HVAC repair, installation, and planning
Cooling, heat pumps, furnace repair, ductwork, indoor air quality, thermostats, and emergency no-cool service for Valley homes. Home Systems LA pages go beyond service labels by explaining when to repair, when to replace, what can go wrong, what cost drivers matter, and what to document before work is covered or a system is restarted.
AC Repair
no-cool calls, weak airflow, short cycling, hot rooms, tripped condenser breakers, and first-heat-wave failures
AC Replacement
old condensers, repeated compressor failures, high summer bills, poor comfort, and right-sizing decisions
Heat Pump Installation
gas-to-electric upgrades, efficient heating and cooling, ADU comfort, and CEC electric-readiness planning
Furnace Repair
no-heat calls, ignition issues, blower failures, safety switches, and old gas furnace diagnostics
Ductless Mini-Split Installation
garage conversions, ADUs, bonus rooms, bedrooms, studios, and hard-to-cool additions
Ductwork and Airflow
hot bedrooms, high bills, attic leakage, noisy returns, weak vents, and comfort imbalance
Indoor Air Quality
wildfire smoke, dust, allergies, filtration upgrades, stale rooms, and ventilation concerns
Thermostat and Controls
blank thermostats, wrong staging, smart thermostat upgrades, wiring faults, and heat pump controls
Emergency HVAC
no cooling during heat waves, burning smells, frozen coils, water around air handlers, and unsafe heating concerns
Local hvac issues Home Systems LA plans for
Woodland Hills, Canoga Park, Chatsworth, and Porter Ranch put equipment under longer heat stress. Van Nuys, North Hollywood, and Panorama City add apartment access, rooftop equipment, tenant scheduling, and parking constraints. Burbank and Magnolia Park have municipal utility planning differences. Calabasas, Hidden Hills, Sherman Oaks, and Encino may need gate access, hillside routing, finish protection, and HOA coordination.
The best service visit starts before the truck rolls: photos, age labels, panel photos, cleanout locations, shutoff locations, roof keys, gate instructions, symptom timing, and whether a recent remodel or appliance change happened. That preparation reduces guesswork and helps the technician separate immediate repair from larger replacement or code-scope decisions.
Get a tech window without guessing.
Use the external scheduler, then have the city, system type, access notes, photos, and urgency ready so the visit starts with useful context.