The HVAC industry generates over $150 billion annually across the United States, and that number keeps climbing. Every home, apartment, office, and commercial building depends on heating, ventilation, and air conditioning year-round — which means when systems break down, customers call immediately. Starting an HVAC business puts you in one of the most recession-resistant trades there is, with strong margins, repeat customers, and demand that never really stops.

This guide walks you through everything you need to know to start an HVAC business: the certifications and licenses required, what it costs to get started, the business systems you need to run professionally from day one, and how to position yourself to scale.

Licensing and Certifications You'll Need

HVAC is a licensed trade, and the requirements vary by state — but there are federal requirements that apply everywhere.

Important: Operating without EPA 608 certification is a federal violation with fines up to $44,539 per day per violation. Get certified before handling any refrigerants.

Estimated Startup Costs

HVAC has higher startup costs than many home service trades because of the equipment required. Here's a realistic breakdown:

Hand tools & gauges
$3,000–$8,000
Diagnostic equipment
$2,000–$8,000
Service van
$25,000–$60,000
Van stock (parts)
$3,000–$10,000
Insurance (year 1)
$3,000–$8,000
Licensing & certification
$500–$2,000

Total estimated startup range: $36,500–$96,000. Many technicians start by working from a used van with a solid tool set and build from there. You don't need everything at once.

Building a Maintenance Plan Program

The most profitable HVAC businesses don't just chase service calls — they build recurring revenue through maintenance plan programs. A basic maintenance agreement typically covers a spring tune-up (AC) and a fall tune-up (heating) for $150–$300 per year per system. If you have 200 maintenance plan customers, that's $30,000–$60,000 in predictable annual revenue before you take a single service call.

Maintenance plans also give you the inside track on equipment replacement jobs. When a system that you've been maintaining for three years finally needs to be replaced, you're the one they call — not someone they found on Google that morning.

Essential Business Systems for Your HVAC Company

Most HVAC technicians who start their own business are excellent at the technical work. The ones who struggle — or fail — almost always do so because of the business side, not the mechanical side. These are the systems you need in place before you get busy:

Build Your HVAC Business the Right Way

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