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🔥 Furnace Installation in Tuttle, OK

Gas and electric furnace installation. Right-sized for Oklahoma winters, properly vented, with combustion analysis on every install so the system runs safely and efficiently from day one. Serving Tuttle and the OKC metro since 2011. OK CIB Licensed #00125054. A+ BBB. 5.0★ from 111+ reviews.

📋 OK CIB #00125054 🏆 A+ BBB ⚡ Response 40-55 minutes ⭐ 5.0 from 111+ reviews 💰 0% APR Financing
Tuttle Furnace Installation

Furnace Installation in Tuttle, Oklahoma

If you need furnace installation in Tuttle, Oklahoma, ARP Heat And Air is the licensed, owner-operated HVAC company that has been serving this side of the OKC metro since 2011. Gas and electric furnace installation. Right-sized for Oklahoma winters, properly vented, with combustion analysis on every install so the system runs safely and efficiently from day one.

From our Edmond shop can reach Tuttle addresses in roughly 40-55 minutes. Our typical Tuttle customer is in including the original Tuttle town center, the residential subdivisions along OK-37, and the rural-acreage properties to the north and west. We know the area, we know what Tuttle's housing stock looks like inside the walls, and we know the specific HVAC problems that come up here.

For furnace installation specifically in Tuttle, expect to pay $3,800-$8,500 — $3,800-$8,500 depending on AFUE rating and home size. Diagnostic visits run $89, applied toward any repair we perform. We give upfront pricing in writing before any work begins. No surprises, no commission-driven upsells.

Why Tuttle homeowners choose ARP Heat And Air

ARP is owner-operated by Charlie — not a franchise, not a private-equity rollup, not a phone room. When you call, you usually get Charlie or one of our two senior techs. Tuttle customers consistently tell us that this is the difference: someone who answers the phone, gives you a real ETA, and shows up when they said they would.

We hold Oklahoma CIB License #00125054 and we are a BBB Accredited Business with an A+ rating. Our Google profile is 5.0 stars across 111+ verified reviews, and our reviews specifically mention honest diagnoses (we have walked away from jobs we thought were a bad deal for the customer) and fast response times.

EPA Section 608 Universal certified for refrigerant handling. Fully insured. All work guaranteed.

Common furnace installation issues we see in Tuttle

Tuttle's housing stock is a mix of older 1960s-80s ranch homes in town, 1990s-2000s suburban subdivisions, and 1-10 acre rural homes; many newer builds have geothermal options. Tuttle sits at higher elevation than central OKC with more open wind exposure and a higher concentration of rural-acreage properties on well water. That mix produces specific HVAC patterns:

What we typically run into in Tuttle: wind-driven debris in outdoor units; rural-acreage homes with propane backup; older homes with retrofitted central air on undersized electrical service; geothermal system service for the small number of geothermal installs in the area.

For furnace installation specifically, the failure modes we see most often are:

Wrong-size installations

An oversized furnace cycles on and off too frequently, causing premature heat exchanger wear. An undersized furnace runs constantly without keeping up. We do Manual J load calculation to size correctly.

Improperly vented furnaces

High-efficiency 90%+ AFUE furnaces use PVC venting that must be sloped, sized, and terminated correctly. Improper venting causes condensate freezing, exhaust spillage, or even carbon monoxide issues.

Gas line undersizing

A new 96% AFUE furnace may draw more gas at higher pressure than the old system. The gas line must be evaluated. We pressure-test on every install.

Skipped combustion analysis

A furnace that "fires up" is not necessarily a furnace that fires correctly. We use a combustion analyzer on every install to verify CO levels, O2, and efficiency.

How furnace installation works with ARP

Here is exactly what happens when you call us for furnace installation in Tuttle:

  1. Free in-home estimateWe size the furnace via Manual J load calculation, inspect existing venting and gas supply, and write a firm quote with no commission pressure.
  2. Match AFUE to your home80% AFUE for budget-conscious replacement, 96-98% AFUE for long-term efficiency. We explain the payback math so you choose with the right info.
  3. Permit + installPermits pulled, install in one day for most homes (8-12 hours), proper venting, gas line pressure test, electrical hookup.
  4. Combustion analysis + walkthroughCombustion analyzer test before we leave. CO levels measured, O2 verified, efficiency confirmed. Then we walk you through the new thermostat and warranty registration.

Most installs done in one day, 8-12 hours. We do not stretch jobs out, and we do not invent extra "while we are here" work to pad the invoice.

Tuttle service area

ZIP codes: 73089. Typical response time: 40-55 minutes from our Edmond shop during business hours. Landmarks we use to locate addresses: Tuttle Public Schools, downtown Tuttle, Lake Stanley Draper nearby.

Tuttle sits at 1,378 ft. The local climate factor that affects HVAC most: Tuttle sits at higher elevation than central OKC with more open wind exposure and a higher concentration of rural-acreage properties on well water.

For most Tuttle homes, sizing typically lands at 3-4 ton systems for typical 1,800-2,400 sq ft Tuttle homes. We size every install via Manual J load calculation, not by replacing whatever ton-size the previous system was.

HVAC brands we service in Tuttle

We work on Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Rheem, Goodman, Amana, York, Bryant — both gas and electric. If your system is a brand not listed, we likely service it too — call and ask. We do not refuse work because of brand bias.

Frequently asked questions — furnace installation in Tuttle

How much does furnace installation cost in Oklahoma?

A new furnace in Oklahoma typically runs $3,800-$8,500 installed. An 80% AFUE basic furnace is $3,800-$5,500. A 96% AFUE two-stage furnace is $5,500-$7,000. A 97-98% AFUE modulating furnace is $6,500-$8,500. Pricing depends on home size, gas line condition, and venting requirements.

80% AFUE or 96% AFUE — which is better for Oklahoma?

For most Oklahoma homes, 96% AFUE pays back in 5-8 years through lower gas bills, and qualifies for utility rebates. 80% AFUE costs $1,500-$2,000 less upfront but uses about 18% more gas. If you plan to be in the home 8+ years, 96% AFUE wins on total cost.

How long does furnace installation take?

Most replacement installations are done in a single day — 8 to 12 hours. Larger systems, gas line modifications, or vent re-routing can extend that to 2 days.

Do you do combustion analysis?

Yes — on every install. A combustion analyzer is the only tool that verifies CO levels, O2, and efficiency are within safe and correct ranges. Installers who skip this step have no way to know if the furnace is running correctly.

📞 Want to talk to the owner directly?

When you call (405) 413-0583, there is a real chance Charlie answers personally. ARP is small on purpose — we cap our service volume so that quality stays high and the owner stays involved on every job. That is not a tagline, it is the operating model.

If Charlie does not pick up, one of our senior techs will, and you will get an honest ETA on the spot. No call center, no robot menu, no "we will call you back within 48 hours."

— Charlie, owner, ARP Heat And Air · Tuttle customer since 2011

💰 Financing available — 0% APR plans

New furnace installation does not have to drain your savings. We offer 0% APR promotional financing for 12-18 months on qualifying installations, plus standard fixed-rate options over 60-120 months for larger projects. Soft-credit pre-qualification does not affect your credit score.

$79 per month example for $5,500 system at standard rate

We help identify federal tax credits (up to $2,000 for qualifying heat pumps) and OG&E rebates — these stack with financing.

View Financing Plans →

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OK CIB Licensed Since 2011 · A+ BBB · 5.0★ from 111+ reviews · 24/7 Emergency Service · 0% APR Financing Available

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Frequently Asked Questions

Real answers from Charlie, owner of ARP Heat And Air.

How much does furnace installation cost in Oklahoma?

A new furnace in Oklahoma typically runs $3,800-$8,500 installed. An 80% AFUE basic furnace is $3,800-$5,500. A 96% AFUE two-stage furnace is $5,500-$7,000. A 97-98% AFUE modulating furnace is $6,500-$8,500. Pricing depends on home size, gas line condition, and venting requirements.

80% AFUE or 96% AFUE — which is better for Oklahoma?

For most Oklahoma homes, 96% AFUE pays back in 5-8 years through lower gas bills, and qualifies for utility rebates. 80% AFUE costs $1,500-$2,000 less upfront but uses about 18% more gas. If you plan to be in the home 8+ years, 96% AFUE wins on total cost.

How long does furnace installation take?

Most replacement installations are done in a single day — 8 to 12 hours. Larger systems, gas line modifications, or vent re-routing can extend that to 2 days.

Do you do combustion analysis?

Yes — on every install. A combustion analyzer is the only tool that verifies CO levels, O2, and efficiency are within safe and correct ranges. Installers who skip this step have no way to know if the furnace is running correctly.

Is high-efficiency (95%+ AFUE) worth it in Oklahoma?

Often yes. The price difference between 80% and 95%+ AFUE is typically $700-$1,400, and the annual savings are $80-$180/year on natural gas in Oklahoma. Payback is 5-10 years. High-efficiency models also qualify for rebates and tax credits that close the price gap further.

Can I keep my old AC and just replace the furnace?

Often yes — if the existing AC is under 8-10 years old and matches the new furnace's blower CFM. We verify static pressure compatibility before recommending it. For older AC systems, we suggest matched replacement because refrigerant connections and coil sizing rarely align across generations.

What is the difference between single-stage, two-stage, and modulating furnaces?

Single-stage: ON or OFF at full burner output, lowest cost, more temperature swings. Two-stage: 65%-100% output, smoother heat and quieter operation, $400-$800 more. Modulating: continuously variable output 40%-100%, smoothest comfort and lowest bills, $1,000-$2,000 more than single-stage. For Oklahoma climate, two-stage is the sweet spot for most homes.

Will my gas line and venting handle a new furnace?

We check this during the install quote. Most existing gas lines are sized adequately, but older 1960s-70s homes sometimes need upsizing. High-efficiency 95%+ furnaces need PVC venting (the existing metal flue is repurposed or removed). If venting upgrades are needed, we quote them in writing before starting.