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When to call 911 instead
A contractor can fix the HVAC system; only the fire department, utility, or hazmat team can make the home safe when a life-safety scenario is unfolding. If any of these apply, get out first, call 911 from outside, and schedule HVAC service once the scene is cleared.
- Suspected carbon-monoxide (CO) leak. If you smell rotten-egg odor, hear hissing from a gas line, or a CO alarm is sounding, leave the home immediately and call 911 from outside. Do not re-enter until the fire department clears the property. Get everyone out first — adults, kids, and pets — before calling. CDC carbon monoxide info · EPA carbon monoxide guide
- Natural-gas leak or suspected gas smell. Call your gas utility's 24/7 emergency line first. Do not operate switches, phones, garage doors, or appliances inside the home — any spark can ignite gas. Before any digging on your property for HVAC repairs (condenser pads, gas-line reroutes, mini-split line-sets), call 811 at least two business days ahead so utility lines are marked. Call 811 before you dig
- HVAC fire, smoke, or visible flame. Evacuate the home, then call 911. Do not attempt to extinguish an electrical or combustion fire at the furnace or air handler without training. Once the fire department clears the scene, contact your homeowner's insurance carrier before an HVAC contractor touches the damaged equipment — photos and adjuster visits come first.
- Test your CO detectors at least once a year. CO detectors have a service life of 5–7 years — check the sensor's "replace by" date on the back of the unit. Batteries get tested annually (spring and fall daylight-saving switches are a common reminder). Install at least one detector on every floor and outside every sleeping area; a single CO event can be fatal at 150+ ppm within two hours. CDC: preventing CO poisoning
Emergency shortlist
Request a dispatch →No providers in Brick are explicitly tagged as 24-hour. Below is the top-ranked general shortlist — call to confirm emergency availability.
- NJR Home ServicesTop ratedinstallationrepairinspection
What customers say “From the call to NJR explaining we are hearing a sound coming from our furnace when starting up, the young lady we…”
- installationrepairinspectionemergency
What customers say “I cannot say enough great things about the service I received. From the moment Dan walked into my home, he treated both…”
- Dwyer ServicesTop ratedinstallationrepairinspectionemergency
What customers say “Our Central Air was 34 years old and our furnace was 18 years old, after getting quotes from others, we found Dwyer to…”
- Atlantic ShoreTop rated
What customers say “I had Atlantic Shore do a complete install in December of 2023. The guys were great and did the full install in five…”
- 1st Choice Air ComfortTop rated
What customers say “Let me start by saying it’s extremely scary when you have problems with your heat and HVAC unexpectedly, especially the…”
What customers say “Where to begin-I will start with the first unsung hero, Maryann. This young lady is the ideal representative of a…”
- Genuine Heating & CoolingTop rated
What customers say “I reached out to Genuine Heating & Cooling for a quote on commercial work I need completed for a restaurant I am…”
- CAM HVAC ServicesTop ratedinstallationrepairemergency
What customers say “CAM HVAC Services gets 10 stars! They are a wonderful company that truly cares about their customers. They came and…”
What counts as a HVAC emergency
- No heat with outdoor temperatures below freezing — pipe-freeze and health-risk territory.
- No AC during an active heat wave when indoor temps exceed 85°F, especially with vulnerable occupants.
- Burning smell, smoke, or visible flame at the furnace or air handler — shut it off and call immediately.
- Natural-gas odor near the equipment — leave the house, call the utility, then your HVAC pro.
- Furnace repeatedly shorts the breaker or trips the high-limit switch.
- Refrigerant leak with a hissing noise or visible oil staining around the evaporator or lineset.
What to do before the pro arrives
- Shut the system off at the thermostat and the service disconnect before the tech arrives.
- If you smell gas, evacuate first and call your utility's emergency line before an HVAC tech.
- Open windows to ventilate if you suspect CO or combustion issues; move pets and kids out of the room.
- Keep the area around the air handler clear so the tech can get on-site and working in minutes, not hours.
Typical emergency-call cost
After-hours surcharges typically run about 1.6× the standard rate of $5,625–$15,625. Diagnostic fees are often credited toward the repair when you approve the work on-site — confirm before the tech is dispatched.
Estimate your Brick emergency call
Emergency pricing shifts with time of day and urgency. Get a ballpark before you call — dispatchers quote faster when you know the typical range.
Frequently Asked Questions
How fast can an emergency HVAC pro get to me in Brick?
Most 24-hour pros target a 1–2 hour on-site window inside the city core, longer for outlying areas. Confirm ETA when you call — and ask whether the dispatcher or the actual technician is giving the estimate.
What do after-hours and weekend surcharges look like?
Expect roughly 1.5×–2× normal labor rates outside business hours. Diagnostic fees in Brick typically run $5625–$10125 for emergency calls and are often credited toward the repair.
Is the diagnostic fee applied to the repair?
Many providers credit the diagnostic toward the repair if you approve the work on-site. Ask before the tech is dispatched so there are no surprises on the invoice.
Are Brick pros actually available 24 hours?
True 24/7 providers answer the phone with a live dispatcher after hours and can dispatch the same night. Some listings advertise 24-hour service but only return calls the next morning — call first and confirm a tech is being dispatched now.
Licensing verified weekly. Reviews refreshed within the last 30 days.
Licensing data: New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs — State Board of Examiners of Heating, Ventilating, Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Contractors (HVACR Contractors Board) · Company data: verified business records + Google Business profile
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