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Summit Climate Solutions · Atlanta, GA

Best HVAC Installation in Atlanta, GA

The best HVAC installation starts with a Manual J load calculation, uses equipment matched to your climate zone, and finishes with commissioned airflow and refrigerant charge verification

Summit Climate Solutions employs NATE-certified installation leads, pulls required permits, and provides post-installation commissioning data for every job.

4.9 389+ Reviews 20+ years

Everything Included

What You Get

  • Manual J Load Calculation

    We size every system scientifically using ACCA Manual J methodology — never by rule-of-thumb guessing — ensuring you get the right capacity for your home's exact heat gain and loss profile.

  • Factory-Backed Equipment Warranties

    We install Carrier, Lennox, and Trane systems with 10-year parts warranties registered in your name — and our workmanship warranty adds 2 years on top of that for labor.

  • Same-Day Completion Commitment

    Our crews are sized to complete most whole-home installations in a single day. You will not go more than one night without climate control during your installation.

Our Guarantees

  • 2-year labor warranty plus full manufacturer parts warranty up to 10 years, registered in your name at installation.
  • 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

“Pollen had our outdoor unit so clogged it was barely cooling in Marietta. Summit cleaned it, found a low refrigerant issue from a slow leak, and fixed both. Night and day difference in cooling.”

V.A.

Atlanta

“Heat pump install in Alpharetta — perfect for Atlanta's climate. Heats and cools efficiently without a gas line. Summit handled the whole project including the new thermostat setup.”

F.W.

Atlanta

“Our Roswell home is 30 years old with original ductwork. Summit sealed the ducts, added returns to two rooms, and our AC actually reaches the back bedrooms now. Should have done this years ago.”

O.R.

Atlanta

Serving Marietta Alpharetta Roswell Atlanta is the largest metro in the Southeast and a major B2B services hub — businesses here compete across finance, tech, media, and professional services, all requiring credible digital presence.

Our Approach

HVAC Installation in Atlanta

Atlanta's long, humid summers make AC the most-used system in the home — pollen season also clogs outdoor condenser units faster than almost anywhere in the country, and the shift toward heat pumps in this moderate climate zone means installation expertise matters more than ever.

Atlanta HVAC installation has been transformed over the past decade by the practical superiority of heat pump technology in the region's moderate climate. Atlanta's ASHRAE climate zone — mixed humid, Zone 3A — is nearly ideal for heat pump operation. Winter temperatures rarely sustain below the 20s, which is well within the efficient operating range of standard-efficiency heat pump equipment. A heat pump in Marietta, Alpharetta, or Roswell delivers coefficient of performance values of 2.5–3.5 during the typical Atlanta winter, meaning the system moves 2.5 to 3.5 units of heat energy for every unit of electrical energy consumed — a dramatic efficiency advantage over resistance electric heat or even a high-AFUE gas furnace on a cost-per-BTU basis when electricity and gas prices are considered. Summit Climate Solutions approaches Atlanta installations with heat pump recommendations as the default for new construction and replacement scenarios, rather than as an alternative to be upsold. For existing gas infrastructure homes in Roswell and Marietta where the homeowner wants to maintain dual-fuel flexibility, dual-fuel heat pump systems that use the heat pump as primary with a gas furnace backup for the occasional sustained cold event represent the best economic and comfort outcome. For new construction in Alpharetta without gas infrastructure, all-electric heat pump systems with appropriate backup electric resistance strip sizing for the design heating load are the straightforward choice. Equipment sizing for Atlanta installations is constrained by the same latent load considerations as other humid Southeast markets. The long humid season — April through October with relative humidity regularly above 75% — means that an oversized system will short-cycle, fail to maintain adequate dehumidification, and create the clammy indoor conditions that lead homeowners to set the thermostat lower and lower in search of comfort that a properly sized system would provide at a higher setpoint. Summit performs Manual J calculations for every Atlanta installation with humidity-adjusted design conditions, ensuring the equipment selection reflects the actual latent load of the specific home's construction type. The ductwork in older Marietta and Roswell homes is a key installation variable. 1980s–1990s systems often have undersized return air runs that inadequate airflow for modern high-efficiency equipment. Summit's assessments include duct static pressure testing and a duct leakage check to identify losses that would undermine the new system's performance.

HVAC installation quality is invisible to the naked eye and nearly impossible to evaluate at the time of installation — but it determines system performance, efficiency, and longevity for the next 15–20 years. The foundational quality marker is a proper Manual J load calculation: without it, system sizing is guesswork, and the chronic oversizing that results produces short-cycling, poor dehumidification, premature wear, and comfort complaints that no amount of service calls will resolve. After installation, a quality job is verified by measuring: static pressure in the supply and return plenums, system airflow by blower speed and temperature rise, refrigerant charge by superheat and subcooling, and leaving air temperature at each register. Summit Climate Solutions provides commissioning documentation for every installation so you have a permanent record of the system's verified performance on day one.

Every installation includes a Manual J load calculation and a post-install commissioning report — documented proof that your system is correctly sized, charged, and airflow-balanced for maximum efficiency and comfort.

Problems We Solve

  1. Most residential HVAC installations are sized by rule of thumb or square footage, not Manual J — oversizing is endemic

  2. Improper refrigerant charge at installation (too high or too low) degrades compressor life and voids most manufacturer warranties

  3. Ductwork that isn't sealed after equipment installation loses 20–30% of system capacity to leakage

  4. Installing variable-speed equipment on fixed-speed ductwork design wastes the efficiency premium paid for inverter systems

  5. No-permit installations can void homeowner's insurance coverage for HVAC-related losses and create problems at home sale

  6. An aging HVAC system over 12 years old consumes 30–50% more electricity than modern high-efficiency units, quietly adding hundreds of dollars to your utility bill every year while delivering inconsistent comfort.

  7. Uneven temperatures between rooms — too hot upstairs, too cold downstairs — often indicate an undersized or improperly designed system that no amount of maintenance will permanently resolve.

  8. Refrigerant phase-outs mean that systems running R-22 are becoming increasingly expensive to service as refrigerant prices climb; replacing with an R-410A or R-32 system eliminates this ongoing cost exposure.

Have Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

11 answered
What is commissioning and why does it matter for a new HVAC installation?

Commissioning is the process of measuring and verifying that a newly installed system performs within design specifications. It includes measuring static pressure against duct system design limits, verifying airflow at each supply register, confirming refrigerant charge by superheat and subcooling readings against manufacturer tables, verifying electrical connection integrity, and testing all safety controls. Commissioning documentation is the proof that the installation was done correctly — not just that the system turned on.

What certifications should an HVAC installation technician have?

EPA 608 certification is legally required for any technician handling refrigerants — this is the minimum baseline. NATE certification in air conditioning and heat pump installation demonstrates verified competence beyond the legal minimum. Factory training from equipment manufacturers (Carrier, Lennox, Trane certification programs) ensures familiarity with brand-specific installation requirements. Summit's installation leads hold EPA 608, NATE installation certification, and factory training from our primary equipment brands.

How do you size a new HVAC system for my home?

We perform a Manual J load calculation using ACCA-approved methodology. This involves measuring your home's conditioned square footage, ceiling height, window area and orientation, wall and ceiling insulation R-values, air infiltration characteristics, and local design temperatures. The calculation produces the actual heating and cooling load in BTU/hr, which determines the appropriate system capacity. Manual J-sized systems are typically 10–20% smaller than what most contractors quote using rule-of-thumb methods.

What brands of HVAC equipment does Summit Climate Solutions install?

Our primary installation brands are Carrier, Lennox, and Trane — we hold factory certification with all three and stock OEM parts for warranty service. We also install Rheem, Goodman, and American Standard based on customer preference and budget requirements. We recommend equipment based on the balance of efficiency, reliability track record, and total installed cost for your specific application — not based on brand margin.

What warranty do I get on a new HVAC installation?

Manufacturer equipment warranties vary by brand and tier: typically 5–10 years on compressors and 5 years on other parts, with 10-year coverage available on registered premium equipment. Our installation labor warranty is 1 year from installation date. Manufacturer warranties require professional installation by certified technicians — we document all required registration and provide you with warranty cards and commissioning data for your records.

How long does HVAC installation take?

Most whole-home replacements are completed in 6–10 hours — one full day. Multi-zone or new-construction installs may take 2–3 days. We schedule a fixed start time and give you a completion estimate before work begins so you can plan your day.

Do I need a permit for a new HVAC installation?

In most municipalities, yes — a mechanical permit is required for new HVAC installation and must be inspected before the system is commissioned. We handle permit applications, scheduling inspections, and final sign-off as part of every installation. You do not need to manage any of this.

What HVAC brands do you install?

We are authorized dealers for Carrier, Lennox, and Trane — consistently ranked among the top three brands for reliability, efficiency, and warranty coverage. We also install Rheem and American Standard systems based on your budget and preference.

What is a Manual J load calculation and why does it matter?

Manual J is the ACCA-approved engineering calculation that determines the exact heating and cooling capacity your home needs. An oversized system short-cycles, fails prematurely, and leaves your home humid. An undersized one runs constantly and struggles on extreme days. We measure your home precisely rather than guessing by square footage.

Will a new HVAC system really lower my energy bills?

Modern 16–18 SEER2 systems use 30–50% less electricity than a 10-year-old 10 SEER system. Most homeowners recoup the efficiency premium in 4–7 years through energy savings, and enjoy improved comfort and lower maintenance costs throughout the system's 15–20 year life.

Is a heat pump better than a gas furnace and AC?

In moderate climates, a heat pump is more efficient and often cheaper to operate than a separate gas furnace and AC. In regions with extreme winters (below -10°F regularly), a dual-fuel heat pump paired with a gas furnace backup typically delivers the best efficiency and cold-weather performance.

Ready to Get Started

Why clients choose us

★★★★★ Rated 4.9 · Trusted by 389+ customers in Atlanta

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