessment | No freeze damage confirmed | Freeze damage to refrigerant lines or coil |
| Duct condition | Clean, tested, minimal leakage | 20%+ leakage, damaged sections (common in older Dallas homes) |
If your Dallas HVAC system uses R-22 refrigerant (Freon) — any system installed before 2010, and many installed before 2015 — you face an accelerating replacement timeline regardless of other factors. R-22 production ceased in the U.S. in 2020 under the Montreal Protocol phase-out. Remaining supply is stockpiled and pricing has climbed to $100–$200+ per pound for recovered and recycled R-22 on the DFW market. An R-22 leak repair requiring 5 pounds of refrigerant adds $500–$1,000 in refrigerant cost alone — on top of the leak repair cost.
For a Dallas system on R-22 that develops a leak: repair the leak only if the system has several years of remaining useful life and the refrigerant cost is manageable. If the system is also 14+ years old with a significant leak, replacement with an R-410A or R-32 system is the financially rational choice.
Dallas's climate — 100°F+ summers with genuine heating requirements (average January low 37°F, occasional ice storms) — puts it in an interesting position for heat pump evaluation:
Gas furnace + AC system (most common):
Heat pump system:
For most Dallas homeowners replacing a standard split system: a high-efficiency gas furnace (96 AFUE, two-stage burner) with a high-efficiency AC (17–18 SEER2, two-stage or variable-speed) remains the most reliable and cost-effective package for DFW's climate extremes.
The standard HVAC industry rule: if the repair cost exceeds 50% of the new system price, replace. Real Dallas scenarios:
For Dallas homeowners with aging HVAC systems (over 12 years), prepare for summer:
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