Summit Climate Solutions · Denver, CO
Affordable Furnace Repair in Denver, CO
Furnace repairs at straightforward prices — Summit Climate Solutions fixes what's broken, gives you the estimate upfront, and never invents problems to inflate the bill
Most furnace failures cost $150–$450 to repair. Know what you're paying before the wrench turns.
Transparent Pricing
Our Pricing Approach
Starting From
$150–$1,500
Quote-Based Pricing
- Diagnostic fee $89, credited toward repair if you proceed same day.
- Igniter or flame sensor replacement: $150–$300.
- Circuit board replacement: $350–$700.
- Heat exchanger replacement: $1,000–$2,500 — often warrants a unit replacement discussion.
- After-hours emergency premium: $50–$75 over standard labor rates, disclosed before dispatch.
Get Your Quote
Every project is unique. Let us assess your situation and provide a tailored, accurate quote.
Request PricingEverything Included
What You Get
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24/7 Emergency Heating Response
Furnace failures do not wait for business hours. We dispatch licensed technicians around the clock, with priority routing for households with infants, elderly residents, or medical conditions.
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Carbon Monoxide Safety Check Included
Every furnace repair call includes a complimentary CO inspection using calibrated combustion analysis equipment — at no extra charge, because your family's safety matters more than upsells.
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All-Brand Furnace Expertise
NATE-certified technicians trained on Carrier, Lennox, Trane, Rheem, Bryant, Goodman, York, and Amana furnaces — gas, oil, and electric — covering all makes and models.
Our Guarantees
- Free carbon monoxide safety check included with every furnace repair
- licensed insured
- 20+ years
- 1-year parts & labor warranty
- NATE-Certified Technicians
- 2-hour emergency response
Social Proof
Why Customers Trust Us
- licensed insured
- 20+ years
- 1-year parts & labor warranty
- NATE-Certified Technicians
- 2-hour emergency response
“Furnace quit on a -5°F night in Littleton. Summit's emergency tech arrived in under 2 hours, diagnosed a failed igniter, and had heat running again before midnight. Incredible response.”
“Installed a dual-fuel heat pump system in our Aurora home. Works as AC in summer and efficient heat pump in fall/spring, with the gas furnace kicking in only on the coldest days. Bills dropped significantly.”
“The altitude adjustment thing is real — our old company never tuned our furnace for Denver's elevation. Summit re-tuned it and the short-cycling stopped immediately.”
Our Approach
Furnace Repair in Denver
Denver's extreme temperature swings — from 90°F summers to -10°F winter nights — demand HVAC systems that perform reliably year-round. Altitude also affects system performance, requiring technicians who understand the adjustments needed for proper combustion and airflow at 5,280 feet.
Denver furnace repair is among the most technically demanding work Summit Climate Solutions performs, and altitude is the reason. At 5,280 feet above sea level — the exact elevation of central Denver and its suburbs of Littleton, Aurora, and Lakewood — the combustion process in a natural gas furnace operates with approximately 17% less oxygen available per unit volume than at sea level. This reduced oxygen density means that furnaces installed in Denver without proper altitude adjustment burn rich, producing elevated carbon monoxide in the flue gases, operating inefficiently, and frequently short-cycling on high-limit as the heat exchanger overheats from incomplete combustion. Most furnace manufacturers provide altitude de-rating instructions and orifice size specifications for installations above 2,000 feet. A furnace installed in Denver should have its burner orifice or gas valve adjusted to reduce the gas firing rate proportionally to the available oxygen, and the result should be verified with a combustion analyzer measuring flue CO, CO2, and O2. Summit Climate Solutions technicians carry digital combustion analyzers to every Denver furnace repair call and verify combustion quality as a standard diagnostic step — not an optional add-on. A furnace repaired in Denver without a combustion analysis is a furnace with an unverified safety status. Winter temperature extremes in the Denver metro create a furnace failure pattern specific to cold climates. When temperatures drop below 0°F — as they do several times each winter, with windchill values reaching -20°F or colder — condensate drain lines on high-efficiency condensing furnaces can freeze. A frozen condensate line backs up into the furnace and causes a pressure switch or drain float switch to shut the system down. Summit technicians in Littleton and Aurora carry heat tape and condensate line remediation supplies on every truck during the winter months, and part of the fall maintenance visit is inspecting the condensate drain routing for freeze risk and adding heat tape protection where needed. The Littleton, Aurora, and Lakewood housing stock includes a significant proportion of homes built in the 1970s through 1990s with original 80% AFUE non-condensing furnaces. These older units often have heat exchanger cracks or corrosion that has developed over 30+ years of thermal cycling at altitude. Summit technicians perform camera-assisted heat exchanger inspections on older Denver furnaces as a standard diagnostic component, documenting findings with photographs before any recommendation is made.
Furnace repair is one of the most anxiety-inducing home service calls a homeowner faces — you're cold, you have no leverage, and you don't know if the technician is honest. Summit Climate Solutions addresses that anxiety directly with published repair ranges, written estimates before every job, and a diagnostic fee that applies toward approved repairs. We don't upsell heat exchanger replacements on furnaces that have years of life left, and we don't recommend full system replacements on repairable equipment. When a furnace genuinely is beyond economical repair, we tell you why — in writing — and show you the math. Our NATE-certified technicians are paid a salary, not a commission, which means their only incentive is to fix your furnace correctly the first time.
Every furnace repair includes a complimentary carbon monoxide safety check with a calibrated detector — because a cracked heat exchanger can endanger your family even after the heat comes back on.
Problems We Solve
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Some HVAC companies falsely diagnose cracked heat exchangers to justify full furnace replacement on repairable units
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Commission-driven technicians may recommend a full system replacement when a $200 igniter repair would solve the problem
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Diagnostic fees not credited toward repair create a perverse incentive to always find something to fix
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Aftermarket parts of poor quality cause repeat failures within one heating season, generating unnecessary return calls
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Furnace repair pricing has wide variation — the same igniter replacement quoted at $150 by one company and $550 by another
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A furnace that will not ignite on a freezing night puts your family at risk of dangerously low indoor temperatures — pipes can freeze within hours in extreme cold, multiplying the cost of the emergency.
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Short cycling — your furnace turning on and off every few minutes — stresses the heat exchanger and blower motor, and often signals a cracked heat exchanger that can leak carbon monoxide into your living space.
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A yellow or flickering burner flame instead of a steady blue one is a carbon monoxide warning sign that demands immediate shutdown and professional inspection before the furnace is operated again.
Have Questions?
Frequently Asked Questions
What does a typical furnace igniter replacement cost?
Igniter replacement is one of the most common furnace repairs. Depending on the furnace brand and igniter type (silicon nitride vs. silicon carbide), parts range from $25–$80. With labor and diagnostic credit applied, total cost typically falls between $150–$280. We carry igniters for Carrier, Lennox, Trane, Rheem, and most other major brands on every truck.
How do I know if my furnace heat exchanger is actually cracked?
A legitimate heat exchanger diagnosis requires a camera inspection of the heat exchanger cells, a combustion analysis measuring CO in the flue gas and air supply, and a visual inspection of the secondary heat exchanger on condensing furnaces. We document all findings with photos. If we diagnose a cracked heat exchanger, we show you the evidence. We do not condemn a furnace based on a visual inspection alone.
Is furnace repair worth it, or should I just replace the system?
Repair makes financial sense when the system is under 15 years old, the repair cost is less than 30–40% of replacement cost, and the AFUE rating is still reasonable for your climate (80%+ for most climates, 90%+ for cold climates). We provide a written repair-vs-replace analysis when repair costs are substantial. A 98% AFUE condensing furnace pays for itself over time, but only if your current furnace is genuinely near end of life.
What's included in a furnace repair visit beyond fixing the immediate problem?
Every repair visit includes a carbon monoxide safety check (free, always), a visual inspection of the heat exchanger, a filter check and replacement recommendation, a combustion analysis if accessible, and an assessment of any secondary issues that may need attention before the next heating season. We leave you with a written summary of findings, not just a repair receipt.
Do maintenance plans cover furnace repair costs?
Our maintenance plans cover the cost of semi-annual tune-up visits and include a 15% discount on all repair parts and labor when issues are found. They don't cover major repairs outright, but the discount and the preventive value of catching failing components early — a flame sensor before it causes a no-heat lockout, a heat exchanger before it cracks further — make plan membership consistently cost-effective.
How much does furnace repair cost?
Repairs range from $150 for a simple igniter replacement to $1,500 for a complex circuit board or inducer motor job. Our diagnostic fee is $89 and is applied to the repair total if you proceed the same day. All pricing is provided in writing before any work begins.
How do I know if I should repair or replace my furnace?
Consider replacement if the repair cost exceeds 50% of a new unit's price, the furnace is over 15 years old, or you are facing recurring breakdowns. We will give you an honest repair-vs-replace comparison with energy savings projections — no high-pressure sales tactics.
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★★★★★ Rated 4.9 · Trusted by 389+ customers in Denver
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