Nearly every HVAC company in Minnesota will try to sell you a maintenance plan. They range from $150 to $400+ per year and typically include one or two annual tune-ups plus priority service and discounts on repairs. Are they worth it? The honest answer is: sometimes yes, sometimes no — and it depends on your specific situation.
What's Typically Included in an HVAC Maintenance Plan
| Plan Feature | Typical Value | Standard Rate (without plan) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual furnace tune-up | Included | $80–$150 |
| Annual AC tune-up | Included (on 2-visit plans) | $80–$150 |
| Priority scheduling | Faster service in emergencies | N/A |
| Repair discount | 10–15% off labor/parts | Standard rates |
| No diagnostic fee | Waived service call | $75–$125 |
| Filter reminders | Automated reminders | Free to self-manage |
When a Maintenance Plan IS Worth It
A plan makes strong financial sense in these situations:
Buy the same name-brand HVAC system the pros install — shipped factory-direct to your door. No middleman, free delivery, 5-star rated, and financing available.
- Your system is 8–15 years old: Equipment in this range has enough remaining life to justify ongoing maintenance investment, but enough wear that annual inspections catch developing issues before they become emergency failures.
- You're not a DIYer: If you won't remember to change filters, clean coils, or check condensate drains on your own, a plan ensures it gets done — reducing the risk of preventable failures.
- You want priority service: Minnesota HVAC companies get slammed in January and July. Plan members typically get faster scheduling during peak periods. If a furnace failure at -15°F is a serious concern, the peace of mind has real value.
- You have a warranty-sensitive system: Some manufacturer warranties require documented professional maintenance. Skipping annual service could void the warranty on a newer high-efficiency system.
When a Maintenance Plan Is NOT Worth It
- Your system is brand new (0–3 years old): New systems rarely need anything beyond filter changes. Annual tune-ups add little value for a well-installed 1-year-old furnace.
- Your system is very old (17+ years): If your furnace is near end of life, putting $200/year into a maintenance plan is often better applied toward replacement savings. The plan won't extend a fundamentally worn-out system.
- You're a competent DIYer: Filter changes, coil cleaning, drain inspection — the bulk of "maintenance" value can be done yourself. If you do your own upkeep, the plan ROI is much lower.
- The plan has auto-renewal and poor cancellation terms: Read the contract. Some plans auto-renew and are difficult to cancel. Check whether the discounts apply to labor, parts, or both — "discounts" sometimes don't add up to much in practice.
The Math on a Typical 2-Visit Plan
A plan costing $249/year with two tune-ups included:
- Furnace tune-up retail value: $120
- AC tune-up retail value: $100
- Combined retail: $220
- Plan cost: $249
- Net "premium" for extras (priority service, discounts): $29/year
At that math, you're essentially paying retail for the tune-ups plus $29 for the priority service and discount perks. Whether that's worth it depends on how much you value not waiting 5+ days for service during a peak-season breakdown.
Questions to Ask Before Signing
- Does the discount apply to parts, labor, or both?
- What's the cancellation policy?
- Does priority service have a defined response time guarantee?
- Is the plan tied to a specific technician company, or transferable?
- Are there exclusions (like refrigerant, compressors, heat exchangers)?
Get wholesale pricing on a new system.
Tell us a little about your home and what you're replacing. We'll send real numbers on a Goodman 96% AFUE setup — shipped direct to your door anywhere in the lower 48. No contractor markup, no obligation.
