January 18, 2025. Salt Lake County hit a low of 2°F early that morning — one of the coldest mornings of the winter. Dispatch took its first emergency call at 5:14 a.m.: customer in Yalecrest with no heat for 6 hours, indoor temperature down to 51°F, three sleeping children in the home. Marcus Halverson was the on-call technician that night. He’d been to bed at 11:00 p.m.; the 5:14 a.m. dispatch got him on the road at 5:31. Arrival in Yalecrest at 6:02 a.m. (about 48 minutes after the call). Diagnostic confirmed: 2012 Carrier Performance 96 furnace with a failed hot surface igniter (HSI), code 33 on the control board, no flame call possible. Marcus had the right HSI on the truck (he’d stocked common Carrier and Trane HSIs in 2024 after seeing the pattern of winter dispatch parts requests). Replacement took 22 minutes. Furnace cycled and started normally at 6:31 a.m. Total time from call to running: 1 hour 17 minutes. Total cost: $385 ($89 diagnostic + $185 HSI + $111 labor). Customer’s home was at 65°F by 7:30 a.m., warm enough for the family. This is what furnace emergency repair in Salt Lake City actually looks like — quick diagnostic, common parts on the truck, completion before kids are awake. Below is what furnace repair across Salt Lake City involves, the most common failure modes by season and neighborhood, our pricing reference, and the response time expectations. For broader furnace repair technical context see the main furnace repair page.
24/7 emergency dispatch available. Comfort Care plan members get priority 1-2 hour response during winter emergency calls.