AC & furnace repair and installation in New Hampshire
Same-day pros across 15 New Hampshire cities. Estimate your cost, then call to lock in the price.
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What it costs across New Hampshire
AC Repair
AC repair cost depends on the failing part and whether the system is low on refrigerant, electrical, or mechanical. Common fixes — capacitors, contactors, fan motors, refrigerant recharges — land between $150 and $1,500 including labor, while a failed compressor runs higher.
See Manchester pricing →Furnace Repair
Furnace repair cost depends on the failing part and whether the unit is gas or electric. Common fixes — flame sensors, igniters, blower motors, control boards — land between $150 and $1,800 including labor, while a cracked heat exchanger runs higher.
See Manchester pricing →AC Installation
AC installation cost covers the equipment and labor to fit a new system — whether it's a like-for-like central AC replacement, a first-time install with new ductwork, or a ductless mini-split. The number swings with tonnage, SEER2 efficiency tier, and duct condition.
See Manchester pricing →AC Maintenance
AC maintenance — a seasonal tune-up — keeps the system running efficiently and catches small faults before they become summer breakdowns. A single visit runs $75–$200; annual plans that bundle a spring AC and fall heating check cost a bit more.
See Manchester pricing →* Statewide medians — open a city for locally adjusted pricing.
What’s different about New Hampshire.
Generic cost pages skip the things that actually decide your price and which system fits here — local code, climate, and the money you can claim back.
Recommended unit for New Hampshire
Given New Hampshire’s cold climate and mixed heating, dual-fuel (cold-climate heat pump + gas furnace) is the sensible default for most New Hampshire homes. The cooling season is short, so the budget is better spent on heating efficiency than on ultra-high SEER2. A pro can confirm the right size and system for your home with a load calculation.
Sources: NHSaves Heat Pumps (residential rebates) · NH Department of Energy Home Electrification & Appliance Rebates · Choose Energy NH electricity rates
What New Hampshire code requires
Across New Hampshire, installing or replacing an HVAC system means meeting these statewide rules under the state mechanical code:
- PermitRequired
Mechanical permit pulled by your licensed HVAC contractor; covers equipment, refrigerant, and the electrical disconnect.
- SEER2 minimum13.4 SEER2 (North)
Federal North-region minimum for new split-system AC. Higher tiers cut bills and unlock rebates.
- Load calculationRecommended
Sizing by load calc — not rule of thumb — prevents an oversized unit that short-cycles and never dehumidifies.
- RefrigerantR-454B / R-32 (R-410A phased down 2025+)
- Good to know—
Cold-climate sizing matters: NHSaves rebates require cold-climate heat pumps rated for low ambient (NEEP-listed) performance, and equipment must use R-32/R-454B (R-410A no longer allowed).
Sources: NHSaves Heat Pumps (residential rebates) · NH Department of Energy Home Electrification & Appliance Rebates · Choose Energy NH electricity rates
Not sure which rules and rebates apply to your home?
A licensed New Hampshire pro will walk you through code, the right unit, and what you can claim back — in one quick call.
No obligation — talk through your options.
Money back in New Hampshire
New Hampshire heating is mostly mixed, which shapes the money back:
- State$250 per ton, up to $1,250NHSaves Cold-Climate Heat Pump Rebate (standard tier, switching from oil/gas/propane) →
State or utility program — verify eligibility before you buy.
- State$750 (UEF 2.0+)NHSaves Heat Pump Water Heater Rebate →
State or utility program — verify eligibility before you buy.
- Federal30% of cost, up to $2,000Federal 25C tax credit — heat pump →
For a qualifying ENERGY STAR heat pump meeting the CEE efficiency tier. Claimed on your federal return.
- Federal30% of cost, up to $600Federal 25C tax credit — central AC →
For a qualifying high-efficiency central air conditioner.
The federal 25C tax credit (30%, up to $2,000 for a qualifying heat pump and up to $600 for a high-efficiency central AC) applies in every state, including New Hampshire.
Ready to get your HVAC system serviced in New Hampshire?
Speak with a licensed, insured HVAC technician near you. Upfront pricing, same-day availability, no obligation.
- Licensed & insured
- Same-day availability
- Upfront, no-pressure pricing
- Local pros near you
No obligation — talk through your options.

All 15 New Hampshire cities
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Comfort back in three steps.
- 1
Tell us what’s wrong
Use the cost tool or call — takes 30 seconds. No cool air, no heat, or time for a new system.
- 2
Get matched with a local pro
We connect you with a licensed, insured HVAC technician near you — often the same day.
- 3
Repair or replace, fast
Your pro confirms the price on-site and gets your comfort back. Most jobs done in a few hours.
HVAC FAQs — New Hampshire
In New Hampshire, a mechanical permit is generally required for an AC or heat pump install. Your licensed HVAC contractor pulls it; it covers the equipment, refrigerant, and electrical disconnect.
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