Rome, NY

HVAC Pros in Rome, NY

3 HVAC providers cover Rome. oneida County homeowners typically upgrade every 12–18 years in this climate. National Grid (NY) rebates up to $4,000 available.

3 providers listedNY DOS + local license-verifiedFree quotes
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Quick facts

  • AreaRome
  • StateNY
  • Providers3
  • Climate zone5A-Cool-Humid
  • Heating degree days6,200
  • Recommended systemdual fuel

Why HVAC matters in Rome

Rome sits in IECC climate zone 5A-Cool-Humid with average January temperatures of 24°F and July highs around 74°F. With 6,200 heating degree days, a reliable heating system is essential for comfort and safety.

NY (Oneida County) falls in IECC 5A-Cool-Humid. HDD 6200 / CDD 900 per NOAA 1991–2020 state averages drive a dual fuel HVAC strategy. Climate data is zone-level; consult a contractor for site-specific load calcs.

Dual-fuel system recommended for Rome

A dual-fuel system pairs a heat pump with a gas furnace backup — the heat pump runs efficiently on mild days while the furnace handles deep cold.

With 6,200 heating degree days and winter lows reaching 24°F, standard heat pumps lose efficiency. The dual-fuel approach gives you heat pump savings on 80% of winter days plus reliable gas heat when temperatures drop below 15-20°F.

Typical cost$8,000–$16,000
After rebates$4,000–$10,000 after rebates

See full cost breakdown by system type →

About Rome HVAC

Rome's suburban profile means most HVAC work is replacement rather than new-build. With only 3 HVAC providers on file in Rome, expect some providers to quote travel premiums. Compare any available pro's license and insurance before signing.

Rome's winter design temps (January averages near 24°F) sit at the edge of standard heat-pump efficiency, which is why dual-fuel setups — heat pump plus gas furnace backup — have become the contractor-preferred configuration here. Properly sized equipment matched to Rome's load profile runs quieter, lasts longer, and avoids the short-cycling that kills cheap installs. National Grid (NY)'s National Grid + NYS Clean Heat ASHP Rebate currently offers up to $4,000 toward a qualifying system, which meaningfully shifts the cost-of-ownership math.

Top local providers

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  1. Ber-mor Gas Service storefront photo
    4.8 (63 reviews)Serves Rome
    What customers say
    Was a cold and nasty winter night in upstate NY. I called 8:22pm and explained my problem to dispatch that my…
  2. Oneida County Furnace Inc storefront photo
    4.6 (19 reviews)Serves Rome
    What customers say
    Oneida County Furnace recently installed a new hot water heater in my home, and I couldn’t be more pleased with the…
  3. 4.5 (6 reviews)Serves Rome
    What customers say
    Couldn't be happier. Furnace went, and he was at my house within a few hours. Easily diagnosed and fixed the problem.…

What Rome homeowners say

★★★★★

Couldn't be happier. Furnace went, and he was at my house within a few hours. Easily diagnosed and fixed the problem. Charged a very fair fee. Told me to call if same issue persists, as he stands by his work. I needed him again just a week later for …

Joshua MacDougall reviewing Mid-City Heating & Cooling Llc, 2 years ago
★★★★★

Was a cold and nasty winter night in upstate NY. I called 8:22pm and explained my problem to dispatch that my thermostat read 65° but furnace wouldn't blow heat. Within 3 min I received a call from John an outstanding gentleman with around 20 years e…

Daniel Bulinski reviewing Ber-mor Gas Service, a year ago
★★★★★

Oneida County Furnace recently installed a new hot water heater in my home, and I couldn’t be more pleased with the experience. The team was professional, efficient, and provided excellent communication throughout the process. The installation was co…

Chester W. DiBari III reviewing Oneida County Furnace Inc, 5 months ago

Local pricing snapshot

Typical project range$3,500 – $12,500per system install, Rome

Repairs typically run $150–$600. Full system replacements range from $4k for a basic furnace to $12k+ for a premium heat pump. Dual-fuel systems (heat pump + gas backup) are recommended for this area's cold winters.

Available rebates in Rome

  • National Grid (NY): National Grid + NYS Clean Heat ASHP Rebate $1,000–$4,000 for heat pump
  • National Grid (NY): National Grid High-Efficiency Gas Furnace Rebate $400–$800 for furnace

Federal tax credits (up to $2,000 for heat pumps) can stack with utility rebates. See full cost breakdown →

Nearby service areas

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • What's the best heating system for Rome?

    Rome has cold winters (avg January: 24°F) with 6,200 heating degree days. A dual-fuel system (heat pump + gas furnace backup) is recommended — the heat pump handles mild days efficiently while the furnace takes over during deep cold snaps below 15-20°F.

  • How important is air conditioning in Rome?

    Very. With 900 cooling degree days and summer highs regularly exceeding 74°F, AC is essential in Rome. Central AC or a heat pump (which provides both heating and cooling) is strongly recommended. Budget $3,500-$7,000 for a quality cooling system installation.

  • What HVAC rebates are available in Rome?

    Rome homeowners can stack multiple incentives: National Grid (NY) offers up to $4,000 for heat pump installations. Add the federal 25C tax credit ($2,000), and total savings can reach $6,000+. Ask your installer to itemize which rebates apply to your specific project.

  • How much does HVAC work cost in Rome?

    In Rome, typical costs range from $150-$600 for repairs, $4,000-$8,000 for a standard furnace or AC replacement, and $6,000-$14,000 for a heat pump system. After available rebates, heat pump installations often net out to $4,000-$9,000. Get 2-3 written quotes to compare — prices vary significantly between contractors.

  • How do I verify a HVAC contractor is licensed in New York?

    New York does not issue a statewide HVAC contractor license. Instead, licensing is handled by NYC (Department of Consumer and Worker Protection), and individual counties such as Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, and Rockland — each with its own license lookup. For NYC, verify Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) status at the DCWP Citizen Access portal; elsewhere, contact the county Consumer Affairs office. Confirm active status, insurance on file, and any required bond.

Licensing verified weekly. Reviews refreshed within the last 30 days.

Licensing data: New York Department of State (consumer protection) plus local licensing (NYC DCWP, county Consumer Affairs) · Company data: verified business records + Google Business profile

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