Premium HVAC Los Angeles 87
6956 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional HVAC service for residential and light commercial. Honest diagnostics, fair pricing, and guaranteed satisfaction on every job.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
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Typical cost in Los Angeles
$1,500–$8,000 / project
158 contractors in Los Angeles
6956 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional HVAC service for residential and light commercial. Honest diagnostics, fair pricing, and guaranteed satisfaction on every job.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
2469 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
We specialize in energy-efficient HVAC solutions. Our team handles installation, repair, and preventive maintenance to keep your home com¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
9839 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional HVAC service for residential and light commercial. Honest diagnostics, fair pricing, and guaranteed satisfaction on every job.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
2209 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional HVAC service for residential and light commercial. Honest diagnostics, fair pricing, and guaranteed satisfaction on every job.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
714 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Expert HVAC technicians providing fast, reliable service for air conditioning, furnace repair, and system upgrades. Same-day appointments¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
5826 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Expert HVAC technicians providing fast, reliable service for air conditioning, furnace repair, and system upgrades. Same-day appointments¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
7244 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional HVAC service for residential and light commercial. Honest diagnostics, fair pricing, and guaranteed satisfaction on every job.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
3229 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
We specialize in energy-efficient HVAC solutions. Our team handles installation, repair, and preventive maintenance to keep your home com¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
6924 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Expert HVAC technicians providing fast, reliable service for air conditioning, furnace repair, and system upgrades. Same-day appointments¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
5448 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Trusted HVAC contractor specializing in residential AC repair, heating installation, and seasonal maintenance. Licensed, insured, and ava¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
5111 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
We specialize in energy-efficient HVAC solutions. Our team handles installation, repair, and preventive maintenance to keep your home com¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
367 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional HVAC service for residential and light commercial. Honest diagnostics, fair pricing, and guaranteed satisfaction on every job.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
For: repair or full system replacement in Los Angeles, CA
HVAC costs in Los Angeles are shaped by a unique set of factors: California's Title 24 energy efficiency mandates, the mild coastal climate vs. extreme inland heat, high labor costs driven by the region's union and licensed contractor market, and frequent specification of ductless and zoned systems to comply with California's clean air and building codes.
Typical ranges for Los Angeles HVAC work:
| Service Type | Typical Scope | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| AC refrigerant recharge (R-410A) | Per lb + inspection, residential | $150–$350 per lb |
| AC capacitor or contactor replacement | Common repair in hot LA summers | $150–$400 |
| Evaporator or condenser coil cleaning | Preventive maintenance | $200–$500 |
| Blower motor replacement | Most common motor failure | $400–$900 |
| Compressor replacement (existing unit) | High-cost repair vs. replacement | $1,800–$3,500 |
| Furnace heat exchanger repair | Safety-critical; common in older units | $1,200–$3,500 |
| Central AC replacement (split system, 3 ton) | Standard 1,800–2,400 sq ft LA home | $6,500–$13,000 |
| Furnace replacement only (gas, 80K BTU) | Standard single-family replacement | $3,500–$7,000 |
| Full HVAC system replacement (AC + furnace) | Swap-out with same duct config | $9,000–$18,000 |
| Ductless mini-split, single zone (per zone) | No duct work needed; common in ADUs | $3,500–$6,500 |
| Ducted heat pump (2–3 ton) | All-electric, Title 24 compliant | $8,500–$16,000 |
| Attic duct replacement or sealing | CalGreen Tier 1 duct leakage | $2,500–$8,000 |
Every HVAC system replacement in California must comply with California Title 24, Part 6 (Building Energy Efficiency Standards), administered by the California Energy Commission. Key requirements that affect replacement costs:
Los Angeles spreads across multiple HVAC design zones. Coastal areas (Santa Monica, Manhattan Beach, Pacific Palisades) have mild summers and rarely need A/C at all — mini-splits or very modest central systems are common. The San Fernando Valley (Sherman Oaks, Van Nuys, North Hollywood) routinely hits 105–115°F in August, requiring full-capacity systems with high SEER ratings and verified load calculations. Inland communities (Pasadena, Pomona, Whittier) fall in between.
BLS Occupational Employment data for the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim MSA (SOC 49-9021, HVAC Mechanics and Installers) shows a median hourly wage of $35.42/hr — among the highest HVAC labor markets in the country. Union HVAC technicians (UA Local 250, IBEW Local 11 for commercial crossover) command $45–$65/hr including benefits.
HVAC work in Los Angeles is one of the most heavily regulated contractor trades in California. Understanding the license structure is essential to protecting yourself.
All HVAC contractors performing work for compensation in California must hold a C-20 (Warm-Air Heating, Ventilating, and Air-Conditioning) license issued by the California Contractors State License Board. Verify any HVAC contractor at cslb.ca.gov (License Check function) before signing a contract. Confirm:
A C-20 license holder has passed both a trade exam and law/business exam. Unlicensed HVAC contractors cannot legally pull permits in Los Angeles — meaning their work cannot be inspected or legally certified, and your equipment warranty may be voided.
Any technician handling refrigerant (charging, recovering, or reclaiming) must be EPA Section 608 certified under the Clean Air Act. Request the technician's certification card before allowing refrigerant work. The certification is:
Unauthorized refrigerant release is a federal violation — do not hire any contractor or handyman who offers to "top off" the refrigerant without diagnosing and repairing the leak first.
All HVAC system replacements in the City of Los Angeles require a mechanical permit from the LA Dept of Building and Safety (LADBS). The permit process includes:
A contractor who says "you don't need a permit for a like-for-like replacement" is wrong and exposing you to risk. Unpermitted HVAC work in LA is a material defect that must be disclosed at resale. LADBS does conduct compliance sweeps in areas of complaint.
Both SoCalGas (gas lines) and LADWP (electrical service) may require licensed contractors for certain connection work. SoCalGas requires a C-36 (plumbing contractor) license for gas line work connected to HVAC equipment. All new or modified electrical circuits for HVAC equipment require a C-10 (electrical contractor) or appropriately licensed sub to pull the electrical permit.
Los Angeles's large informal labor market produces many unlicensed HVAC operators — especially frequent on Craigslist and some Facebook Marketplace categories. Risks:
Verify at cslb.ca.gov before every hire.
California's regulatory environment makes the DIY vs. pro decision largely settled for most HVAC work. Here's the honest breakdown:
Refrigerant handling: Federal law (Clean Air Act, 40 CFR 82) prohibits anyone without EPA Section 608 certification from purchasing or handling refrigerant in quantities above consumer-grade canisters. You cannot legally buy R-410A or refrigerant recharge kits without 608 certification.
System replacement: A like-for-like central AC or furnace replacement requires a LADBS mechanical permit in Los Angeles. Owner-builder permits are theoretically available, but the permit requires the homeowner to certify they will perform the work personally, arrange HERS duct testing, and pass a field inspection. Almost no homeowner has the tools or expertise to pass these inspections independently.
Gas line connections: C-36 license required in California.
New electrical circuits for HVAC: C-10 license or homeowner pull with restriction on work scope.
| Factor | DIY (Legal Scope) | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerant recharge | Illegal without EPA 608 cert | Licensed tech with proper equipment |
| System replacement | Requires LADBS permit + HERS testing | Contractor handles permit and inspection |
| Preventive filter changes | ✅ Fully DIY | N/A |
| Thermostat replacement | ✅ DIY (low-voltage wiring under 50V, no permit) | Available; newer smart thermostats often preferred |
| Condenser coil cleaning | ✅ DIY with coil cleaner spray + garden hose | Professional cleaning includes full service |
| Blower motor, capacitor, contactor | Possible if HVAC-experienced; power off required | $150–$400 professional; safe and warranted |
| Duct sealing (mastic or tape) | ✅ DIY accessible ducts in attic/crawlspace | HERS tested seal is required for permit close |
| New system installation | Requires permit + HERS + licensed disconnect | All requirements handled; warranty preserved |
| Title 24 compliance | Complex; errors result in failed inspection | Contractor certifies compliance |
| Equipment warranty | Voided if not permitted and installed by licensed contractor | Preserved; most brands require documentation |
LA's Title 24 requirements, LADBS permit process, HERS testing mandate, and California licensing laws mean that HVAC system-level work is essentially off-limits for DIY. The legitimate DIY scope is: filters, thermostat, basic condenser cleaning, drain line maintenance. Everything else requires a C-20 licensed, EPA 608 certified professional who can pull the LADBS permit. The good news: California's rebate programs (LADWP, SoCalGas, IRA 25C) make properly permitted, rebate-eligible professional work more affordable than in most other states.
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