“I had a weird situation with my sump pump operation in that it would empty out at various rates. Sometimes fine, other…”
“Gabe was GREAT!! He came by my house and before he started, he advised me on some options for a replacement water…”
“Back in 2017 when I knew I was going to have a new furnace and central air system sized and installed it wasn't even a…”
“A+ on every factor. From scheduling an appointment for an estimate, the quoting process, their communication,…”
“Best HVAC experience I’ve ever had. The company was quick at responding and quick at sending a tech out. I got Ted Cole…”
“Start to finish Blu Flame provided quality service. It had been a few years since we’ve had routine maintenance done…”
“They were available to contact us on our furnace that went out at 10 pm and were able to replace it after one day of…”
“Scott was prompt, professional, and incredibly helpful. He took on an emergency call (our heating wasn't working) and…”
Derived from local HVAC benchmarks in Toledo. Most repair tickets fall well below full-system pricing — expect simple swaps (capacitor, ignitor, thermostat) at the low end and major component replacements (blower motor, control board, compressor) at the high end.
Pick the repair type and your system's age for a ballpark range. Real quotes vary by part availability and diagnosis — use this as a sanity check before approving work.
Most diagnoses take 30–60 minutes on site. Small repairs (capacitor swap, thermostat, ignitor) finish the same visit. Parts-on-order repairs can push the job 1–5 business days depending on supplier stock.
Labor warranties of 30–90 days are common; parts usually carry the manufacturer's warranty (1–10 years). Always get the warranty terms in writing on the invoice before the tech leaves.
Red flags: no written estimate before work starts, refrigerant refill with no leak search, blanket recommendation to replace without an inspection, or very high "after-hours" pricing on a non-emergency call. Two written quotes for any repair over $600 is the fastest sanity check.
When the repair estimate exceeds 50% of a new system, or the unit is past 15 years, or it uses obsolete refrigerant (R-22), replacement usually wins the 5-year math. Otherwise repair is almost always the better call.
Licensing verified weekly. Reviews refreshed within the last 30 days.
Licensing data: Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board (OCILB), Ohio Department of Commerce · Company data: verified business records + Google Business profile
See our editorial standardsReport inaccurate info about HVAC repair in Toledo
Two or three written quotes is the fastest way to normalize a repair bill — we'll connect you with top-ranked local pros.