Your West Point Heating and Cooling Experts
The most common question we hear from West Point homeowners isn't 'can you fix it' — it's 'is it worth fixing.' A furnace that needs a $700 repair at 18 years old is a different decision than the same repair on a 6-year-old system. An AC that needs a refrigerant recharge at year 12 may have a leak that makes the repair a short-term patch on a larger problem. We help King William County homeowners understand where their system actually sits in its service life before committing to a repair that may not make financial sense.
King William County's mixed-humid climate means both heating and cooling systems are load-bearing. An AC that underperforms in August and a furnace that struggles in January aren't unrelated problems — they're the result of the same deferred maintenance pattern that costs West Point homeowners more over time.
The combination of 1,880 annual cooling degree days and 2,760 heating degree days means West Point homeowners depend on both systems across the year. King William County's housing stock, with a median construction year around 1982, contains a large inventory of equipment due for evaluation or replacement.