WVC Multi-Family Furnace Tune-Up Contract Case Study

West Valley City Multi-Family Furnace Tune-Up Contract: Vanessa O. 25th Street Triplex

Customer:
Vanessa O. (consent for documentation given; property owner operating multi-family rental properties)
Property address area:
West Valley City, near 3500 South 25th Street — established residential street with mixed single-family and small multi-family housing
Property characteristics:
1972 three-unit triplex (rear-loaded design with parking and shared yard). Total square footage approximately 3,840 sq ft (1,280 sq ft per unit). Construction: brick veneer over wood frame, vinyl double-pane windows replaced 2017 across all units. Each unit: 2-bedroom, 1-bath with full kitchen, living room, and dining area. Three separate forced-air furnace systems, one per unit, with individual gas meters and electrical service. Mechanical equipment in dedicated closets accessible from each unit’s interior. Vanessa O. acquired the property in 2019 (5 years at time of project initiation) and operates as long-term rental for working families. Tenant occupancy stable: original 2019 tenant in Unit A remains in 2025, Unit B turnover once (current tenant since 2021), Unit C had 2 turnovers (current tenant since 2023).
Contract type:
Multi-year residential maintenance contract covering all three units’ HVAC equipment. Annual tune-ups on fall schedule, comprehensive diagnostic and minor preventive maintenance, priority dispatch coverage, tenant coordination protocols, and bilingual service for Spanish-speaking tenants.
Contract initiation date:
October 2022 (initial 3-year contract; renewed October 2025 for additional 3-year term)
Annual contract value:
$1,800 per year covering all three units ($600 per unit). Multi-year discount applied vs. individual unit pricing ($800 per unit would total $2,400 annually).

Background

Vanessa O. is a property investor managing 7 rental units across the Wasatch Front, including this WVC triplex and additional properties in Ogden, Murray, and West Valley City. She prioritizes professional property management practices: written leases, regular inspections, vetted contractors, and proactive maintenance contracts for major systems. The WVC triplex came with three different ages and conditions of HVAC equipment when Vanessa acquired the property in 2019, reflecting the previous owner’s deferred maintenance pattern. Vanessa’s first action after acquisition was scheduling individual tune-ups on each unit to assess equipment condition. Through 2019-2022, she paid for individual tune-ups annually at higher per-unit cost ($245 per unit per visit = $735 per year for all three). The 2022 contract conversion reduced annual cost while adding tenant coordination, priority dispatch, and bilingual service for her Spanish-speaking tenants.

Equipment Inventory (Three Furnaces)

Unit A furnace:
  • 2012 Goodman GMS80 furnace, 80% AFUE, 60,000 BTU/hr input. 12 years service at contract initiation in 2022, now 14 years service.
  • PSC single-stage blower
  • Single-stage gas valve
  • Atmospheric venting through dedicated B-vent stack
  • Located in unit interior closet near rear entrance
  • 2012 Goodman GSX13 AC matched (2-ton, 13 SEER, R-410A)
  • Tenant: working family with two children, primary household language Spanish
Unit B furnace:
  • 2018 Bryant 925SA48060V17 furnace, 96% AFUE, 60,000 BTU/hr input. 6 years service at contract initiation, now 8 years service.
  • Variable-speed ECM blower
  • Single-stage gas valve
  • PVC concentric venting through east exterior wall
  • Located in unit interior closet
  • 2018 Bryant 24ACA3 AC matched (2-ton, 13 SEER, R-410A)
  • Tenant: working professional, primary household language English
Unit C furnace:
  • 2006 Lennox SL280 furnace, 80% AFUE, 60,000 BTU/hr input. 18 years service at contract initiation in 2022, now 20 years service.
  • PSC multi-speed blower
  • Single-stage gas valve
  • Atmospheric venting through dedicated B-vent stack
  • Located in unit interior closet
  • 2006 Lennox HSXA12 AC matched (2-ton, 12 SEER, R-22)
  • Tenant: retired couple, primary household language Spanish
Equipment age summary:
Three units span 14-year equipment age range (2006-2018 installations). Unit C is the oldest equipment approaching end-of-life. Unit A is mid-life. Unit B is the newest, well within expected service life. Vanessa’s capital planning addresses each unit on its replacement schedule rather than coordinated replacement.

Annual Contract Service Scope

Per-unit tune-up scope (each unit annually):
  • Visual inspection of furnace cabinet, vent system, ductwork connections
  • Combustion analysis (Testo 320): CO at flue, O₂ in flue gas, steady-state efficiency, manifold pressure altitude-adjusted
  • Heat exchanger inspection (borescope) for cracks or wear
  • Burner cleaning and adjustment
  • Ignition system testing (HSI or igniter assembly)
  • Inducer motor inspection and capacitor testing
  • Blower motor inspection and capacitor testing (PSC) or amp draw verification (ECM)
  • Filter replacement
  • Thermostat operation verification
  • Drain line inspection and cleaning
  • Refrigerant line inspection (AC system)
  • Operational testing across heating and cooling modes
  • Customer/tenant communication about any issues identified
Contract-included services:
  • Annual fall tune-up per unit (3 visits)
  • Annual spring AC tune-up per unit (3 visits)
  • Priority dispatch for emergency calls (4-hour response target)
  • 15% discount on repair parts and labor
  • Tenant coordination for service appointments
  • Spanish-language tenant communication where applicable
  • Annual condition report with photo documentation
  • Service history maintenance and equipment-by-equipment tracking
  • Documentation suitable for capital planning and tax preparation
Tenant coordination protocol:
  • Initial appointment scheduled with Vanessa, with proposed dates
  • Vanessa notifies tenants per lease 48-hour notice requirement
  • Our dispatch contacts tenant directly 24 hours before appointment to confirm specific window
  • Spanish-language communication for Spanish-speaking tenants (Carla Mendoza or Priya Sandoval coordinates)
  • Service window typically 2-hour arrival window
  • Technician text-message arrival notification when en route
  • Post-service report provided to both Vanessa and (if requested) tenant
Equipment-specific approach:
  • Unit A (2012 Goodman): standard tune-up; mid-life equipment with ongoing monitoring for cascading component issues. Recent capacitor monitoring critical.
  • Unit B (2018 Bryant 96% AFUE): standard tune-up; newer equipment with focus on maintaining manufacturer warranty compliance. ECM blower amp draw monitoring annual.
  • Unit C (2006 Lennox): more thorough investigation given equipment age. Annual borescope inspection for heat exchanger cracks. R-22 refrigerant charge monitoring (system end-of-life for R-22 availability). Capital planning conversations with Vanessa about replacement timing.

October 2024 Annual Service Visit (Documented Example)

Visit context:
Third year of contract service. Eli Tran (lead technician for this property under contract) performed annual fall tune-up on all three units. Single dispatch covering all three units sequentially. Carla Mendoza assisted with Spanish-language tenant coordination for Units A and C.
Service date:
October 14-15, 2024. Two-day completion (Units A and B day 1, Unit C day 2) accommodating tenant work schedules.
Unit A findings:
  • Combustion analysis: CO 28 ppm at flue, O₂ 7.2%, efficiency 79.4%, manifold pressure 3.4″ WC
  • Heat exchanger borescope: minor surface oxidation, no cracks identified
  • Capacitor measurement: 38 MFD (vs 40 MFD nominal, within 5% tolerance, acceptable)
  • Filter: replaced (1-inch MERV 8 builder-spec; upgrade to 4-inch MERV 11 recommended for next service cycle)
  • Drain line: cleared minor sediment buildup
  • Tenant feedback: equipment operating normally, no concerns
  • Overall assessment: equipment in good condition for 12-year service age
Unit B findings:
  • Combustion analysis: CO 12 ppm at flue, O₂ 7.0%, efficiency 95.8%, manifold pressure 3.4″ WC
  • Heat exchanger inspection: excellent condition, no concerns
  • ECM blower amp draw: within manufacturer specification
  • Inducer motor: operating normally
  • Filter: replaced (4-inch MERV 11 media filter)
  • Drain line: clean
  • Tenant feedback: equipment operating normally, comments on quiet operation
  • Overall assessment: equipment in excellent condition for 6-year service age
Unit C findings (more comprehensive given equipment age):
  • Combustion analysis: CO 42 ppm at flue (acceptable but elevated vs. 28 ppm Unit A and 12 ppm Unit B), O₂ 8.2% (elevated), efficiency 76.8% (below 80% nameplate, indicating degraded combustion)
  • Heat exchanger borescope: surface oxidation present, minor pitting observed, NO cracks identified. Documentation photo taken for year-over-year comparison.
  • R-22 refrigerant pressure verification: charge at acceptable level, no detected leak. Last R-22 system in Vanessa’s portfolio.
  • Capacitor measurement: 32 MFD (vs 40 MFD nominal, 20% degradation), exceeds acceptable tolerance for continued operation. Replaced during visit (covered under contract discount).
  • Inducer motor: operating, but with audible bearing whine consistent with end-of-life
  • Burner cleaning: significant carbon buildup removed
  • Filter: replaced
  • Tenant feedback: equipment operating “loud sometimes” per tenant; previously interpreted as normal operation, now confirmed as bearing wear
  • Overall assessment: equipment approaching end-of-life. Recommended replacement planning for 2025-2026 timeframe.
Capital planning conversation with Vanessa (post-service):
Comprehensive condition report delivered to Vanessa October 17 with photo documentation:

  • Unit A: continue current maintenance pattern, monitor capacitor approaching replacement threshold next year
  • Unit B: excellent condition, continue routine maintenance
  • Unit C: replacement planning recommended for 2025-2026 timeframe
  • Recommended replacement timing: summer 2025 (off-peak pricing, lower urgency)
  • Recommended equipment tier for Unit C replacement: 92-96% AFUE replacement (Heil N9MSB or Goodman GMVC8 series) with full IRA 25C tax credit + Wattsmart + ThermWise rebate eligibility
  • Estimated 2025 replacement cost: $7,800-9,400 depending on equipment tier and rebate structure

Multi-Year Service History Patterns

2022-2023 contract year findings:
  • Unit A: standard maintenance, no issues
  • Unit B: standard maintenance, no issues (then 4 years service)
  • Unit C: standard maintenance, identified beginning of heat exchanger oxidation pattern
2023-2024 contract year findings:
  • Unit A: standard maintenance, identified beginning of capacitor degradation
  • Unit B: standard maintenance, no issues
  • Unit C: heat exchanger oxidation progressing, no cracks; R-22 system noted for replacement planning
2024-2025 contract year findings (described above):
  • Unit A: capacitor approaching replacement threshold
  • Unit B: excellent condition continued
  • Unit C: end-of-life signals (capacitor failure, inducer motor wear, combustion degradation); replacement planning initiated
Capital planning timeline based on multi-year service data:
  • Unit C: replacement recommended summer 2025
  • Unit A: monitor for replacement 2027-2029 timeframe (will be 15-17 years at that point)
  • Unit B: monitor for replacement 2030-2033 timeframe (will be 12-15 years at that point)

Staggered replacement timing reduces capital expenditure concentration. Property owner’s capital planning supported by documented condition trajectory.

Service history value:
Multi-year service documentation provides Vanessa with: (a) capital planning information for budget purposes, (b) tax preparation documentation for property expense deductibility, (c) tenant communication regarding equipment condition transparency, (d) buyer documentation if property is sold (equipment condition history valuable for sale negotiations), (e) insurance documentation for claim support if equipment failure events occur, (f) regulatory compliance documentation if WVC or other jurisdiction implements rental property HVAC inspection requirements.

Tenant Coordination Outcomes

Unit A tenant (Spanish-speaking family with two children):
Carla Mendoza coordinated all service appointments in Spanish. Tenant comfort with the process improved noticeably across the 3-year contract period. Initial 2022 appointment required extended explanation of: technician credentials, what tune-up entails, why annual maintenance important. By 2024, tenant proactively reported minor equipment concerns to Carla in advance of scheduled service. This communication helped identify a minor blower noise issue that we addressed during the 2024 visit, preventing more significant deterioration. Tenant has provided positive feedback to Vanessa about responsive service.
Unit B tenant (English-speaking professional):
Standard English-language coordination through email and text. Tenant typically not home during service window. Spare-key arrangement with Vanessa’s property management provides access. Tenant provides post-service feedback by text if equipment performance issues. Through 2024, no significant issues reported.
Unit C tenant (Spanish-speaking retired couple):
Priya Sandoval coordinated 2024 service appointment in Spanish. Retired couple prefers home-presence during all service appointments. Coordination requires more notice and longer service windows. Tenant has been particularly responsive to reporting equipment concerns; she reported the “loud sometimes” pattern that helped confirm Unit C inducer motor bearing wear. Spanish-language communication critical given tenant’s preference for not having interactions in second language during stressful situations (equipment failures).
Tenant satisfaction trends:
Vanessa has reported very low tenant turnover in this property compared to similar properties in her portfolio without maintenance contracts. Specifically: Unit A original 2019 tenant remains in 2025 (6 years tenancy, well above WVC average rental tenure); Unit B current tenant since 2021 (4+ years); Unit C current tenant since 2023 (2+ years). Stable tenancy correlates with reliable HVAC maintenance (along with other property management factors); tenants value functional, well-maintained heating and cooling.

Cost Breakdown

Annual contract pricing:
  • Base price per unit: $800 (individual unit single-year rate)
  • Multi-unit discount (3 units): -$200 per unit = -$600 total
  • Multi-year contract discount (3-year terms): no additional discount; 3-year terms maintain stable pricing
  • Bilingual service coordination: $0 (included as standard for WVC properties)
  • Annual contract value: $1,800 ($600 per unit)
Services included per year:
  • 3 fall furnace tune-ups (one per unit)
  • 3 spring AC tune-ups (one per unit)
  • 6 total scheduled service visits annually
  • Priority dispatch coverage for emergency calls
  • 15% repair discount on all parts and labor
  • Tenant coordination administrative work
  • Spanish-language tenant communication
  • Annual written condition report with photo documentation
  • Service history maintenance
Comparison to individual tune-up pricing:
  • Individual fall tune-up per unit: $245
  • Individual spring AC tune-up per unit: $245
  • Total individual pricing for 3 units annually: $245 × 6 visits = $1,470 base
  • Plus: no priority dispatch, no repair discount, no tenant coordination, no condition report, no service history maintenance
  • Contract additional value beyond base tune-up pricing: $1,800 – $1,470 = $330 in additional services (priority dispatch coverage value alone typically $200-400 per emergency call avoided)
Out-of-contract emergency repair history (during contract period):
  • 2023: Unit A capacitor replacement (caught during routine service, no emergency call): $185 with 15% discount = $157
  • 2024: Unit C capacitor replacement during October service visit: $185 with 15% discount = $157
  • 2024: Unit A minor blower noise issue addressed during service (no separate charge): $0
  • Total contract-related repair costs over 3-year contract period: $314
  • No emergency dispatches during contract period (vs. 2020-2021 pre-contract pattern of 2 emergency calls per year averaging $385 + $145 hot-weather premium = $530 per emergency event)
Total cost over 3-year contract:
  • 3 years contract value: $5,400
  • Out-of-contract repair costs: $314
  • Total spent: $5,714 over 3 years
Avoided emergency costs estimate:
  • Pre-contract emergency pattern: ~2 emergency calls per year at $530 average
  • Estimated avoided over 3 years: 6 emergency calls × $530 = $3,180
  • Plus tenant relations costs (reputation, turnover potential): difficult to quantify but significant

Why This Case Study Illustrates Important Patterns

Multi-family rental maintenance economics:
Rental property owners face multiple competing pressures: minimize maintenance costs to maximize cash flow, prevent tenant turnover that creates vacancy costs, maintain property value through equipment condition, comply with code requirements. Maintenance contracts address all four pressures simultaneously: scheduled costs replace unpredictable emergency expenses, reliable equipment improves tenant satisfaction reducing turnover, documented condition supports property value, regular service ensures code compliance. Annual contract value for this triplex ($1,800) represents approximately 0.04% of property value annually – modest investment for significant operational benefits.
Staggered replacement planning:
Multi-unit properties with HVAC equipment installed at different times allow staggered replacement scheduling. Vanessa’s triplex contains 2006, 2012, and 2018 equipment – 14-year age range. Capital planning for staggered replacement (Unit C 2025, Unit A 2027-2029, Unit B 2030-2033) spreads capital expenditure over time vs. concentrated replacement of all equipment simultaneously. Multi-year service documentation provides condition trajectory enabling this planning. Owners without service history must rely on calendar-based replacement schedules that may replace functioning equipment too early or fail to anticipate replacement of degrading equipment in time.
Tenant coordination as service requirement:
HVAC service in occupied rental properties requires tenant coordination protocols beyond technical service requirements. 48-hour notice per lease, scheduling around tenant work patterns, language preferences, security access arrangements, post-service tenant communication. These coordination requirements have administrative cost; bundled into maintenance contracts, they’re transparently included rather than itemized per visit. Properties without these protocols experience: tenant scheduling complaints, missed service windows, security access conflicts, tenant relationship damage. Effective tenant coordination is operational competency requiring deliberate investment.
Spanish-language service competency requirement:
WVC’s approximately 32% Hispanic population includes many residents in rental housing. Property owners with Spanish-speaking tenants benefit from HVAC contractors offering bilingual service. Our team’s bilingual capability (Priya Sandoval, Carla Mendoza, Jordan Whitmer dispatch, and Eli Tran ongoing certification) enables effective service for these properties without language barrier complications. Tenant comfort with service appointments improves with native-language coordination; tenant proactive issue reporting (which prevents more significant equipment failures) requires comfortable communication. Properties with Spanish-speaking tenants where HVAC contractors don’t offer bilingual service experience reduced tenant satisfaction and missed opportunities for proactive maintenance.
Service history as capital planning tool:
Multi-year documented service history provides quantitative basis for capital planning. Condition trajectory data (combustion analysis, capacitor measurements, heat exchanger inspection photos) enables: identification of degrading equipment in advance of failure, replacement timing optimization for off-peak pricing and seasonal availability, capital budget forecasting for tax planning and property cash flow management, buyer documentation for property sale negotiations. Without service history, property owners make capital decisions on equipment age alone – typically replacing functioning equipment prematurely or missing replacement signals in time. Service history converts maintenance contracts from cost center to strategic asset.
Property owner partnership relationship:
Multi-year contract relationships develop trust and operational fluency. Our team knows each unit’s equipment, tenant patterns, access procedures, capital planning timeline. New relationships require relearning these patterns each year. Stable contractor relationships also benefit from: predictable annual cash flow for the contractor, deep equipment-specific knowledge for the property, reliable response capability for emergencies, capital planning collaboration for the property owner. Vanessa’s 3-year contract renewal in 2025 reflects mutual operational satisfaction.

Code and Standards Compliance Documentation

Applicable codes and standards:
  • 2024 IMC with Utah amendments: Mechanical equipment service
  • IFGC Section 304.1: Altitude derate at WVC 4,200 ft (16.8% derate)
  • UMC Section 510: Combustion air provision
  • ASHRAE 90.1: Energy efficiency standards (informational reference)
  • EPA Section 608: Refrigerant handling (Unit C R-22 monitoring, Units A and B R-410A handling)
  • WVC rental property code compliance: HVAC equipment functionality and safety (no specific WVC inspection requirements at this time but emerging trend)
  • Utah DOPL HVAC contractor licensing: #11567823-5501 active and current
Documentation maintained per service visit:
  • Pre-service visit conditions documented
  • Per-equipment combustion analysis measurements
  • Heat exchanger borescope photos (Unit C primarily)
  • Capacitor measurements with manufacturer specification comparison
  • Refrigerant charge verification (AC equipment)
  • Filter changes documented
  • Tenant communication record
  • Service history database update
  • Annual condition report to property owner
Permits:
Not applicable for routine maintenance and tune-up services. Capital replacement work (Unit C anticipated 2025 replacement) will require WVC Building Department permit at that time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why use a maintenance contract instead of paying per service?
Maintenance contracts provide multiple benefits beyond per-service savings: predictable annual costs vs. unpredictable emergency expenses, priority dispatch when emergencies occur, 15% repair discount on parts and labor, tenant coordination administrative work, condition documentation for capital planning, service history for property value documentation. For rental property owners specifically: tenant satisfaction improvement from reliable maintenance reduces turnover, which is the largest single operational cost in rental property management. Annual contract value ($1,800 for this triplex) typically less than single tenant turnover cost (lost rent + cleaning + advertising + showings averaging $2,000-3,500 per turnover).
How do you handle tenant coordination for service appointments?
Initial appointment scheduled with property owner with proposed dates. Owner notifies tenants per lease 48-hour notice requirement. Our dispatch contacts tenant directly 24 hours before appointment to confirm specific 2-hour service window. Spanish-language communication for Spanish-speaking tenants. Technician text-message arrival notification when en route. Post-service report provided to property owner and tenant if requested. We handle most tenant communication directly to reduce administrative burden on property owners.
Why is bilingual service important for rental properties?
WVC’s approximately 32% Hispanic population includes many residents in rental housing. Property owners with Spanish-speaking tenants benefit from HVAC contractors offering native-language coordination: improved tenant comfort with service appointments, proactive tenant communication about minor issues before they become emergencies, reduced tenant turnover from language-barrier service frustrations. Our team’s bilingual capability (Priya Sandoval, Carla Mendoza, Jordan Whitmer dispatch, ongoing additional certifications) enables effective service across language preferences.
What happens when equipment reaches replacement age?
Multi-year service documentation provides condition trajectory enabling proactive replacement planning. We provide annual condition reports identifying equipment approaching end-of-life. Property owner makes replacement timing decisions (typically targeting summer off-peak pricing). We coordinate replacement work as separate project from maintenance contract. New equipment installed during replacement covers manufacturer warranty period; maintenance contract continues covering ongoing service. Replacement projects qualify for available rebates and tax credits (IRA 25C, Wattsmart, ThermWise).
How does this contract structure compare to other property management approaches?
Various rental property maintenance approaches exist: (a) reactive repairs as failures occur (lowest upfront cost, highest emergency cost and tenant satisfaction risk), (b) per-tune-up scheduling without contract (predictable maintenance but no priority dispatch or repair discounts), (c) maintenance contract with single contractor (predictable costs, priority dispatch, service history, contractor familiarity with property), (d) property management company including maintenance bundling (additional overhead but comprehensive property management). Contract approach (option c) typically offers best balance for property owners managing 1-15 rental units. Larger portfolios may benefit from property management company arrangements.

Project Details Summary

Customer:
Vanessa O., property investor managing 7 rental units across Wasatch Front including WVC triplex (consent given for documentation)
Property:
WVC 1972 three-unit triplex on 25th Street, 1,280 sq ft per unit (3,840 sq ft total)
Contract type:
Multi-year residential maintenance contract covering all three furnace + AC systems; renewed October 2025 for 3-year term
Equipment inventory:
Unit A (2012 Goodman GMS80 80% AFUE), Unit B (2018 Bryant 925SA48060V17 96% AFUE), Unit C (2006 Lennox SL280 80% AFUE) — 14-year age range supporting staggered replacement planning
Annual contract value:
$1,800 covering all three units ($600 per unit), including 6 scheduled service visits annually, priority dispatch, 15% repair discount, tenant coordination, bilingual service, annual condition reports
Service team:
Eli Tran (lead technician), Carla Mendoza (Unit A Spanish tenant coordination), Priya Sandoval (Unit C Spanish tenant coordination)
Three-year outcomes (2022-2025):
Zero emergency dispatches across all three units during contract period (vs. 2020-2021 pre-contract pattern of ~2 emergency calls annually). Tenant turnover reduced; Unit A original 2019 tenant remains in 2025 (6 years tenancy). Equipment condition documented across multi-year service history. Unit C replacement planning initiated for 2025-2026 timeframe.
Capital planning timeline:
Unit C replacement summer 2025 ($7,800-9,400 estimated). Unit A monitoring for 2027-2029 replacement. Unit B monitoring for 2030-2033 replacement. Staggered replacement spreads capital expenditure over 8-year window.

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