An emergency AC or heat call on a Saturday in August can cost $200 or $1,800. The difference is almost never about how hard the repair is. It is about pricing model — flat rate vs time-and-materials, weekday vs after-hours premium, and whether you got a quote in writing before approving work. Here is what each tier actually looks like in Rhode Island in 2026.

What an emergency HVAC call typically costs in RI 2026

Component Weekday After-hours / weekend
Diagnostic / trip fee $89 to $149 $129 to $249
Capacitor replacement $180 to $320 $240 to $400
Contactor replacement $220 to $380 $280 to $440
Refrigerant leak repair + recharge $450 to $1,200 $550 to $1,400
Blower motor replacement $450 to $850 $550 to $1,000
Compressor replacement $1,800 to $3,500 $2,100 to $4,000
Full system replacement (emergency) $7,500 to $15,000 $8,500 to $16,000

The diagnostic fee — what it pays for

The diagnostic fee covers the technician’s drive time + 30 to 60 minutes of testing to identify the failure. A real diagnostic includes:

  • Capacitor microfarad reading vs nameplate
  • Contactor inspection for pitting/burning
  • Refrigerant pressure check at suction and head
  • Amperage draw on compressor + fan motor
  • Voltage at the disconnect
  • Thermostat operation test
  • Supply/return temperature split measurement

If the homeowner approves the repair, most reputable RI contractors apply the diagnostic fee toward the repair (effectively waiving it). If the homeowner declines, the diagnostic fee stands.

After-hours premium — what is fair

RI HVAC contractors typically charge 25 to 50 percent premium for emergency calls outside standard business hours (after 5pm weekdays, weekends, holidays). This reflects:

  • Overtime labor for the technician
  • Parts house deliveries at premium rates or stock on truck
  • Same-day response commitment

A 200 percent premium (e.g. $500 diagnostic instead of $149) is price gouging. So is “emergency response fee” stacked on top of the diagnostic fee.

Flat-rate vs time-and-materials pricing

Most RI residential HVAC work in 2026 is flat-rate: the contractor quotes the total job before starting, the homeowner approves in writing, and the price doesn’t move regardless of how long the actual repair takes. Flat-rate protects the homeowner from “the part was harder to remove than expected” surprises.

Time-and-materials charges hourly labor plus marked-up parts. T&M can be cheaper on simple repairs but exposes the homeowner to unpredictable bills if anything goes sideways. T&M emergency calls are where the $1,800 capacitor-replacement horror stories come from.

Rule of thumb: never approve emergency HVAC work without a written flat-rate price for the specific repair, including all parts, labor, and any after-hours premium. “I’ll let you know what it comes to” is the most expensive sentence in HVAC.

Common emergency call patterns

August Saturday: AC stops cooling, capacitor failure

Most common summer call. Symptoms: outdoor unit fan running, no cool air, possible buzzing sound. Typical cost: $240 to $400 after-hours. Fix time: 30-45 minutes. A $1,200 quote for this repair is price gouging.

December Sunday: Furnace not igniting, ignitor failure

Common winter call. Symptoms: thermostat calls for heat, blower runs, no warm air. Typical cost: $320 to $480 after-hours including ignitor part. Fix time: 45-60 minutes.

July Friday night: Compressor seized, no cooling

Less common but the worst news. Symptoms: outdoor unit attempts to start, makes humming or clicking sound, trips breaker. Compressor replacement is $2,100 to $4,000 after-hours. On a system more than 12 years old, replacement of the entire system is often the better economic call.

Avoiding emergency calls in the first place

  • Annual tune-up catches capacitor weakness, contactor pitting, refrigerant leaks, and motor bearing failure before they cause a no-cooling call
  • Replace filter every 30-90 days depending on type
  • Clear leaves and debris from the outdoor condenser unit each season
  • Test thermostat operation at the start of each season

What Horizon HVAC handles

Horizon HVAC dispatches emergency calls across the RI service area. Flat-rate pricing on every repair, written before work starts. Standard after-hours premium of 25 percent (not 100 percent). The Comfort Club waives the diagnostic fee for members and provides priority dispatch.

RI HVAC License #00007430. Mike Cesaroni, owner. 4.9 stars across 401 Google reviews.

Further reading

Call now if you’re without heat or cool

Same-day diagnostic across the RI service area. Flat-rate written quote before any repair starts.

Call (401) 425-9879 or schedule online.

Sources: ACCA Standard 4, EPA Section 608 refrigerant handling standards, manufacturer service literature, RI HVAC industry typical 2026 pricing. Final repair pricing depends on specific failure, equipment age, and parts availability.



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