AC Repair services in Oklahoma City
When something goes wrong with your ac repair in Oklahoma City, you need someone who can be there fast. Plain-spoken estimates, written quotes, no surprise add-ons mid-job. That's the whole pitch.
What a typical call looks like
Recent Oklahoma City job: AC running but blowing room-temperature air on a 102°F day in a 12-year-old home. We located leak with electronic detector, sealed and recharged, system back to spec in under 90 minutes after diagnosing refrigerant leak at the suction line schrader valve. Cost ran $1334 — pretty middle-of-the-road for that fix.
What you're paying for
Most AC repair calls come down to one of six causes: low refrigerant from a slow leak, failed capacitor, failed contactor, dirty condenser coil, blower motor failure, or compressor failure.
The diagnostic determines which. We run refrigerant pressures (high and low side), superheat/subcool calculation, voltage at the contactor, capacitor microfarads, and a temperature-split test on the supply and return.
About 60% of summer no-cool calls turn out to be one of three things: low refrigerant ($240-$650 to find and seal the leak, plus refrigerant), bad capacitor ($165-$325 to replace), or dirty condenser ($95-$195 to clean).
Compressor failures are the expensive ones — $1,800 to $3,800 typically. On any unit over 10 years old, we walk through the math on repair vs. replace before quoting the compressor swap.
Oklahoma City-area patterns we see
Newer Oklahoma City construction tends to be on slab foundations with PEX. Easier access in some ways, more code-current in others.
If you're calling from a property management company, we have separate scheduling and billing for that.
Cost range
Diagnostic visit runs $80 – $120. Capacitor replacement runs $150 – $300. Refrigerant leak find + seal + recharge runs $220 – $600. Condenser coil cleaning runs $85 – $180. Contactor replacement runs $170 – $315. Blower motor replacement runs $385 – $810.