How much does an HVAC service call cost?
By the HVAC Service Call editorial team · Ranges cross-referenced from published 2026 contractor data (methodology below)
An HVAC service call costs $75–$200 on average in 2026 — the fee covers the technician's visit and diagnosis, and most contractors credit it toward the repair if you proceed. After-hours and weekend calls run $150–$400 (about 1.5–2×). No honest contractor quotes an exact repair by phone.
Service call, diagnostic fee, trip charge — the difference
Mostly the same, with one distinction that can cost you money if you don't ask.
Trip charge
Pays to get the truck to your door. On some pricing it applies even if you decline all work.
Diagnostic fee
Covers the testing and a written finding with a repair quote. Usually includes the trip.
Hourly minimum
Some shops bill the first hour instead of a flat fee — common where drive times are long.
"Is your fee a trip charge or a full diagnostic, and does it credit toward the repair?" One question that prevents most billing surprises.
What the fee includes — and what it doesn't
- Travel and the trip to your home
- A visual and operational inspection
- Instrument readings — electrical, pressures, temperatures
- A written diagnosis with a repair quote
- The first 30–60 minutes on site
- Parts
- Repair labor
- Refrigerant
- The after-hours premium
If the visit ends with no written finding, you didn't get a diagnostic — you got a trip charge. Moving from the fee to the fix? See HVAC repair cost.
The three fee models
Flat diagnostic, credited on repair
The norm at most shops. You pay a set fee; it comes off the bill if you approve the work.
Waived with repair
The fee disappears above a job minimum. It sounds better, but it's priced into the repair — not free money.
Hourly minimum
The first hour is billed regardless. Common in rural, low-density areas where windshield time is real.
None of these is a scam. Not knowing which one you booked is how surprises happen.
Fees by the kind of visit
| Visit type | Typical fee |
|---|---|
| Standard diagnostic | $75–$200 |
| After-hours / weekend | $150–$400 |
| Second opinion | $50–$150 |
| Maintenance / tune-up | $75–$150 |
| Replacement estimate | $0 |
Why is a replacement estimate free when a repair diagnostic isn't? Because a replacement estimate is a sales visit — the contractor expects to quote a big-ticket install. A repair diagnostic is skilled troubleshooting with no guaranteed sale, so it's billed as work.
Is the fee credited toward the repair?
Usually, yes. Ask directly: "If I approve the repair today, does the diagnostic fee come off the bill?" One timing nuance — the credit typically applies on the same visit or same ticket, not if you call back a month later to book the work.
Disputes, no-diagnosis, and phone quotes
They couldn't find it
You still owe the fee — the testing happened. But ask for the written readings; an intermittent fault documented today gets diagnosed faster, and often free, on the return trip.
You disagree with a charge
Ask for an itemized invoice first. If it's still wrong, escalate calmly to the office manager, and treat a card dispute as the last resort.
A phone "quote"
Nobody honest prices an exact repair by phone — the part isn't confirmed until it's measured. Treat a firm phone price as a red flag.
More red flags to watch for when hiring: choosing a contractor.
How to lower the fee honestly
- Bundle it with the repair so the fee credits toward the work.
- Maintenance-plan members often get reduced or waived diagnostics.
- If the system runs but underperforms, book a maintenance visit instead — same instruments, lower fee, catches the same small faults.
- Replacing, not repairing? The estimate is free — say so up front.
How we sourced these ranges
Fee ranges are cross-referenced from published 2026 contractor and cost-data sources and checked against reported invoices, last reviewed July 2026. We don't perform repairs and we don't collect quote-bait — this page exists to explain the fee, not to sell you a visit. Numbers are updated as new data is published.
Common questions about the fee
Is a service call the same as a diagnostic fee?
Mostly, yes — but there's a distinction worth money. A trip charge (service-call fee) pays to get the truck to your door and may apply even if you decline all work. A diagnostic fee covers the testing and a written finding, and usually includes the trip. Some shops instead bill an hourly minimum. Ask which model you're booking.
Do I pay if the technician can't find the problem?
Usually yes — you're paying for the diagnostic work, and that happened whether or not it produced an answer. Ask for the written readings, though. An intermittent fault documented today is often diagnosed free or faster on the return visit; that's a reasonable thing to request.
Why can't I get an exact quote over the phone?
Because the failed part isn't confirmed until it's measured on site. A firm phone 'quote' is a door-opener, not a real price — the same symptom can come from a $20 part or a $2,000 one. An honest contractor quotes after diagnosis.
How much is an emergency service call?
After-hours, weekend, and holiday calls typically run $150–$400 — about 1.5–2× the standard fee. The call to reach a contractor through us costs nothing; the fee is the contractor's, charged at the visit. See our emergency page for what's worth an after-hours call.
Does the fee apply to maintenance visits?
A maintenance or tune-up visit is a different service — typically $75–$150 — with a different purpose. If your system runs but underperforms, booking maintenance instead of a diagnostic uses the same instruments at a lower fee and often catches the same small faults.
Are service-call fees negotiable?
The fee itself rarely is, but the model is something you choose. Ask whether it's a flat diagnostic that credits toward the repair, a fee waived above a job minimum, or an hourly minimum — knowing which one you booked is how you avoid a surprise.
One call routes you to a licensed local contractor who will quote the fee up front: (888) 810-2291.