Getting HVAC Quotes: What to Expect from Each Company
Soliciting quotes from HVAC companies is a structured process with defined phases, documentation expectations, and regulatory checkpoints that vary by system type, project scope, and state licensing rules. A quote that omits load calculations, permit disclosures, or equipment SEER ratings is structurally incomplete — regardless of the price listed. This page explains what a legitimate HVAC quote contains, how the quoting process unfolds from first contact to written proposal, and where the differences between company types produce meaningfully different outputs.
Definition and Scope
An HVAC quote is a written or digital proposal from a licensed contractor that documents the proposed scope of work, equipment specifications, labor costs, permit obligations, warranty terms, and payment structure for a heating, ventilation, or air conditioning project. The term covers replacement installations, new system installations, and major retrofit work — not routine maintenance calls or minor repairs, which are typically governed by flat-rate service agreements.
The scope of a quote is shaped by three intersecting factors: project type (replacement vs. new installation), system architecture (central split, package unit, ductless mini-split, heat pump, or furnace), and applicable state or local mechanical codes. The HVAC system installation cost breakdown for a given project depends heavily on which of these factors applies, because each one changes what the contractor must document, permit, and warrant.
At the regulatory level, any quote involving refrigerant-handling work must be performed by a technician holding EPA Section 608 certification under 40 CFR Part 82, administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. State licensing requirements layer on top of this federal baseline — contractor license classes, bond minimums, and insurance floors vary by state, as detailed in HVAC Contractor Licensing Requirements by State.
How It Works
The quoting process follows a sequential structure. Skipping phases is a recognized red flag in the industry, particularly the Manual J load calculation step.
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Initial contact and project triage. The homeowner or facility manager describes the existing system, symptoms or goals, and property characteristics. The company logs the request and schedules a site visit. Phone-only quotes without a site visit are not considered complete estimates for full system replacements.
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On-site assessment. A technician or sales estimator visits the property to measure conditioned square footage, inspect ductwork, assess insulation levels, evaluate the electrical panel, and document the existing equipment (model, age, condition). For replacement projects, this visit typically takes 45 to 90 minutes.
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Manual J load calculation. A properly scoped quote for system replacement or new installation requires a Manual J calculation — the industry-standard residential load calculation methodology published by the Air Conditioning Contractors of America (ACCA). Manual J determines the correct tonnage for cooling and BTU capacity for heating. Oversizing or undersizing by even 0.5 tons produces measurable efficiency and comfort penalties. The HVAC System Sizing Guide covers Manual J inputs in detail.
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Equipment specification. The contractor proposes specific equipment: manufacturer, model number, SEER2 rating (the updated efficiency metric that replaced SEER under DOE rules effective January 1, 2023, per 10 CFR Part 430), HSPF2 for heat pumps, and AFUE for furnaces. Each of these ratings carries regulatory minimums that differ by climate region under the DOE's regional efficiency standards.
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Permit and inspection disclosure. Any quote for a full system replacement must disclose permit requirements. Mechanical permits are required in most U.S. jurisdictions for HVAC replacement work. The permit fee and inspection scheduling are ordinarily the contractor's responsibility to initiate, though the cost is typically passed to the customer.
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Written proposal delivery. The contractor delivers a written proposal itemizing equipment costs, labor, permit fees, disposal of the old unit, and warranty terms. Reputable companies separate parts and labor warranty periods clearly — manufacturer equipment warranties and contractor labor warranties are distinct instruments.
Common Scenarios
Straight equipment replacement (same system type). The most common scenario: a central split system fails and a like-for-like replacement is proposed. Quotes in this scenario should still include a Manual J confirmation, because DOE regional efficiency minimums may require a higher SEER2-rated unit than what was originally installed. Customers replacing older R-22 refrigerant systems will see a mandatory equipment upgrade, since R-22 production was phased out under the EPA's Clean Air Act Section 608 program.
System type change. A homeowner switching from a gas furnace to a heat pump, or from central ducted to ductless mini-split, receives a more complex quote. Electrical panel upgrades (often from 100A to 200A service), ductwork modifications, and additional permitting may be required. Comparing these project types is addressed in Central Air vs. Ductless Mini-Split and Heat Pump vs. Furnace Comparison.
Multi-company comparison. Obtaining quotes from 3 companies for the same scope is the standard recommendation from ACCA and consumer guidance publications. Direct comparison requires that each quote specify the same equipment tier — comparing a 16 SEER2 unit from one contractor against a 14 SEER2 unit from another produces a false price comparison. The HVAC Company Rating Criteria framework explains how to normalize quotes for comparison.
Decision Boundaries
Two structural contrasts define how quotes differ across company types:
National chains vs. local contractors. National HVAC chains typically deliver standardized quote formats, tiered pricing packages (good/better/best), and manufacturer-backed financing programs. Local contractors often offer more flexible scope customization but less standardized documentation. The National HVAC Chains vs. Local Companies comparison covers how these structural differences affect quote completeness and post-installation support.
Residential vs. commercial scope. Commercial HVAC quotes for rooftop package units, variable refrigerant flow (VRF) systems, or chilled-water systems involve different licensing tiers, longer equipment lead times, and commissioning phases not present in residential quotes. A residential contractor's quote format is not transferable to a commercial project without structural additions.
Key boundary conditions that determine quote type:
- Projects exceeding a jurisdiction's defined BTU threshold may require a licensed mechanical engineer's stamp alongside the contractor's permit application.
- Quotes that include HVAC financing options must disclose APR and loan term under the federal Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. §1601 et seq., administered by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau).
- Energy Star certified HVAC systems appearing in a quote may qualify for utility rebates or federal tax credits; the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 established a rates that vary by region tax credit (up to amounts that vary by jurisdiction for central AC, up to amounts that vary by jurisdiction for heat pumps) for qualifying installations (IRS Form 5695 guidance).
- A quote with no permit line item for a full system replacement in a jurisdiction that requires mechanical permits is a documented HVAC company red flag and may expose the property owner to code violation liability at resale.
References
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Section 608 Refrigerant Management Program
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations — 40 CFR Part 82 (Refrigerants)
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations — 10 CFR Part 430 (Energy Efficiency Standards)
- Air Conditioning Contractors of America (ACCA) — Manual J Residential Load Calculation
- U.S. Department of Energy — Regional HVAC Efficiency Standards
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z)
- IRS — Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (Form 5695)