Our Heating Services

New furnace, heat pump, or ductless mini-split — sized to your home’s actual load, not guesswork. Conrad handles permits, equipment selection, and same-day startup. Free estimates, financing available.

System not firing, short-cycling, making sounds it didn’t make last winter? Our technicians carry the parts that close most repairs on the first visit — igniters, flame sensors, blower motors, reversing valves. Diagnostic first, written quote before anything gets touched.

A fall tune-up catches the heat exchanger cracks and failing capacitors that turn into January emergencies. Conrad documents every checkpoint. Maintenance agreement customers get priority scheduling and 10% off repairs.

One Company for All Your Heating and Cooling Repair Needs

Here’s what happens when you use separate contractors for your furnace and your AC: the heating company doesn’t know what the cooling company found, and neither one knows your system’s full history. When the same problem shows up twice in different seasons, you pay for two diagnostic calls.

Conrad repairs both. Same technician, same service record, same call whether it’s February or August. Beaverton-based since 2019 — CCB-licensed, EPA 608-certified, no subcontractors. Bosch authorized dealer. Lennox, Carrier, Trane, Daikin, Goodman, and Rheem all serviced.

Heating System Repair

Beaverton winters don’t freeze pipes, but they run heating systems hard — five months of condensate drain activity, daily thermal cycling on the heat exchanger, igniter firing every time the thermostat calls for heat. The parts that go first are predictable: hot surface igniters, flame sensors, blower motor bearings, capacitors on heat pumps, defrost boards during cold snaps.

Heating repair services from Conrad cover gas and electric furnaces, ducted and ductless heat pumps, mini-splits — all brands. Same-day service for most Portland metro calls; 24/7 emergency dispatch when the heat’s out completely.

Air Conditioning and Cooling Repair

Portland summers didn’t use to matter much for AC. Now the Willamette Valley runs multi-day stretches above 95°F every July, and the cooling system that skipped its spring tune-up is the one that fails during the advisory. What fails: capacitors and contactors first (by a wide margin), then refrigerant leaks, frozen evaporator coils from low refrigerant or poor airflow, fan motor failures.

AC repair services cover central AC, heat pumps in cooling mode, and ductless mini-splits. Same process: diagnostic call, written quote, repair, test. Same-day and 24/7 emergency availability.

Year-Round Heating and Cooling Repair Service

A heat pump doesn’t have an off-season — it heats in winter and cools in summer, which means it can malfunction in any month, in either mode. A refrigerant leak that quietly degrades cooling performance in August may have been losing charge since April.Conrad’s emergency HVAC services run 365 days a year: furnace failures in February, AC breakdowns in July heat advisories, heat pump faults whenever they happen. One dispatcher, one response time, one company that already knows which system you have.

Conrad truck parked outside home

How Our Heating and Cooling Repair Works

Call comes in — live dispatcher, not voicemail. Address logged, technician sent. On-site, the tech runs a full diagnostic rather than chasing the most obvious symptom. Written quote before anything is touched — that number doesn’t change between the estimate and the invoice.

Repair done, system run through a full cycle, written summary left with you. Most calls close on the first visit. Conrad’s HVAC maintenance agreement covers heating and cooling in one plan and is the most reliable way to keep both systems out of the emergency queue..

Why Choose Conrad for Heating and Cooling Repair?

One Team for Heating and Cooling

The technician who fixed your furnace in January is the one available for your AC in July. One service record, one call. No fumbling through who handled what when the problem spans two seasons — Conrad already has your system’s history on file.

Same-Day and Emergency Service

Most repair calls received before 5 PM are scheduled same-day across the Portland metro. After hours, the emergency line goes to a real dispatcher. Conrad is Beaverton-based, which keeps response times across Washington County shorter than companies dispatching from across the city.

Upfront Pricing, No Hidden Fees

Diagnostic first, written quote second, work third. The number after diagnosis is on the invoice — nothing added at the end. If something changes mid-repair, the technician stops and calls before continuing.

All Brands and Systems Serviced

Conrad repairs every major heating and cooling brand — Bosch, Lennox, Carrier, Trane, Daikin, Goodman, Rheem — gas furnaces, electric furnaces, heat pumps, ductless mini-splits, central AC. Parts for the most common failures ride on the truck.

Do you repair both heating and cooling systems?

Yes — furnaces, heat pumps, ductless mini-splits, and central AC. One company for both means one call, one diagnostic record, and one maintenance plan that covers the full year. Same-day service available; emergency dispatch 24/7.

What heating and cooling systems do you repair?

Gas and electric furnaces, ducted and ductless heat pumps, ductless mini-splits, and central AC. All major brands serviced — Bosch, Lennox, Carrier, Trane, Daikin, Goodman, Rheem — regardless of age or who installed the system.

How much does heating and cooling repair cost?

Most heating repairs run $150–$600; AC repairs are in a similar range depending on the part and labor involved. Conrad provides a written quote after on-site diagnostics, before any work starts. Call 503-785-9715 for same-day service.

Do you offer emergency heating and cooling repair?

Yes — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Calls go to a live dispatcher. Most Portland metro emergency calls are on-site within 2 hours. Conrad’s emergency HVAC services cover heating and cooling failures in any season.

How do I know if my HVAC system needs repair?

Heating: no heat or weak airflow, short-cycling, unusual sounds, burning smell, energy bills up without explanation. Cooling: warm air when set to cool, system cycling on and off, ice on the indoor unit, water leaking, or a noticeable electricity spike. Either list — worth a diagnostic call.