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Oklahoma City, OK

Furnace Repair in Oklahoma City, OK

Professional furnace repair in Oklahoma City, OK. Priority response during cold snaps — when temperatures drop below freezing, we prioritize no-heat calls. Licensed (OK CIB #00125054), Serving Oklahoma City families and businesses since 2011.

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✓ OK CIB #00125054
⏱ Priority response during cold snaps — when temperatures drop below freezing, we prioritize no-heat calls.

Furnace Repair in Oklahoma City — What to Expect

When you need furnace repair in Oklahoma City, OK, you want a licensed HVAC company that knows the local housing stock, responds quickly, and gives you straight answers on pricing. ARP Heat And Air serves all of Oklahoma City — including Nichols Hills, Crown Heights, and the surrounding neighborhoods — from our Edmond headquarters, 25 minutes south of our Edmond headquarters. Oklahoma winters aren't long, but when an arctic front blows through and your furnace quits at 10pm, you need fast help. We respond quickly, diagnose accurately, and repair what's actually broken.

Why Oklahoma City HVAC Matters to Us

Oklahoma City's sheer geographic size means different parts of town have very different HVAC patterns. North OKC (north of NW Expressway) trends toward newer builds with builder-grade equipment. Central OKC (Crown Heights, Mesta Park, Paseo) has 70-100-year-old homes with ductwork challenges. South OKC has a mix — Capitol Hill has older homes, while further south toward Moore line has newer developments. For furnace repair specifically, Oklahoma City's housing mix matters. Older homes downtown often have undersized ductwork from the 1950s that struggles with modern AC capacity. Northwest OKC (Quail Creek, Nichols Hills area) tends toward oversized systems from the boom-era 2000s that short-cycle. West OKC near Yukon has newer builds with builder-grade equipment reaching replacement age. We've been servicing Oklahoma City since 2011. Every Oklahoma City ZIP code (73102, 73103, 73106, 73112, 73118, 73119, 73120, 73127, 73132, 73162) is inside our standard service radius — no trip charges for Oklahoma City calls, and 25-40 minutes is the typical arrival window from our Edmond base.

Common Furnace Repair Issues We Fix in Oklahoma City

Ignitor / hot surface ignitor failure

The most common furnace repair. A bad ignitor means no flame. Usually a $220–$380 repair including the part and labor.

Flame sensor issues

Dirty or failed flame sensors cause short-cycling or no-heat. Often a clean-and-adjust fix, $180–$280.

Blower motor failure

The blower won't run, or runs but doesn't push air. Can be the motor itself, the capacitor, or the control board. $250–$650 depending on cause.

Gas valve / safety issues

When the gas valve won't open, it's usually a safety sensor tripping for a reason — we diagnose the root cause before replacing parts. $300–$700 range.

Draft inducer motor

The draft inducer pulls combustion gases out safely. When it fails, furnace won't fire. $350–$650.

Thermostat-side issues

Sometimes the furnace is fine — the thermostat has failed or lost its program. $120–$350 for thermostat replacement.

What We Won't Do

We don't push replacements. If your furnace is 10-15 years old and needs one repair, we'll quote the repair. If it's 20+ years old with a cracked heat exchanger, we'll tell you it's time — and never the other way around.

Frequently Asked Questions — Furnace Repair in Oklahoma City

How much does furnace repair cost in Oklahoma City, OK?

Furnace repairs in Oklahoma City typically run $180 to $700. Ignitor replacement is most common at $220–$380. Gas valve or draft inducer issues can reach $650+. Heat exchanger cracks usually mean replacement, not repair.

Do you do emergency furnace repair in Oklahoma City?

Yes — when temperatures drop below freezing, we prioritize no-heat calls in Oklahoma City and across the metro. Drive time from our Edmond headquarters is 25-40 minutes. Call (405) 413-0583 any time.

My furnace is making a weird noise. Is that serious?

Depends on the noise. Banging at startup can be delayed ignition (dangerous — shut it off and call). Squealing is usually a blower motor bearing. Clicking is often the flame sensor. We diagnose in-person rather than guess over the phone.

Carbon monoxide concerns — when should I worry?

If your CO detector alarms, leave the house and call us immediately. Cracked heat exchangers can leak CO and must be addressed. If you don't have a CO detector on every floor of a home with a gas furnace, install one today — they're $25–$40 at any hardware store.

Why Oklahoma City HVAC Service Is Different

Service area: ZIP codes 73102, 73103, 73106, 73107, 73108, 73109, 73111, 73112, 73114, 73115, 73116, 73118, 73119, 73120, 73122, 73127, 73128, 73129, 73130, 73132, 73134, 73135, 73139, 73141, 73142, 73149, 73150, 73151, 73159, 73160, 73162, 73165, 73169, 73170, 73173, 73179. We service Nichols Hills, Crown Heights, Heritage Hills, Mesta Park, Paseo, Belle Isle, Quail Creek, Lakeside, The Village, Gaillardia, and Deer Creek.

Oklahoma City is the largest market we serve — it spans pre-war bungalows in Heritage Hills and Mesta Park, postwar ranches in Crown Heights and Nichols Hills, 1970s-80s additions in Putnam City and Quail Creek, and the new developments in far-NW OKC and south of Moore. Each era has its own HVAC quirks.

Local climate factors we account for

OKC sits squarely in Tornado Alley, averaging 50+ tornado warnings per year. Systems in south OKC face higher humidity coming off the Canadian River; systems in north OKC see slightly lower humidity and stronger diurnal swings. The urban heat island in downtown adds 3-5°F to peak cooling loads vs. outer suburbs.

Common Oklahoma City-specific HVAC issues

We see specific problems by OKC area: (1) In older pre-war Heritage Hills and Mesta Park homes, retrofitted central AC often has badly undersized return ducts — we correct these during maintenance; (2) In Nichols Hills, we see higher-end variable-speed and zoned systems that need specialty diagnostic skills; (3) In south OKC, moisture intrusion and evaporator coil corrosion from higher humidity is common.

How we reach you

From our Edmond base, OKC jobs take 20-40 minutes depending on traffic and which part of the city. We handle service calls from north OKC down through Capitol Hill and south into the Moore border without trip charges. For emergency calls, we can route through Kelley Avenue or Broadway Extension to avoid I-35 construction.

Need Furnace Repair in Oklahoma City, OK?

Licensed, insured, Call or book online — we'll get to your Oklahoma City home fast.