Ogden AC and Heat Pump Rebates 2026: Stacking Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart, Do

06 May 2026

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Ogden AC and Heat Pump Rebates 2026: Stacking Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart, Dominion Energy ThermWise, and the Federal 25C Credit

Ogden AC and Heat Pump Rebates 2026: Stacking Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart, Dominion Energy ThermWise, and the Federal 25C Credit
Ogden homeowners and property managers in Weber County have a clear window in 2026 to reduce the cost of new cooling and electrified heating. The Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart program for high-efficiency heat pumps and ductless systems, Dominion Energy’s ThermWise rebates for high-efficiency furnaces and smart thermostats, and the federal 25C tax credit combine to pull real dollars off project budgets. The numbers matter most on heat pump conversions that remove or sideline older AC equipment, but efficient central air upgrades still see incentive support when equipment meets qualifying tiers.

This is not abstract policy. It is a direct impact on installed cost for homes across central Ogden’s 84401, East Bench 84403 near Weber State University, west Ogden and North Ogden in 84404 and 84414, and South Ogden and Washington Terrace in 84405 and 84415. For projects in Ogden Valley zip codes 84310 and 84317 near Pineview Reservoir, the performance math shifts due to colder design temperatures, which often steers a dual-fuel specification. Either way, rebate alignment and commissioning quality control decide whether the new system pays back the way the programs intend.
Why this matters now in Weber County
Cooling loads in Ogden spike in July and August as valley floor highs run in the mid-90s Fahrenheit on clear days. Winter heating loads hit sustained cycles in December and January with single-digit lows during cold snaps. That pattern drives many properties to pair a high-efficiency heat pump with either electric resistance backup or an existing gas furnace in a dual-fuel configuration. It also puts central AC replacements under scrutiny for SEER2 efficiency and airflow performance on older duct systems common in 1940s to 1960s ranch homes in central Ogden, South Ogden, and Washington Terrace.

The 2025 refrigerant transition to R-454B is now standard across new split systems in 2026. Installations done without attention to line set integrity, brazed connection quality, and charge verification create early-life callbacks and wasted energy. The Utah State Energy Code sets the floor for minimum efficiency, but incentives and long-term bills reward correct sizing and equipment selection above that minimum.
Stacking 2026 incentives in Ogden: what qualifies and what stacks
Each program targets different parts of the system and uses different rules. The mechanics of the stack are straightforward when the design and paperwork are right. Rocky Mountain Power’s Wattsmart program pays on qualified heat pump systems that meet program efficiency thresholds. Dominion Energy’s ThermWise rebates pay on high-efficiency gas furnaces, smart thermostats, and some duct sealing measures for customers on the gas utility. The federal 25C tax credit pays back at filing time on qualifying equipment and verified installation components. The programs can stack because they pay from different sources with different rules.

For a Weber County project replacing a 20-year-old split AC and 80 percent AFUE furnace, a common 2026 path is a variable-capacity cold-climate heat pump with an existing or new 95 to 98 percent AFUE gas furnace as auxiliary heat. The heat pump drives cooling all summer and heating most winter days. The gas furnace covers those last cold mornings on the East Bench or in Ogden Valley or during snowstorms moving off Ben Lomond Peak. That hybrid delivers strong kilowatt-hour savings and therm reductions, which lines up with all three incentive programs.
Local signals that change the design and improve eligibility
Elevation and housing age shift the heat pump versus AC-only decision. Ogden’s valley floor neighborhoods in 84401 and 84404 sit near 4,300 feet. The East Bench in 84403 runs 200 to 500 feet higher, with slightly cooler summer afternoons and colder winter mornings. Ogden Valley in Eden and Huntsville at roughly 5,000 feet sees a shorter cooling season, heavier snow loads, and longer heating seasons. Those differences affect Manual J load calculations and the balance point for heat pumps. They also tilt equipment selection toward HSPF2 9.0 or better cold-climate models for reliable winter performance.

Older 25th Street corridor Victorians and East Bench bungalows that were retrofitted with forced air often have return duct constraints. Many 1940s to 1960s ranch homes in central Ogden, Washington Terrace, and South Ogden retain original undersized returns and sheet-metal trunks. Without return modifications, even a high-SEER2 condenser cannot deliver design airflow. Equipment that meets program efficiency on paper can fall short in the field if static pressure runs high. Correcting duct restrictions and sealing leaky return chases is part of the real-world path to claimed savings and a clean rebate file.
A shareable Ogden-specific performance insight
Across One Hour Ogden projects that include field-verified Manual J and duct static measurements, typical 1,800 to 2,400 square foot homes on the valley floor in 84401, 84404, and 84405 pencil out at 2.5 to 4.0 tons of cooling. The same square footage on the East Bench in 84403 often requires 0.5 ton less cooling, despite higher solar gain through west-facing exposures. Cooler afternoon air offsetting evening loads creates that delta. On the heating side, Ogden Valley properties in 84310 and 84317 commonly land 15 to 25 percent higher design heating loads than valley floor homes of similar size. That difference is large enough to push many Huntsville and Eden projects to dual-fuel heat pump specification for mornings that dip well below the heat pump balance point.
What qualifies for Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart in 2026
Wattsmart rebates in Utah focus on high-efficiency heat pump systems, ductless mini-splits, and specific upgrade paths such as converting from electric resistance or replacing a heat pump with a higher-efficiency model. Incentive amounts have adjusted year to year, but the structure has stayed stable. Cold-climate variable-capacity inverter heat pumps with HSPF2 around 9 or higher and SEER2 in the 16 to 20 range have historically qualified for the higher tiers. Ductless mini-splits serving homes without ducts in North Ogden and central Ogden bungalows continue to receive strong support when they meet program efficiency thresholds and serve primary living spaces.

Central AC by itself carries limited or no utility incentive in many Utah schedules because it does not move winter load off the grid the way heat pumps do. Where AC rebates appear, they usually require a jump from base code SEER2 to a higher tier paired with proper commissioning. As of 2026, homeowners who choose a straight AC replacement should plan the budget assuming little or no Wattsmart help unless the schedule explicitly shows a qualifying tier. Heat pumps remain the cleanest Wattsmart opportunity in Weber County for cooling and heating combined.
What qualifies for Dominion Energy ThermWise in 2026
Dominion Energy’s ThermWise program provides rebates on qualifying high-efficiency gas furnaces, smart thermostats, duct sealing, and select HVAC optimization measures. Furnace rebates have historically applied to 95 percent AFUE and higher condensing furnaces, with higher incentives at 97 and 98 percent AFUE tiers. Smart thermostats that meet program requirements continue to earn a per-thermostat rebate and help deliver measured kilowatt-hour and therm reductions across Weber County homes.

For Ogden properties running a dual-fuel configuration, a 95 to 98 percent AFUE furnace paired with a variable-speed ECM blower supports both the ThermWise furnace rebate and the airflow stability that high-SEER2, variable-capacity heat pumps need for quiet staging and stable coil temperature. That pairing also reduces gas use during shoulder-season furnace cycles and provides steady register temperatures that older single-speed blowers cannot match.
Federal 25C credit in 2026 and how Ogden projects stay eligible
The Inflation Reduction Act’s 25C credit remains in place in 2026. For qualified heat pump installations, homeowners can claim a federal tax credit of 30 percent of installed costs, capped at $2,000 per year. Central air conditioners that meet the qualifying energy tier can qualify for a 30 percent credit up to $600. Electrical panel upgrades, air sealing, and insulation carry separate caps that can stack within the annual total cap structure. Annual caps have applied in prior years at $3,200, with $2,000 reserved for heat pumps and the remainder for building envelope and other HVAC components. Homeowners should confirm with their tax professional, since individual circumstances and year-to-year guidance matter.

Eligibility hinges on equipment meeting the designated efficiency tier, commonly defined by the Consortium for Energy Efficiency for the 25C program. In practice, cold-climate inverter heat pumps from major brands including Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Mitsubishi Electric, Bosch, American Standard, Daikin, LG, Bryant, York, Rheem, and Goodman offer models that qualify. Commissioning, documentation, and AHRI matching matter. An AHRI certificate that shows the exact outdoor and indoor model pairing is standard in rebate files and tax documentation packages prepared for Ogden homeowners.
SEER2, HSPF2, AFUE, and the Utah State Energy Code in 2026
Utah follows the 2024 International Mechanical Code framework with state amendments and is aligned with DOE 2023 minimum efficiency metrics. The Northern region minimum for new split AC systems sits at SEER2 14.3. Heat pumps must meet SEER2 and HSPF2 minimums for code compliance, with most modern equipment exceeding these floors. Furnaces under Utah’s code do not mandate 95 percent AFUE, but ThermWise incentives concentrate at 95 percent and above. In the field, One Hour Ogden specifies beyond the minimum when the duct system, return sizing, and budget align, because SEER2 16 to 18 two-stage or variable capacity equipment paired with an ECM variable-speed blower produces measurable comfort gains in Ogden’s dry summer and during inversion season filtration cycles.

Refrigerant changes affect installation practice rather than eligibility. With R-454B now the common refrigerant in 2026 new splits, technicians trained for R-454B-safe brazing and evacuation procedures are essential. EPA Section 608 certification and factory-authorized training for the chosen brand reduce risk during the changeover and ensure the charge is correct for the new refrigerant’s pressure-temperature profile.
Real stacks in Ogden: what homeowners have seen and what to expect in 2026
Ogden projects that replace a 3-ton 13 SEER legacy AC and 80 percent AFUE furnace with a 3-ton variable-capacity cold-climate heat pump and a 96 percent AFUE ECM furnace have, in recent seasons, produced combined incentives commonly in the range of $2,500 to $3,500 when Wattsmart and 25C stack together and a ThermWise furnace rebate applies. Numbers vary by exact program schedules, installed model, and file accuracy. Ductless mini-split primary heat installations in smaller central Ogden homes have also seen strong per-system Wattsmart incentives combined with the 25C credit, especially when the mini-split serves the main living zone and meets cold-climate performance tiers.

Central AC-only replacements see smaller stacks. Where a SEER2 16 central air system qualifies for a federal 25C credit up to $600 and a smart thermostat adds a ThermWise rebate, the combined benefit is still meaningful, but not at the level of a heat pump conversion. In every case, the stack improves with documented Manual J, Manual S, and Manual D work, commissioning checklists, and AHRI matched system documentation.
Ogden housing stock patterns that shape rebate-aligned design
On Historic 25th Street and in adjacent East Bench bungalows, retrofits often marry a ductless mini-split to the main floor and a modest heat pump or central system for bedrooms to avoid invasive duct rebuilds. In 1970s to 1990s split-level homes in Roy, Riverdale, and Pleasant View, return modifications and supply register balancing fix the short-cycling that oversized single-stage condensers created during past replacements. In newer Farr West and Layton construction with zoned HVAC and tight envelopes, variable-capacity heat pumps matched to zone control logic deliver even register temperatures and lower fan noise without fighting high static.

Duct sealing and return enlargement are not glamorous line items, but they decide whether a SEER2 18 condenser performs like an 18 or slides to a 14 in the real world. For ThermWise duct sealing rebates, leakage testing may support documentation, and in practice, sealing leaky returns in central Ogden ranch homes cuts dust infiltration during Wasatch Front inversion season, which improves filter performance and indoor air quality.
Commissioning steps that protect eligibility and savings
Heat pump and AC commissioning in Weber County projects should include refrigerant charge verification by superheat and subcool, static pressure measurement with fan speed mapping, and thermostat calibration. ECM variable-speed blower setup needs to reflect the installed filter media pressure drop, especially for MERV 13 filtration that many Ogden homeowners choose to address winter inversion PM2.5. The technician should confirm condensate drain pitch and trap, outdoor pad stability, line set insulation integrity, and thermostat wiring. An AHRI certificate for the indoor and outdoor pairing and a completion of manufacturer startup checklists go into the rebate and 25C documentation packet.

An overlooked Ogden-specific step is elevation correction in the Manual J and refrigerant performance assumptions. At roughly 4,300 to 5,000 feet, air density affects heat transfer. Equipment selection tools from Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Mitsubishi Electric, Bosch, and others allow entry of elevation to adjust capacity expectations. Skipping this step produces systems that underperform on peak days or short-cycle in shoulder conditions, which eats into the savings the rebate stack projects.
Manual J, Manual S, and Manual D in Ogden zip codes
Manual J load calculations for 2,200 square foot split-levels in Roy 84067 and Riverdale often output near 3 tons of cooling with realistic infiltration and internal load entries. East Bench 84403 properties sometimes fall a half-ton lower. Ogden Valley projects in 84310 and 84317 show the opposite pattern for heating. Correct Manual S selection from brand performance data books then maps to the nearest capacity that the inverter can modulate across the load range. Manual D duct design or at least static testing and return sizing verification confirms whether the selected air handler or furnace ECM can move the required CFM without high noise or coil frosting risks.

On a 1995 split-level in Roy with original ductwork, the difference between a 3-ton two-stage heat pump with a target of 1,150 to 1,250 CFM at full load and an oversized 4-ton single-stage unit is the difference between quiet dehumidifying cycles and loud, short bursts that never stabilize temperature. Proper selection also affects eligibility for certain Wattsmart tiers that require variable capacity and documentation of set commissioning airflow.
Wasatch Front inversion and filtration choices that pair with the stack
Ogden sits under winter inversions that trap particulate in the valley from December through February. PM2.5 readings commonly exceed the EPA 24-hour standard during persistent events. Homes along the valley floor in 84401, 84404, and 84405 carry higher indoor dust load during these periods if return leaks exist. Upgrading to MERV 13 filtration minimum with a proper media cabinet and confirming blower programming for filter pressure drop improves indoor air quality. For homes with sensitive occupants, HEPA bypass or electronic air cleaners such as Lennox PureAir or Trane CleanEffects can be specified. While these upgrades are not the core of the rebate stack, they improve delivered comfort from the same equipment by stabilizing coil cleanliness and airflow across the season.
Brands and equipment that meet performance and eligibility needs
In Weber County, inverters from Carrier Infinity Greenspeed, Trane XV20i, Lennox XP25 and SL25XPV, Mitsubishi Electric Hyper-Heat, Daikin Fit, Bosch heat pumps, LG inverter systems, Bryant Evolution, and American Standard variable-speed lines have strong track records at altitude. Ductless systems from Mitsubishi Electric and Daikin serve East Bench and central Ogden retrofits where ducts cannot be economically corrected. Furnaces from Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Rheem, Goodman, and Bryant at 95 to 98 percent AFUE paired with ECM blowers support dual-fuel builds that pass ThermWise criteria.

Smart thermostats that align with ThermWise, such as Nest, ecobee, and Honeywell Home models on the approved list, integrate with zoning and inverter staging. Correct thermostat selection avoids oversimplified control of variable capacity equipment, which can otherwise behave like a single-stage unit and miss both comfort and savings targets.
R-454B, installation practice, and Ogden project risk control
With the 2025 through 2026 transition to low-GWP refrigerants such as R-454B in full effect, line set reuse requires inspection for size, wall thickness, and cleanliness. Many older Ogden homes running R-410A have line sets that can be flushed and pressure-tested, but kinks hidden in wall cavities or oil contamination increase risk. When in doubt, a new properly sized line set routed with clean sweeps and correct insulation avoids early-life compressor failures and preserves the warranty. EPA Section 608 certified technicians should weigh in on the line set decision during the in-home estimate.
Project flow in Ogden from estimate to rebate file and credit claim
Every incentive dollar depends on clean documentation. The field process that One Hour Heating & Air Conditioning of Ogden follows begins with a site visit that includes Manual J entries, static pressure checks, and a duct inspection. The team specifies equipment using Manual S and confirms duct capacity and return sizing per Manual D principles. The install includes brazed connections under nitrogen purge, triple evacuation to 500 microns or better before charge, thermostat integration, ECM blower setup, and commissioning checklists.

Documentation packages include AHRI certificates, startup and commissioning forms, and copies of invoices structured to satisfy Wattsmart and ThermWise submittals. For 25C, homeowners receive the model numbers, dates, and any auxiliary component documentation that a tax preparer or homeowner will need to claim the credit. When a smart thermostat is part of the scope, serial numbers and program enrollment details accompany the rebate file to support ThermWise.
Air conditioning services Ogden: where replacement still wins without full electrification
Some Ogden homeowners prefer to keep a traditional AC and gas furnace pair. A SEER2 16 or higher two-stage air conditioner matched with a variable-speed ECM blower and a 95 to 98 percent AFUE furnace still moves the energy bill in the right direction and improves noise and comfort. On 1990s tract homes in Pleasant View, Farr West, and North Ogden with workable ducts, this combination delivers strong results. Smart thermostat integration adds control and qualifies for ThermWise. While the Wattsmart rebate stack is strongest with heat pumps, the 25C AC credit and ThermWise items still offset part of the project cost.
Two real Ogden scenarios and the incentive picture
Scenario one: A 2,000 square foot East Bench home in 84403 with an aging 3-ton 13 SEER AC and 80 percent AFUE furnace converts to a 3-ton Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat inverter heat pump with a 96 percent AFUE variable-speed furnace in dual-fuel mode. Manual J confirms 2.75 to 3.0 tons cooling, and static testing leads to a 20 percent return area increase. The project qualifies for a Wattsmart heat pump rebate based on the inverter and cold-climate rating, a ThermWise furnace rebate, a ThermWise smart thermostat rebate, and a federal 25C heat pump credit up to $2,000. The combined stack materially lowers installed cost.

Scenario two: A 1995 split-level in Roy 84067 with a working gas furnace gets a straight AC replacement to a SEER2 16 two-stage condenser and a matched indoor coil with an ECM blower upgrade. Duct corrections include a second return in the hallway to cut static. The project qualifies for the federal 25C AC credit up to $600, and a ThermWise smart thermostat rebate. Even without a heat pump, summer utility bills drop and comfort improves on July afternoons.
Costs, timelines, and what Ogden owners should plan for in 2026
Installed project budgets vary with brand, capacity, duct scope, and control complexity. Heat pump conversions with variable-capacity outdoor units, new line sets where required, and return upgrades typically price above straight AC replacements. Dual-fuel configurations that reuse a workable furnace fall between a full conversion and an AC-only project. Timelines for in-home consultations are fast outside peak season and tighter in late June through August and again in December. Permit time in Ogden City and surrounding jurisdictions is generally predictable when scope is clear and documentation is complete.

Homeowners should plan a straightforward schedule: a site visit and consultation, a written scope with equipment models and commissioning targets, a proposed incentive map with estimated Wattsmart, ThermWise, and 25C values, an installation day or two depending on duct work, and a post-install verification and paperwork handoff. The most common source of rebate delays in Weber County is mismatched model numbers between the installed equipment and the AHRI certificate, which is avoided by locking the pairing in advance and confirming serials at install.
FAQ Ogden homeowners ask about 2026 rebates and credits
Do Wattsmart and 25C conflict? No. One is a utility rebate and one is a federal tax credit. They apply to the same project if it qualifies for both.

Will AC-only projects get Wattsmart? Usually not, unless the current schedule lists a qualifying AC tier. Heat pumps remain the primary Wattsmart path for Weber County homes.

Can a dual-fuel system qualify for both ThermWise and Wattsmart? Yes, if the furnace meets the ThermWise AFUE tier and the heat pump meets the Wattsmart inverter and efficiency requirements. Many Ogden East Bench and Ogden Valley projects use this route.

Does 25C cover electrical panel upgrades tied to a heat pump? 25C has covered certain electrical panel upgrades under separate caps in prior years. Owners should confirm with their tax advisor for 2026 filing specifics.

How are older ducts handled? A static pressure reading and return sizing check drive the decision. Many central Ogden, South Ogden, and Washington Terrace homes gain comfort and eligibility stability after return enlargement and sealing. This supports actual SEER2 performance and avoids short cycling.
A short list of decisions that make or break the stack Choose a variable-capacity heat pump that meets Wattsmart and 25C tiers, or confirm AC-only eligibility before planning on credits. Verify Manual J loads and elevation-adjusted equipment selection to size correctly for Ogden’s climate and housing archetype. Measure duct static and plan return upgrades so the ECM blower can move target CFM without noise or coil frost risk. Lock the AHRI match and collect commissioning documentation for a clean Wattsmart, ThermWise, and 25C file. Integrate a qualifying smart thermostat to capture ThermWise and stabilize staging on inverters and dual-fuel builds. Where this applies across Ogden and the Northern Wasatch Front
One Hour Heating & Air Conditioning of Ogden serves the full Weber County market through central Ogden, the 25th Street Historic District near Ogden Union Station, Ogden East Bench near Weber State University, West Ogden industrial-adjacent corridors, South Ogden, North Ogden, Washington Terrace, Roy, Riverdale, Pleasant View, Farr West, and Harrisville. The team also handles Ogden Valley projects in Eden and Huntsville, where winter design conditions favor dual-fuel setups that still capture strong rebate value. Adjacent Davis County communities like Clearfield, Layton, and Kaysville share similar program rules with minor jurisdictional differences, and the same commissioning standards apply.
Diagnostics and upgrade signals seen in Ogden homes
AC short cycling in a 1990s Roy or Riverdale split-level often points to one of three problems. A failed run capacitor that cannot support compressor start loads, a dirty condenser coil that restricts heat rejection, or an oversized unit from a prior replacement that satisfies the thermostat before the coil dehumidifies. Each shows as uneven cooling and high afternoon bills. On East Bench Victorians and bungalows, weak airflow and hot second floors indicate undersized or single-return layouts. The corrective action is return enlargement and inverter staging with an ECM blower, not just more tonnage. Performing these corrections during a heat pump or AC replacement earns the comfort that the incentive math promises.
Documented outcomes Ogden owners can expect
With a properly sized, commissioned variable-capacity heat pump, Ogden valley floor homeowners should see smooth staging during late afternoon peaks and steady overnight operation that matches the dry climate’s sensible load. On winter mornings in 84403 and Ogden Valley, dual-fuel systems hand off to the gas furnace when outdoor temperatures slide below the balance point. Residents in 84401 and 84404 will notice quieter outdoor units compared to legacy single-stage condensers, and MERV 13 filtration will catch more particulate during inversion episodes when valley air stagnates along I-15 and the Ogden Nature Center corridor.
How One Hour Ogden handles brand selection and warranties
The Ogden team is factory authorized on major brands and matches homes to equipment lines that meet both comfort targets and incentive tiers. Cold-climate inverters from Mitsubishi Electric, Carrier Infinity Greenspeed, Trane XV20i, Lennox SL25XPV, and Bosch are common in rebate-aligned designs. Ductless primary heat and cooling match well to Mitsubishi and Daikin lines in historic East Ogden homes without workable ducts. Furnaces from Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Rheem, Goodman, Bryant, and American Standard in the 95 to 98 percent AFUE range are selected for ThermWise eligibility and for quiet ECM airflow across filtration upgrades. Installations are completed by NATE-certified, EPA Section 608 certified technicians under ACCA Quality Installation standards, with commissioning documentation attached to each file.
A second short list: the most common Ogden project paths in 2026 Heat pump conversion with variable capacity and dual-fuel pairing to an existing or new 95 to 98 percent AFUE furnace for East Bench and Ogden Valley performance. Ductless mini-split primary heat and cooling retrofit for 25th Street corridor and central Ogden homes without cost-effective duct options. SEER2 16 to 18 central AC replacement with ECM blower and return enlargement for 1970s to 1990s split-levels in Roy, Riverdale, and North Ogden. Whole-home filtration upgrade to MERV 13 with blower mapping for inversion season PM2.5 control and coil cleanliness. Smart thermostat integration that meets ThermWise and stabilizes staging on variable-capacity systems and zoned homes in Farr West and Layton. Why local execution decides rebate success
Programs pay for measured or modeled energy reductions. In practice, that means right-sized equipment based on Manual J, duct systems that can move the air at the static pressure the blower can support, and inverters programmed to ramp rather than bang on and off. It also means project management that collects every document required by Wattsmart and ThermWise on the first submission. The final step is giving homeowners a clean, organized packet for the 25C filing that includes AHRI matches and invoices that reflect the installed configuration. This is the difference between a promised stack and a paid stack.
Ready to price the stack on your Ogden home
One Hour Heating & Air Conditioning of Ogden provides air conditioning services Ogden residents ask for when they plan a 2026 upgrade or conversion. The team covers site evaluation, Manual J load calculation, Manual S equipment selection, duct evaluation, and commissioning plans that meet Utah State Energy Code and align to Wattsmart, ThermWise, and 25C requirements. Free in-home estimates on installation are standard, and paperwork assistance follows the job through to submittal and tax documentation. Service extends across Ogden and Weber County, including 84401, 84403, 84404, 84405, 84414, 84415, 84067, 84015, 84310, and 84317. Landmarks and neighborhoods served include the 25th Street Historic District, Weber State University area, West Ogden, North Ogden, South Ogden, Washington Terrace, Roy, Riverdale, Pleasant View, Farr West, Harrisville, Eden, and Huntsville.
Schedule a rebate-aligned estimate
Book a consultation with One Hour Heating & Air Conditioning of Ogden to map your project to 2026 incentives. Utah Licensed, Bonded, and Insured. NATE-Certified Technicians. EPA Section 608 Certified. ACCA Quality Installation practice. StraightForward Pricing with written scopes. Financing available on approved credit. Comfort Club maintenance options after installation. Always On Time Or You Don’t Pay A Dime on the appointment window. Call +1-801-405-9435 or visit https://www.onehourheatandair.com/ogden/ to schedule. Same-day and next-day estimates available across Ogden, North Ogden, South Ogden, Roy, Riverdale, Layton, Kaysville, Eden, and air conditioning maintenance Ogden https://pub-a3d0921cc64d4b5c8a08eea958469665.r2.dev/one-hour-heating-air-conditioning/air-conditioning-services/ogden-ac-sizing-valley-floor-east-bench-or-ogden-valley.html Huntsville.

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One Hour Heating &amp; Air Conditioning delivers dependable heating and cooling service throughout Ogden, UT. Owned by Matt and Sarah McFarland, the company continues a family tradition built on honesty, hard work, and reliable service. Matt brings the work ethic he learned on McFarland Family Farms into every job, while the strength of a national franchise offers the technical expertise homeowners trust. Our team provides full-service comfort solutions including furnace and AC repair, new system installation, routine maintenance, heat pump service, ductless systems, thermostat upgrades, indoor air quality improvements, duct cleaning, zoning setup, air purification, humidifiers, dehumidifiers, and energy-efficient system replacements. Every service is backed by our UWIN® 100% satisfaction guarantee. If you are looking for heating or cooling help you can trust, our team is ready to respond.

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