September 12, 2024. A customer named Caroline B. in Yalecrest — whose comprehensive heat pump conversion appears across our service pages — had originally called us in May 2024 about her aging 2007 Carrier 13 SEER AC. The unit was operating but inefficient, and combined with her 1997 Carrier furnace (also aging), the household’s HVAC bills were climbing. Initial consultation took 90 minutes on-site. Caroline’s family had specific priorities: better IAQ (her son has asthma), lower carbon footprint, manageable monthly operating cost, comfort throughout her 1948 Tudor’s 2,800 sq ft floor plan. The conversation evolved over three meetings and considered six different system configurations. Final recommendation: Mitsubishi P-Series whole-house ducted heat pump (model PUZ-HA42NKA outdoor + PVA-A42NA7 indoor air handler) sized for Manual J load calculation of 38,200 BTU/hr cooling and 41,800 BTU/hr heating. Total project: $24,800 installed, with $1,200 Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebate and $2,000 IRA 25C federal tax credit reducing net cost to $21,600. Installation took 3 days (early September, before peak demand). Caroline’s family has been on it through 12 months now: 31% reduction in combined gas and electric HVAC cost vs. previous year, asthma symptoms significantly improved (Reme-Halo + MERV 13 + heat pump operating in continuous low-speed mode), and the comfort throughout the home is consistent vs. the previous patchy zoning. This is what AC installation in Salt Lake City actually involves — understanding what the household needs, calculating the right capacity, choosing the right equipment, and installing it properly with altitude-derate verification, refrigerant management, and proper commissioning.
AC installation in Salt Lake City has specific local considerations: altitude affects gas-fired equipment but not heat pumps (16.9% derate downtown vs. 18-20% at upper elevations like Federal Heights), diverse housing stock means installations range from straightforward (modern home with adequate ductwork) to complex (1908 duplex with no existing ductwork requiring mini-split alternatives), historic district considerations in the Avenues, Capitol Hill, and parts of Yalecrest may require Salt Lake City Planning review for outdoor equipment placement, and rebate stacking through Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart and federal IRA 25C makes heat pump alternatives increasingly attractive. For broader AC installation technical context see the main AC installation page.
Initial consultation visits at no cost. Comprehensive Manual J load calculation included. Rebate and tax credit guidance throughout the process.