Back Mountain, PA

HVAC Pros in Back Mountain, PA

Back Mountain sits in a climate that works HVAC equipment hard — 6,200 heating and 900 cooling degree days a year. 3 pros listed. PPL Electric Utilities rebates up to $1,200 available.

3 providers listedPA HIC license-verifiedFree quotes
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Quick facts

  • AreaBack Mountain
  • StatePA
  • Providers3
  • Climate zone5A-Cool-Humid
  • Heating degree days6,200
  • Recommended systemdual fuel

Why HVAC matters in Back Mountain

Back Mountain 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.

PA (Luzerne 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 Back Mountain

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–$12,000 after rebates

See full cost breakdown by system type →

About Back Mountain HVAC

With only 3 HVAC providers on file in Back Mountain, expect some providers to quote travel premiums. Compare any available pro's license and insurance before signing. Homeowners in Back Mountain typically schedule maintenance in spring and fall to get ahead of peak-season wait times.

Back Mountain'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 Back Mountain's load profile runs quieter, lasts longer, and avoids the short-cycling that kills cheap installs. PPL Electric Utilities's PPL Heat Pump Rebate (E-power) currently offers up to $1,200 toward a qualifying system, which meaningfully shifts the cost-of-ownership math.

Top local providers

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  1. Monk Heating & Air Conditioning storefront photo
    4.8 (575 reviews)Serves Back Mountain
    What customers say
    💥💥💥What an exceptional family run business to deal with. From the first call I was greeted with courtesy and treated…
  2. R.N. Fitch & Sons storefront photo
    4.7 (79 reviews)Serves Back Mountain
    installationrepairemergency
    What customers say
    Excellent experience with R.N Fitch & Sons getting a new oil boiler installed. A few bumps in the road along the…
  3. Plum-Air storefront photo
    4.3 (22 reviews)Serves Back Mountain
    What customers say
    Not happy that I had to install a new furnace, but the old one was 20 years old. The people at Plum Air were great from…

What Back Mountain homeowners say

★★★★★

Excellent experience with R.N Fitch & Sons getting a new oil boiler installed. A few bumps in the road along the way(due to my very old house not them) but they took it right in stride and even took extra steps to make sure we had what we needed whil…

Dawn Walsh reviewing R.N. Fitch & Sons, 6 months ago
★★★★★

💥💥💥What an exceptional family run business to deal with. From the first call I was greeted with courtesy and treated with professionalism from start to finish during the job! They showed up to give me an estimate when they said they would and star…

Feracks Auto Service reviewing Monk Heating & Air Conditioning, 2 months ago
★★★★★

Not happy that I had to install a new furnace, but the old one was 20 years old. The people at Plum Air were great from start to finish. They came promptly, since it has been so cold around here, ordered the new furnace and had it installed by the en…

Dr. Tom Jiunta reviewing Plum-Air, a year ago

Local pricing snapshot

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

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 Back Mountain

  • PPL Electric Utilities: PPL Heat Pump Rebate (E-power) $300–$1,200 for heat pump
  • PPL Electric Utilities: PPL Ductless Mini-Split Rebate $200–$800 for ductless

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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Popular comparisons in Back Mountain

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • What's the best heating system for Back Mountain?

    Back Mountain 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 Back Mountain?

    Very. With 900 cooling degree days and summer highs regularly exceeding 74°F, AC is essential in Back Mountain. 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 Back Mountain?

    Back Mountain homeowners can stack multiple incentives: PPL Electric Utilities offers up to $1,200 for heat pump installations. Add the federal 25C tax credit ($2,000), and total savings can reach $3,200+. Ask your installer to itemize which rebates apply to your specific project.

  • How much does HVAC work cost in Back Mountain?

    In Back Mountain, 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 Pennsylvania?

    Pennsylvania does not issue a statewide HVAC trade license. All contractors performing $5,000+ of residential work must register as a Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) with the PA Office of Attorney General — verify at hic.attorneygeneral.gov. Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and many townships additionally require a local mechanical or HVAC license; check the municipal licensing office. Confirm the HIC registration is Active, insurance is in place, and ask for the local trade license copy.

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

Licensing data: Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General — Home Improvement Contractor Registry (local mechanical licensing varies by jurisdiction) · Company data: verified business records + Google Business profile

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