HomeNo-heat survival guide
No-heat emergency · Updated July 2026

No heat in freezing weather — do these steps now

Step 0

Call now — then work the list below while help is on the way

Repairs start the moment the call is made. Everything below this band is what you do while a contractor is en route.

📞 (888) 810-2291
Safety first: if you smell gas or a CO alarm sounds, leave the house and call your gas utility or 911 from outside — don't touch switches. Yes, a broken heater can be dangerous, and that's exactly why the gate exists.
First 10 minutes

The 6 checks that restore most heat

Work them in order. Each takes seconds and fixes a real, common cause.

00:00

Thermostat

Set to HEAT, 3°F above room temp, fresh batteries. A dead cell or a schedule override stops the whole furnace.

00:02

Breaker + furnace switch

Reset the furnace breaker once. Then find the furnace's own shut-off switch — it looks like a light switch on or near the unit and gets bumped off during cleaning. This fixes more real cases than any other check.

00:05

Air filter

Hold it to a light. A filter clogged solid triggers the overheat shutdown that cuts the burners. Swap it and let the furnace cool.

00:07

Gas valve

The handle should be parallel to the gas pipe (open). If a utility crew recently worked the line, the meter valve may still be off.

00:09

Intake & exhaust pipes

High-efficiency furnaces vent through white PVC pipes out a side wall. Snow, ice, or leaves blocking either one locks the furnace out. Clear them — this is the winter-specific cause most people miss.

00:10

Pilot or ignition

Pre-2010 units have a standing pilot to relight per the panel steps; newer ones click to ignite. No click and no pilot after the checks above means an internal fault.

A high-efficiency furnace's white PVC intake and exhaust pipes exit a side wall; a snow drift blocking either opening trips the pressure switch and locks the furnace out until the vents are cleared.
Check 5 in picture form: snow over a high-efficiency furnace's PVC vents is the winter lockout no summer checklist mentions.

Heat restored? Book a tune-up before it happens again. Still dead, and the house isn't dangerously cold? Work the full diagnostic in furnace not turning on — that page carries the deeper fixes.

Minutes 10–60 · people first

Protect the people

Order of priority: people, then pipes, then property. Warm the humans, not the whole house.

  • One room strategy — pick the smallest room, ideally south-facing, close the door, and concentrate everyone and any safe heat there.
  • Space heater, three rules — keep 3 feet of clearance from anything that burns, place it on a hard floor, and plug it directly into a wall outlet, never an extension cord (per CPSC guidance).
  • Never the oven — a gas oven vents carbon monoxide indoors. It is not a heat source.
  • Layers beat one big blanket — trapped air between layers insulates better; add a hat, since a lot of heat leaves through the head.

If the house is dropping into the 40s and you have an infant, an older adult, or anyone with a health condition, relocate them somewhere warm now.

Minutes 10–60 · pipes

Protect the pipes

Pipes are at risk once temperatures near them fall below about 20°F for several hours. Do these:

  • Drip the faucets — a slow trickle on the farthest fixtures and any on exterior walls keeps water moving.
  • Open cabinet doors under sinks so room air reaches the pipes.
  • Close the garage and any exterior doors near plumbing.
  • Find your main water shut-off now — before you need it in a hurry.
Why the drip matters

A burst pipe turns a $300 repair night into a $5,000+ water-damage claim. The drip is free insurance.

One winter note: the furnace's own condensate line can freeze too. If a high-efficiency furnace shows a pressure-switch or drain error, a frozen condensate line is the likely winter culprit — back to check 5 on the intake/exhaust.

The honest call

Emergency visit tonight — or a morning call?

Call now

  • Subzero or fast-dropping indoor temps
  • Infants, older adults, or medical needs in the home
  • Any gas smell or CO alarm
  • Pipes already at risk of freezing

Can wait until morning

  • Mild night, healthy adults only
  • Safe space heat holding a room comfortable
  • No gas or CO concern
  • No plumbing at freeze risk

Premium honesty: after-hours visits run about 1.5–2× the daytime rate. If you're safe tonight, a morning call costs less — and we route that one just the same. If it's a confirmed emergency, see emergency furnace repair. Fee details on HVAC service call cost.

Get a licensed local contractor

Emergency heat help is available 24/7 by calling (888) 810-2291 — the call routes to a licensed local contractor in your area.

No-heat FAQ

Common questions

Will pipes freeze in one night without heat?

They can if indoor temperatures near exposed pipes drop below about 20°F and stay there for several hours — most common in unheated walls, crawlspaces, and against exterior walls. A slow faucet drip on the farthest fixtures is cheap insurance against a burst.

Is it safe to sleep in a house with no heat?

For healthy adults, a night in the 50s°F with layers and blankets is uncomfortable but generally safe. Infants, older adults, and anyone with a medical condition are far more vulnerable — if the house is dropping into the 40s, relocate them somewhere warm.

Do emergency HVAC visits cost more?

After-hours, weekend, and holiday visits typically run 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. If the night is mild and you're safe, a morning call costs less.

Why did my furnace stop working in the middle of the night?

Overnight is when the furnace runs hardest, so a marginal part fails then. The most common overnight cause is an overheat or safety shutdown — a clogged filter or a blocked vent tripping the limit switch — followed by ignition faults. Work the first-10-minutes checks.

Can I run my gas oven for heat?

No. A gas oven vents combustion byproducts, including carbon monoxide, into your living space and is a genuine poisoning risk. Never use an oven or stovetop to heat a room — use safe space heaters and layers instead.

☏ Call a licensed local contractor — (888) 810-2291