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How to Price an HVAC Job in 2026 — Complete Contractor Guide

Published: March 2026 14 min read Category: Pricing Guide

HVAC contractors who underprice equipment installs bleed money on every job. Those who overprice lose bids to competitors. This guide gives you real 2026 cost ranges, labor rates, equipment markups, and a repeatable pricing formula so you can win more bids at margins worth working for.

2026 HVAC Job Cost Overview

Before diving into the formula, here are the installed cost ranges customers will see — and what your estimate needs to cover.

System Type Size Range Installed Cost (Customer Price) Typical Labor Hours
Central AC (split system) 2-5 ton $3,800 – $7,500 6 – 10 hrs
Gas furnace (replacement) 60,000 – 120,000 BTU $2,500 – $5,500 4 – 8 hrs
Heat pump (split system) 2-5 ton $4,500 – $9,500 6 – 12 hrs
Mini-split (single zone) 9,000 – 24,000 BTU $2,200 – $4,800 3 – 6 hrs
Mini-split (multi-zone, 4 heads) 36,000 – 48,000 BTU $7,500 – $14,000 10 – 16 hrs
Ductwork replacement (whole home) 1,500 – 2,500 sq ft home $5,000 – $12,000 12 – 24 hrs
Ductwork sealing & insulation Existing system $1,200 – $3,500 4 – 8 hrs
Air handler replacement Residential $1,800 – $3,800 3 – 6 hrs

These are total customer-facing prices, not your costs. Your actual equipment wholesale cost, labor burden, and overhead sit underneath these numbers. The sections below show you how to build up to them correctly.

Step 1 — Calculate Your True Equipment Cost

Equipment is the largest line item on most HVAC installs. Most distributors offer contractor accounts with net pricing 25-40% below MSRP. Your job is to mark that cost back up to a profitable sell price.

Equipment Markup Benchmarks (2026)

Equipment Category Typical Wholesale Cost Recommended Markup Customer Price Range
Standard efficiency AC (14-16 SEER2) $1,100 – $1,800 35 – 40% $1,485 – $2,520
High efficiency AC (18+ SEER2) $1,800 – $3,200 38 – 45% $2,485 – $4,640
Standard gas furnace (80% AFUE) $700 – $1,100 35 – 40% $945 – $1,540
High efficiency furnace (96% AFUE) $1,100 – $1,900 38 – 42% $1,518 – $2,698
Air source heat pump $1,400 – $3,000 40 – 45% $1,960 – $4,350
Single-zone mini-split $700 – $1,400 35 – 40% $945 – $1,960
Air handler / coil $500 – $1,200 35 – 38% $675 – $1,656

Important: Markup and margin are not the same. A 40% markup means you multiply your cost by 1.40. A 40% margin means 40% of the sell price is profit. Most HVAC contractors use markup language with their suppliers and margin language internally — keep the two separate when building your estimates.

Materials and Supplies Markup

Beyond the main unit, every install includes copper line sets, refrigerant, electrical disconnects, whip cables, condensate lines, duct transitions, and consumables. Mark all of these up at least 30%, and refrigerant at a minimum of 35% given the ongoing price volatility from refrigerant phase-down regulations.

Material Approximate Cost to You Minimum Markup
R-410A refrigerant (per lb) $8 – $14 35%
R-454B refrigerant (per lb) $22 – $38 35%
Copper line set (25 ft, 1/4" + 3/4") $55 – $95 30%
Electrical disconnect $28 – $55 30%
Condensate pan & drain line $18 – $40 30%
Flex duct (per foot) $1.20 – $2.50 30%

Step 2 — Calculate Labor Cost Accurately

Most HVAC contractors undercharge labor because they calculate using base wages, not true loaded cost. If your tech earns $28/hour, your actual cost per hour is closer to $42-$48 once you layer in payroll taxes, workers comp, health insurance, and vehicle costs.

2026 HVAC Technician Labor Rates

Tech Level Typical Hourly Wage Loaded Cost (with burden) Suggested Bill Rate
Apprentice / helper $18 – $24/hr $27 – $36/hr $65 – $85/hr
Journeyman HVAC tech $28 – $40/hr $42 – $60/hr $95 – $130/hr
Senior / lead technician $42 – $58/hr $63 – $87/hr $125 – $165/hr
NATE-certified specialist $50 – $70/hr $75 – $105/hr $140 – $185/hr

The gap between loaded cost and bill rate is not pure profit — it funds overhead: shop rent, insurance, vehicles, tools, advertising, office staff, and software. Most HVAC businesses run 30-40% overhead as a percentage of revenue.

Labor Burden Calculation

Use this formula to find your true labor cost before setting a bill rate:

At a $120/hr bill rate, the $76/hr spread covers your 35% overhead allocation ($42/hr) and leaves about $34/hr in contribution toward profit — roughly 28% net margin on labor, which is healthy.

Step 3 — Scope the Job and Identify Complexity Factors

Two identical AC units installed on two different houses can require very different labor hours. Always walk the job before quoting — or at minimum ask the right questions over the phone.

Factors That Add Labor Time and Cost

Factor Add to Base Labor
Attic air handler installation + 20 – 35%
Crawl space work (tight access) + 25 – 40%
Second-story or rooftop unit + 15 – 25%
Electrical panel upgrade required $800 – $2,500 add-on
Removing old equipment and haul-away + $200 – $450
Permit and inspection (required in most areas) $150 – $500 flat fee
Long line set run (over 25 ft) $12 – $18 per additional foot
Refrigerant line penetration through masonry + $150 – $350
Custom duct transitions needed + $200 – $600
Smart thermostat install and commissioning + $150 – $300

"We were undercharging on crawl space installs by almost $600 a job before we started itemizing access difficulty as a separate line. Once we put it on the estimate as a line item, customers stopped pushing back on it — it justified itself."

— HVAC contractor, 12 years in business, Southeast market

Step 4 — Build the Flat-Rate Estimate

Flat-rate pricing — where the customer sees one total number rather than time-and-materials — builds trust and protects you from scope creep. Here is a complete example for a standard 3-ton AC replacement.

Sample Estimate: 3-Ton Central AC Replacement

Line Item Your Cost Sell Price
3-ton 16 SEER2 condenser unit $1,350 $1,890
Matching evaporator coil $480 $672
Line set (30 ft copper) $78 $104
Refrigerant charge (R-454B, 10 lbs) $280 $378
Electrical disconnect + whip $55 $75
Condensate drain materials $25 $34
Labor — 2 techs x 7 hours @ $48/hr loaded $672 $1,190
Old equipment removal & haul-away $85 $275
Permit & inspection $225 $295
Total $3,250 $4,913

This example produces a gross margin of approximately 33.8% — solid for a replacement job on a standard home. In high-cost markets (California, Northeast, Pacific Northwest), you can and should add $500-$1,000 to this total to reflect local labor market conditions.

Ductwork Pricing in 2026

Duct jobs are harder to quote because there is no standard unit price. Scope varies enormously. Use the methods below depending on job type.

Ductwork Pricing Methods

Method Rate Best For
Per linear foot of duct run $18 – $35/ft (installed) New duct runs, extensions
Per register or diffuser $125 – $280 each (installed) Adding supply or return vents
Per square foot of home $3.50 – $6.00/sq ft Full duct replacement quotes
Flat rate per zone $1,800 – $4,500/zone Zoned systems with dampers

Full Duct Replacement: What Drives Cost

Profit Margin and Business Health Benchmarks

Pricing right is only half the battle. You also need to know whether your business is on track financially. Use these benchmarks to evaluate your numbers quarterly.

Metric Struggling Average Healthy
Gross margin Below 38% 38 – 44% 45 – 55%
Net profit margin Below 5% 5 – 9% 10 – 18%
Equipment markup (average) Below 28% 28 – 35% 35 – 45%
Labor bill rate vs. loaded cost ratio Below 2.2x 2.2x – 2.5x 2.5x – 3.2x
Overhead as % of revenue Above 45% 35 – 44% 28 – 34%

If your gross margin is below 40%, the most likely causes are: undercharging on labor bill rate, not marking up materials, or giving too many discounts in the field. Check each category separately before cutting overhead, which is usually not the real problem.

Seasonal Pricing Strategy

HVAC demand is intensely seasonal. In most markets, late May through August and December through February are peak seasons when customers have little choice but to accept your price. Use this leverage:

Price HVAC Jobs in 60 Seconds

OnSite's AI calculator gives you instant, accurate HVAC estimates — equipment, labor, markup, and all complexity factors built in.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much should I charge to install a central air conditioner in 2026?

Central AC installation runs $3,800 to $7,500 total for most residential jobs, depending on system size, efficiency rating, and local labor rates. Equipment accounts for roughly 50-55% of the total, with labor and overhead making up the rest. Contractors in high-cost markets like California or the Northeast can charge at the higher end of this range.

What markup should HVAC contractors charge on equipment?

Most successful HVAC contractors mark up equipment 25-45% above wholesale cost. On high-efficiency systems and heat pumps, markups toward 40-45% are common because customers are less likely to price-compare premium equipment. Mark up materials like refrigerant, copper line sets, and electrical supplies at least 30% to cover carrying costs and waste.

How do I price HVAC labor per hour?

HVAC technician labor rates range from $85 to $165 per hour billed to the customer, depending on your market and the technician's certification level. Your internal technician wages plus burden (payroll taxes, workers comp, benefits, vehicle costs) typically run $43-$87 per hour. The gap between your cost and your bill rate is what funds overhead and profit.

How long does it take to install a heat pump?

A standard split-system heat pump installation takes 4-8 hours for a two-technician crew. Retrofits replacing a gas furnace and adding cooling take longer — typically 8-12 hours — because new electrical work, line sets, and sometimes ductwork modifications are required. Always add 1-2 hours of buffer for permit inspections and startup testing.

What profit margin should HVAC contractors target?

Industry benchmarks put healthy HVAC contractor net profit margins at 10-15% of revenue. Gross margins should be 45-55% to cover overhead and still hit net profit targets. If your gross margin is below 40%, you are likely underpricing labor, undercharging markup on equipment, or both. Check your loaded labor cost calculation first — this is the most common source of margin erosion.