LC Heating & Air provides heat pump installation in Sierra Madre for year-round comfort. A heat pump heats in winter and cools in summer, replacing both your gas furnace and air conditioner. We install and repair central heat pumps, ductless mini split heat pumps, cold-climate heat pumps, and dual-fuel systems, and we help you stack TECH Clean California rebates, the federal 25C tax credit, and SCE incentives. Whether you are searching for heat pump not heating, heat pump not cooling, heat pump installation and repair, or heat pump replacement cost, call (323) 970-3113 for same-day service and a no-pressure estimate.
Heat Pump Installation & Replacement in Sierra Madre
LC Heating & Air provides heat pump installation in Sierra Madre — including heat pump installation, heat pump replacement, energy efficient heat pump, heat pump rebate. Whether you need same-day service, a written estimate, or help deciding between repair and replacement, our licensed technicians handle every make and model.
We repair and service all major HVAC brands in Sierra Madre, including Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Daikin, Mitsubishi, and Goodman, and older or discontinued units. No matter the manufacturer, we diagnose the problem accurately and give you an upfront price before any work begins.
Sierra Madre sits up against the San Gabriel Mountains, which means the weather here is a little different from the valley floor. Cooler nights, more sun exposure on south-facing slopes, and the occasional marine layer that rolls through the canyon. For a heat pump system, that kind of climate is actually ideal. Heat pumps move heat rather than burn fuel, so when winter lows stay above freezing — which they do here — the system runs at peak efficiency all season long. That efficiency translates to real savings on your combined heating and cooling bills, especially now with California and federal incentives stacked on top.
We install heat pumps in Sierra Madre homes of all kinds: hillside cottages, older custom houses on estate lots, and newer canyon builds where access is tight and equipment placement has to be planned around slopes and narrow roads. If you already have central ductwork, a ducted heat pump goes in the same way as a standard AC and furnace — one outdoor unit, one air handler, same line-set routing. No ductwork? A ductless mini-split heat pump works just as well and avoids the need to run ducts through older framing. Either way, we design the system around your house and your budget, then pull permits, do the install, and help you get every rebate you qualify for.
Consideraciones HVAC locales
Mild winter lows (35–45°F) keep heat pump efficiency high year-round. South-facing slopes on the mountain side cool more slowly.
Narrow streets, steep driveways, tight mechanical closets. We pre-inspect and plan equipment route before installation day.
Many older homes have 100-amp panels or obsolete breaker brands. May need upgrade to add dedicated heat pump circuit.
Pre-1980 construction often has undersized or leaky ducts. We test and quote repairs separately so new system performs correctly.
Common Heat Pump Issues in Sierra Madre Homes
Hillside and canyon properties in Sierra Madre can have very different solar exposure from one room to the next. A heat pump system that is oversized for the shaded side of the house but barely sized for the sunny side will short-cycle and waste energy. We run a Manual J load calculation that accounts for slope, tree cover, and orientation so the zoning makes sense and the equipment matches the real load — not a generic rule of thumb.
Access is another recurring issue here. Many Sierra Madre mechanical closets are tight, with older electrical panels that may not have capacity for a new heat pump. Refrigerant line sets often have to be routed around retaining walls or through crawl spaces under hillside additions. We flag these constraints during the diagnostic visit so there are no surprises the day of installation. And because Sierra Madre gets more wind and debris off the mountains, we pay extra attention to outdoor coil placement and recommend clearances that keep the unit from starving for airflow.
How Sierra Madre's Housing Stock Affects Heat Pump Installation
Most of the homes we work on in Sierra Madre were built before 1980, and a lot of them are on sloped lots or tucked into canyons. That older construction often means undersized ductwork, shared plenums, or no return air pathways in some rooms. A heat pump system moves the same volume of air as a gas furnace — around 400 CFM per ton — so if the ductwork is too small or leaky, you will get the same poor airflow you had with the old system. We do a duct inspection and static pressure test as part of the design process. If the ducts need rebalancing or sealing, we build that into the proposal so the new equipment actually performs.
Electrical service is the other big variable. Many Sierra Madre homes still have 100-amp panels or older Zinsco / Federal Pacific panels that are maxed out. A central heat pump typically requires a dedicated 30- to 60-amp circuit. If the panel is full, we note the upgrade options and can coordinate with a licensed electrician. We do not handle electrical panel upgrades ourselves, but we help you get a clear scope of work so you can price that piece out before committing to the heat pump.
What We Check During a Sierra Madre Heat Pump Diagnostic
When you call about a heat pump that is not heating or cooling right — or if you are considering a new installation — we start with a full system diagnostic. For an existing heat pump, that means checking outdoor coil cleanliness, refrigerant pressures, defrost board operation, reversing valve function, and thermostat communication. We also run a temperature split test and look at the air filter and blower wheel. A lot of the time the problem is a failed run capacitor or a dirty outdoor coil, which is a straightforward repair we can do same-day.
For a new installation, the diagnostic is about measuring the house. We do a Manual J load calculation to determine the right size heat pump. We check the existing ductwork, electrical panel capacity, and refrigerant line-set route. We also look at sun exposure, slope, and wind patterns around the property. All of that goes into a written proposal that spells out the equipment, the installation steps, the permit coordination, and the rebate documentation. Everything is quoted before any work starts. There is no bait-and-switch.
When to Repair vs. Replace Your Heat Pump in Sierra Madre
If your heat pump is less than 10 years old and the problem is a single failed component — a capacitor, a contactor, a bad thermostat — a repair is the right move. Those parts are affordable and the system still has useful life left. We will fix it and get you back running the same day. But if the compressor is failed, the coil is leaking refrigerant, or the system is more than 15 years old and repairs are starting to stack up, replacement makes more financial sense. That is especially true now with TECH Clean California rebates and the federal 30% tax credit making a new system much cheaper than it was a few years ago.
Another pattern we see in Sierra Madre: someone has an old AC unit that is failing and their gas furnace is approaching 20 years old. In that case, replacing both with a single heat pump often costs less than replacing them separately and eliminates the gas bill for heating. We give you a straightforward comparison: the cost to repair the existing system plus projected energy cost for the next few years, versus the cost of a new heat pump after rebates and projected savings. You see the numbers in writing before you decide.
Cost and Rebate Factors for Heat Pumps in Sierra Madre
A standard heat pump installation in Sierra Madre ranges from $7,000 to $16,000 before rebates, depending on equipment efficiency, system complexity, and whether any electrical or duct modifications are needed. The heat pump diagnostic fee is $125–$175, and component repairs typically run $200–$650. Those numbers are before you apply rebates, which is where the math gets interesting. TECH Clean California offers $3,000+ for qualifying heat pump systems, and the federal IRA tax credit is 30% of the equipment cost up to $2,000. Combined, you could see $5,000 or more coming off the net cost.
We include rebate identification and documentation in every installation quote. You see the projected rebate amounts, confirmed eligibility, and the paperwork we handle. We cannot promise a specific discount because eligibility depends on household income limits and equipment selection, but we will tell you exactly which programs you qualify for and what documentation is needed. Financing is available through approved lending partners if you prefer to spread the cost over time.
Scheduling and Access for Sierra Madre Heat Pump Service
Sierra Madre streets are narrow, and many driveways are steep or shared with neighbors. For service calls, we schedule a window so you know when our technician will arrive. For new installations, we do a pre-install site visit to plan the equipment route, line-set path, and staging area. That visit means installation day goes smoother because the crew already knows where the unit goes and how to get materials in place. If the electrical panel is in a basement or a tight closet, we note that ahead of time so the electrician can plan too.
We offer same-day service options for Sierra Madre homeowners with a heat pump that is down or running poorly. Emergency calls are answered within 30 minutes by phone — we pick up and talk through the problem, schedule a dispatch that fits your day, and get someone out there. We do not promise an on-site arrival time of 60 or 90 minutes because traffic and hillside access can push that around. But we do answer the phone, and we do get to you as quickly as we can.
Common Mistakes Sierra Madre Homeowners Make with Heat Pump Installation
The most common mistake I see is sizing the heat pump based on the square footage of the house without accounting for sun exposure and slope. A home on the south-facing side of Sierra Madre gets a lot more solar gain in winter, which actually reduces heating load. But the same home in summer can roast on that exposure, so cooling load is higher. If you size for heating alone, the system is oversized for cooling and will short-cycle. If you size for cooling alone, it may struggle on the coldest winter mornings. We size for both, and we use Manual J so the numbers are correct.
Another frequent mistake is skipping the ductwork inspection. A heat pump moves the same airflow as any central system, so if your ducts are undersized, leaky, or blocked, you will not see the efficiency the equipment is rated for. I have walked into homes where someone installed a 16 SEER heat pump on original 1960s ductwork and wondered why the electric bill did not drop. We catch that during the design phase and quote the duct work separately so the system actually delivers.
Health and Safety Benefits of Heat Pumps in Sierra Madre
A heat pump does not burn anything inside your home. That means no combustion gases, no pilot light, no risk of carbon monoxide from a cracked heat exchanger. If you are replacing a gas furnace, you eliminate that combustion pathway entirely. The only thing moving through your ductwork is conditioned air — no gas, no flue, no draft. For families with young kids, elderly members, or anyone with respiratory conditions, removing a gas-burning appliance from the living space is a real improvement in indoor air quality.
Heat pumps also dehumidify better than gas furnaces because they run longer cycles in cooling mode. That matters in Sierra Madre during the mild winter months when a gas furnace would short-cycle and leave the air feeling clammy. The heat pump runs longer at lower output, pulling more moisture out of the air. We also install MERV-11 or higher filters on our installations, and we note the filter size and recommended replacement schedule in the paperwork so it is clear and easy to maintain.
Common Heat Pump Issues & Diagnostic Guide in Sierra Madre
Understanding these common system symptoms helps identify whether a simple fix or a professional repair is needed.
Not heating/cooling properly
Typical Cause: Reversing valve failure, refrigerant leak, or failed outdoor fan motor
Quick Action: Verify system mode on thermostat and check outdoor unit circuit breaker
Outdoor unit iced up in summer
Typical Cause: Severe restriction of airflow or low refrigerant pressure in coil
Quick Action: Shut off system immediately and allow coil to defrost
Compressor not starting
Typical Cause: Failed start capacitor, blown contactor, or electrical disconnect issue
Quick Action: Check indoor breaker panel; do not try to force start the unit
High electricity bill
Typical Cause: Unit running continuously due to dirty coils or thinned refrigerant charge
Quick Action: Perform annual maintenance tune-up and check for duct leaks
Is a Heat Pump Right for Your Sierra Madre Home?
A heat pump is a good fit for most Sierra Madre homes because winters are mild and summers are manageable, so the system operates at peak efficiency year-round. If you have ductwork already and your AC or furnace is nearing the end of its life, replacing both with a single heat pump often saves money on equipment cost plus eliminates gas heating bills. If you do not have ductwork, a ductless mini-split heat pump can heat and cool individual rooms without needing to run new ducts through framing or crawl spaces.
The downsides are mostly about upfront cost and electrical capacity. A heat pump costs more than just replacing your AC, but less than replacing both AC and furnace. The incentives bring that down significantly. If your electrical panel is full or older, you may need an upgrade to handle the new circuit. We walk through all of that in the proposal so you see the full picture before you decide.
Cómo funciona la visita
We come to your Sierra Madre home, do a Manual J load calculation, inspect your ductwork and electrical panel, and note access constraints and sun exposure. You get a written proposal with equipment options, rebate amounts, and projected costs.
We review the proposal together, answer your questions, and confirm the scope of work. We pull all required permits from the city and coordinate any needed electrical work with a licensed electrician.
Our crew installs the heat pump system — outdoor unit, air handler, line sets, and electrical connections — to manufacturer specs and current code. Same-day completion for most standard installations.
We commission the system, register the manufacturer warranty, and complete all rebate and tax credit documentation. You walk away with a new system and a clear understanding of how to maintain it.
Factores de costo que revisamos antes de cotizar
- • System efficiency rating (SEER2 and HSPF2) affects equipment cost and operating savings.
- • Ductwork condition — repairs or modifications add cost but improve performance.
- • Electrical panel capacity — may need upgrade if panel is full or obsolete.
- • Access complexity — hillside properties, long line-set runs, or tight mechanical spaces add labor time.
- • Permit fees and HERS testing required for Title 24 compliance.
- • Rebate qualification — TECH Clean CA and IRA tax credit amounts depend on income and equipment selection.
Próximos pasos útiles
Heat Pump Installation in Sierra Madre at a glance
- • LC Heating & Air provides heat pump heating and cooling services in Sierra Madre, CA.
- • We install and repair central heat pumps, ductless mini split heat pumps, cold-climate heat pumps, and dual-fuel systems.
- • Common heat pump searches: heat pump not heating, heat pump not cooling, heat pump vs AC, heat pump vs furnace, ductless heat pump, and heat pump replacement cost.
- • Qualifying heat pump installations may receive TECH Clean California rebates plus the federal 25C tax credit.
- • CSLB C-20 HVAC contractor license #1073586.
- • Call (323) 970-3113 for same-day heat pump service in Sierra Madre.
Our heat pump installation process in Sierra Madre
Reviewed by Leo, Owner & Lead Technician
This heat pump installation guide for Sierra Madre is reviewed for practical HVAC accuracy by Leo at LC Heating & Air. LC Heating & Air holds California CSLB C-20 HVAC license #1073586 and provides written estimates before approved work.
What Sierra Madre customers say about heat pump installation
Verified reviews from homeowners in Sierra Madre and nearby neighborhoods who used our heat pump installation service.
“Called LC because our CO detector went off. Their technician found a crack in the heat exchanger and immediately shut down the furnace. He explained the safety issue clearly, provided a replacement estimate, and didn't try to scare us — just facts.”
“Switched from gas furnace to a heat pump after talking to LC. They handled the TECH Clean California paperwork and we got a $2,500 rebate plus the federal tax credit. Total out of pocket was about $5,500 for a system that now heats and cools. Gas bill went to zero.”
“We were skeptical about a heat pump for heating in the winter but LC explained the technology clearly. After one winter season, our home stays warmer than it ever did with the old furnace, and it's quieter too.”





