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Furnace Repair · Near Me

Furnace Repair in Kaysville

Get fast, fair pricing from licensed local pros. Typical Kaysville cost: $80 – $250 installed.

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Flame sensor
$80 – $250
Igniter
$150 – $450
Blower motor
$400 – $1.5k
Control board
$300 – $800
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Kaysville pricing

Furnace repair cost by part.

Typical Kaysville repair pricing including parts and labor. A diagnostic fee usually applies and is often credited toward the work.

Furnace repair in Kaysville, Utah, typically costs between $80 and $3,500+, depending on the component. The median home was built in 1994, so many systems are 30+ years old and may require repairs to flame sensors, igniters, or blower motors. A diagnostic fee of $75–$200 applies. Utah requires a mechanical permit for furnace work, and local HVAC contractors must follow state codes. Kaysville's cold-dry high-desert climate means heating loads are significant, so proper sizing is critical. Most homes use gas furnaces, but high-efficiency heat pumps qualify for the Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebate if NEEP-listed. The federal 25C tax credit (30%, up to $2,000 for qualifying heat pumps, up to $600 for high-efficiency AC) is available through 2025.

  • Diagnostic / service call
    Often credited toward the repair
    $75 – $200
  • Flame sensor or thermocouple
    Common no-heat cause on gas units
    $80 – $250
  • Hot-surface igniter
    Furnace clicks but won’t light
    $150 – $450
  • Blower motor
    No airflow / weak airflow
    $400 – $1,500
  • Heat exchanger
    Cracked exchanger often means replace
    $1,500 – $3,500+

* A cracked heat exchanger is a safety issue — on an older furnace, replacement is usually the call.

Pricing reviewed · Local data from U.S. Census ACS

HVAC systems in Kaysville

U.S. Census ACS
Households
13,086
Homeowners
7,908
87% own
Median home value
$513,500
Median income
$121,867
Median home built
1994
Housing units
9,100

With a median home built in 1994, many Kaysville AC and furnace systems are at or past their 12–15 year lifespan — a common reason replacements spike here.

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Local guide · Kaysville

What’s different about Kaysville.

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 Kaysville

High-SEER2 AC + gas furnace

Given Utah’s cold-dry climate and gas heating, high-seer2 ac + gas furnace is the sensible default for most Kaysville homes. A pro can confirm the right size and system for your home with a load calculation.

Sources: Rocky Mountain Power - Savings & Energy Choices for Homes (Wattsmart) · SEER2 North Region efficiency standards · EIA Utah electricity profile

What Kaysville code requires

Installing or replacing an HVAC system in Kaysville follows Utah rules under the state mechanical code. Here’s what applies statewide:

  • Permit

    Mechanical permit pulled by your licensed HVAC contractor; covers equipment, refrigerant, and the electrical disconnect.

    Required
  • SEER2 minimum

    Federal North-region minimum for new split-system AC. Higher tiers cut bills and unlock rebates.

    13.4 SEER2 (North)
  • Load calculation

    Sizing by load calc — not rule of thumb — prevents an oversized unit that short-cycles and never dehumidifies.

    Recommended
  • Refrigerant
    R-454B / R-32 (R-410A phased down 2025+)
  • Good to know

    Cold-dry high-desert climate: equipment should be sized for hard winter heating loads, and a cold-climate (NEEP-listed) heat pump is required to earn the top Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebate.

Sources: Rocky Mountain Power - Savings & Energy Choices for Homes (Wattsmart) · SEER2 North Region efficiency standards · EIA Utah electricity profile

Talk to a local pro

Not sure which rules and rebates apply to your home?

A licensed Kaysville pro will walk you through code, the right unit, and what you can claim back — in one quick call.

Call now: (855) 321-3116

No obligation — talk through your options.

Money back in Kaysville

Utah heating is mostly gas, which shapes the money back:

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, though it is set to expire after 2025.

How it works

Comfort back in three steps.

  1. 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. 2

    Get matched with a local pro

    We connect you with a licensed, insured HVAC technician near you — often the same day.

  3. 3

    Repair or replace, fast

    Your pro confirms the price on-site and gets your comfort back. Most jobs done in a few hours.

Local insight · Kaysville

Furnace Repair in Kaysville, explained.

What moves the price

What affects furnace repair costs in Kaysville?

Labor rates in Kaysville reflect the local median household income of $121,867, which is above the national average, so service calls may be slightly higher than in lower-income areas. The age of the home (median 1994) means older furnaces may need harder-to-find parts or more labor. Permit fees add $50–$150 to the job. The component itself drives the price: a flame sensor ($80–$250) is far less expensive than a heat exchanger ($1,500–$3,500+). Emergency or after-hours service increases the diagnostic fee. Finally, the choice between a basic repair and upgrading to a high-efficiency unit affects long-term costs.

Common furnace repairs in Kaysville

1

Flame sensor failure

A dirty or faulty flame sensor prevents the burner from staying lit. Repair cost: $80–$250.

2

Igniter problems

A cracked or worn igniter won't spark the gas. Replacement runs $150–$450.

3

Blower motor issues

A failing blower motor reduces airflow and heat output. Replacement costs $400–$1,500.

FAQ

Furnace Repair FAQs — Kaysville

Yes, Utah requires a mechanical permit for any furnace repair that involves gas, electrical, or refrigerant work. Your contractor should pull the permit and include the fee in the quote.

Furnace Repair near Kaysville

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