Emergency HVAC Service in Davis County, UT
No heat in winter, no cool in summer, a furnace producing a burning smell, or a system that won't stop tripping the breaker — emergency HVAC service in Davis County. Call (801) 683-5306 to reach a licensed local Davis County HVAC pro right away.
Call (801) 683-5306- No-heat calls in winter
- Total AC failure during hot weather
- Burning smell, yellow flame, or repeated breaker trips
- Same-day and after-hours service
For non-emergency, request a quote
For emergencies, call (801) 683-5306.
What counts as an HVAC emergency
Utah's climate makes HVAC failures more than an inconvenience. A no-heat call in a Davis County January night puts pipes at risk and the household at risk of hypothermia. A no-cool call during a July heat wave is a health risk for older residents and infants. The provider network treats these as priority calls.
- Total no-heat — furnace won't fire or shuts off repeatedly
- Total no-cool — AC won't run or won't produce cold air
- Burning smell from the furnace — sometimes a worn motor, sometimes a serious electrical issue
- Yellow or orange furnace flame — indicates incomplete combustion (CO risk)
- Water leaking from the furnace or AC — condensate drain, heat exchanger, or refrigerant issue
- Repeated breaker trips — short in the system or failing component
- Carbon monoxide alarm — leave the house first, call 911, then HVAC
Before the technician arrives
A few minutes of triage can speed up the call:
- For no-heat: turn the thermostat off, check the furnace breaker, check the filter
- For no-cool: turn the AC off at the thermostat (prevents ice on the coil), check the breaker
- If you smell gas: leave the house, call the gas utility from outside
- If the CO alarm is sounding: leave immediately, call 911, don't re-enter
Emergency coverage across Davis County
Emergency HVAC service in every Davis County city:
- Layton
- Bountiful
- Emergency HVAC in Clearfield
- Kaysville
- Farmington
- Syracuse, Centerville, North Salt Lake, Woods Cross, Clinton, West Bountiful, Sunset, West Point, South Weber
Emergency HVAC in Davis County: FAQs
What counts as an HVAC emergency in Davis County?
In a Utah climate, an HVAC emergency is anything that leaves the home without heat in winter or without cooling during hot weather — no-heat overnight in January, a complete AC failure in July, a furnace producing a burning smell or yellow flame, water leaking from the furnace or AC, or a tripping breaker that won't reset.
Is emergency HVAC service more expensive?
After-hours and weekend service rates are typically higher than standard daytime visits, but providers in the Davis County HVAC Pros network quote the full call before any work starts. The trip charge and rate are disclosed when you call.
What should I do before the technician arrives?
For a no-heat call: turn the thermostat off, check the breaker, replace the filter if it's clogged. For a no-cool call: turn the AC off at the thermostat to prevent ice buildup, check the breaker, check for a frozen evaporator coil. If you smell gas, leave the house and call the utility from outside.
Do you offer emergency HVAC across all Davis County cities?
Yes — emergency HVAC service is available across all Davis County cities including Layton, Bountiful, Clearfield, Kaysville, Farmington, Syracuse, Centerville, North Salt Lake, and the rest of the county.
Can a furnace problem cause carbon monoxide?
Yes. Cracked heat exchangers, blocked venting, and incomplete combustion can release carbon monoxide into the home. If your CO detector alarms, leave the house immediately, call 911 from outside, and don't re-enter until the fire department clears it. Then call for HVAC service.