
We fix more units than we replace, and we will always tell you if repair is the smarter move. But there are situations where a new system is the right recommendation. If your equipment is 15 or more years old, you are past its designed lifespan. Parts become harder to source. Efficiency drops year over year. What used to cool your home for $120 a month now costs $190.
If your system runs on R-22 refrigerant, that is an even clearer signal. R-22 production ended in 2020. A single pound now runs $100 or more, and a standard recharge takes 3 to 5 pounds. At $300 to $500 per refill, with the leak that caused the loss still present, you are spending money every season on a dwindling supply.
Other indicators: repair costs exceeding half the replacement value, uneven cooling with some rooms warm and others cold, the system running nonstop without reaching the set temperature, or breakdowns more than once per summer. Many homes in South Ogden and along Harrison Boulevard were built in the early 2000s with builder-grade 13 SEER units that are now approaching end of life. Newer construction in the Riverdale area has more efficient equipment, but some early builds in those neighborhoods already have 10-year-old systems that struggle.
Not sure whether to repair or replace? Call us at (801) 436-8725. We will evaluate the system, show you the numbers for both paths, and let you decide. No pressure. If repair makes better financial sense, we will say so. Extend the life of your current system with regular AC maintenance.
Most HVAC companies skip the sizing calculation. They look at the old unit, match the tonnage, and install. That is how you end up with an oversized system that short cycles, wastes energy, and cannot manage temperature swings. Or an undersized system that runs nonstop and still cannot keep pace when Ogden hits 100 degrees in late July.
We perform a Manual J load calculation on every installation. That is the engineering standard for residential HVAC sizing. We measure your home's square footage, insulation values, window area and orientation, ductwork condition, and number of occupants. Then we factor in Northern Utah climate conditions: IECC Climate Zone 5B, dry heat, wide temperature swings between day and night, high altitude at 4,300 feet, and the solar load from intense afternoon sun that bakes south and west-facing walls along the Wasatch Front.
The result is a system sized precisely for your home. Not too big, not too small. It runs efficiently, keeps every room within 2 to 3 degrees of the thermostat setting, and handles Ogden's wide temperature range from triple-digit summers to below-zero winter nights. That is how a correctly sized system should perform in this climate.
No commissioned salespeople. No padded quotes. Call us and we will tell you what your Ogden home requires and what it costs.
Call (801) 436-8725No diagnostic fees. Fast response. Local technicians.
We will be direct about pricing because most companies dodge the question. Entry level: $4,500 to $6,500. That gets you a 14 SEER2, single-stage system. It is builder grade, the same type originally installed in many Ogden homes. It works. It cools. It is reliable. If budget is the top priority, this is a solid option.
Mid-range: $6,500 to $9,000. A 16 SEER2, two-stage system. Better temperature control, quieter operation, lower monthly utility costs. The two-stage compressor runs at a lower speed most of the time and ramps up only on the hottest afternoons. This is our most popular install in Ogden because it balances cost, efficiency, and comfort for our dry heat climate.
High end: $9,000 to $14,000. An 18+ SEER2, variable-speed system. Very quiet. Peak efficiency. The compressor adjusts continuously to match the exact cooling demand. These systems can cut your cooling costs by 40 to 50 percent compared to a 15-year-old unit. Popular in newer North Ogden homes and larger properties near Ogden Canyon.
Your Rocky Mountain Power bill will drop $30 to $80 per month with a high-efficiency system compared to an aging unit. Over 10 years, that is $3,600 to $9,600 back in your pocket. Factor that into the purchase price when weighing your options.
Trane, Carrier, Lennox, Rheem, Goodman, Daikin, American Standard. We are not tied to a single manufacturer. Some companies are. They are dealers for one brand and that is the only option they will show you, regardless of whether it fits your situation. We recommend based on your budget, your ductwork capacity, and what performs best in Northern Utah's dry heat and wide temperature swings. If a $5,000 Goodman is the right call for your home, we will say that instead of pushing a $10,000 system you do not need. If your current unit just needs a fix instead of a full replacement, take a look at common reasons your AC is not cooling.
We will visit your Ogden home, measure everything, calculate the load, and present options with clear pricing. No obligation.
(801) 436-872524/7 emergency line · No diagnostic fees · Same-day service