February 22, 2025. A customer named Margaret R. in the Yalecrest neighborhood — whose furnace stories appear on multiple service pages — called us about an unusual problem on a 14°F morning: her 2018 Honeywell RTH9585 smart thermostat showed “70°F” but her house felt much colder. A backup digital thermometer she’d placed near the thermostat showed 64°F. The thermostat had been displaying inaccurate temperature for weeks before the cold weather made the discrepancy obvious. Margaret’s heating equipment was operating fine; the thermostat was simply telling the furnace the home had reached setpoint when it actually hadn’t. Eli Tran arrived 71 minutes after dispatch (within our Comfort Care 2-hour priority window) and worked through diagnostics: thermostat backlight working, WiFi connected, schedule programmed, equipment communicating correctly. The actual problem was the internal temperature sensor had drifted approximately 6°F out of calibration over the unit’s 7 years. No software update or recalibration available for this specific Honeywell model; replacement was the only practical solution. Margaret chose to upgrade to a Honeywell T10 Pro ($385 installed) rather than replace with same model. Total visit: under 2 hours, including diagnostic, new thermostat installation, configuration, and smartphone app setup. Margaret’s house was back to actual 70°F by 4:00 p.m. that afternoon. This is what thermostat repair actually involves — specific component-level diagnosis rather than guessing at “thermostat issues” generally.
Thermostat repair work falls into three categories: diagnosing whether the thermostat itself is the problem (sometimes it’s the thermostat; often it’s wiring, sensor, or equipment-side issues that mimic thermostat failure), repairing fixable thermostat issues (wiring connections, batteries, calibration where possible, software updates), and replacing thermostats that aren’t economically repairable (most modern thermostats are replacement-only when the internal electronics fail; the cost of replacement parts and labor exceeds the cost of new equipment). Below is what we do during thermostat diagnostic and repair visits, what each type of problem typically costs, and when replacement makes more sense than repair. For new thermostat installation see the smart thermostat installation page.
Several common thermostat issues are homeowner-solvable, potentially avoiding a service visit:
If basic troubleshooting doesn’t resolve the issue, professional diagnostic is the next step.
Same-day service often available. Comfort Care plan members get priority dispatch within 2-hour window.