San Francisco HVAC & Heat Pumps.
SF's overlapping Planning + DBI + Zoning + neighborhood-notification process makes ADUs and remodels procedurally heavier than anywhere else in California. As a hvac & heat pumps contractor for San Francisco, we plan the project around SF Department of Building Inspection, the cool marine climate of CEC Zone 3, and the specific overlays that apply to your parcel — no surprises after demo.
San Francisco cost band — 2026
$10K – $28K
San Francisco sits in our Peninsula / Westside tier (Tier 5) — typical projects land inside this band when scope is locked before mobilization. The main cost drivers on a San Francisco hvac & heat pumps project are equipment tier (SEER/HSPF), ductwork condition or new runs, electrical panel/load capacity, refrigerant line access, and Title 24 compliance package, and the $10K–$28K band assumes those are sized to the lot, not upgraded mid-build.
San Francisco timeline
7–10 weeks from contract to keys for a typical San Francisco project, including SF Department of Building Inspection plan check.
What this includes.
- Manual J load calc and Title 24 energy compliance check
- Equipment selection (heat pump / mini-split / dual-fuel) sized to the load
- Ductwork inspection, sealing, or new runs as required
- Electrical panel/load review and refrigerant-line routing
- Permit, install, startup commissioning, and final inspection
What changes in San Francisco.
Plan check runs through SF Department of Building Inspection, with submittal, corrections, and inspection scheduling all handled in our license — CSLB #1145233. Coastal Zone parcels need a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) on top of the building permit, which we file in parallel with plan check to keep timelines tight. Historic-overlay or HPOZ-equivalent review applies to exterior alterations in designated districts and adds a design-review step ahead of building plan check. Local rent-stabilization or tenant-protection rules apply to most pre-1979/1983 multifamily — relevant for duplex-and-up work.
San Francisco's cool marine climate (CEC Zone 3) rarely needs heavy cooling — ducted or ductless mini-split heat pumps with good envelope sealing usually outperform legacy gas furnaces, and California's Title 24 efficiency credits often make the all-electric option the lower-cost permit path.
Plan check: SF Department of Building Inspection →
In short.
- How much does hvac & heat pumps cost in San Francisco, CA?
- Typical hvac & heat pumps projects in San Francisco land in the $10K – $28K band, all-in (design, permit, build, finishes). San Francisco sits in our Peninsula / Westside tier (Tier 5) — typical projects land inside this band when scope is locked before mobilization. The main cost drivers on a San Francisco hvac & heat pumps project are equipment tier (SEER/HSPF), ductwork condition or new runs, electrical panel/load capacity, refrigerant line access, and Title 24 compliance package, and the $10K–$28K band assumes those are sized to the lot, not upgraded mid-build. Lock scope before mobilization and the final invoice almost always lands inside the band.
- Do I need a permit for hvac & heat pumps in San Francisco?
- Yes — work at this scope is permitted through SF Department of Building Inspection. Plan check runs through SF Department of Building Inspection, with submittal, corrections, and inspection scheduling all handled in our license — CSLB #1145233. Coastal Zone parcels need a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) on top of the building permit, which we file in parallel with plan check to keep timelines tight. Historic-overlay or HPOZ-equivalent review applies to exterior alterations in designated districts and adds a design-review step ahead of building plan check. Local rent-stabilization or tenant-protection rules apply to most pre-1979/1983 multifamily — relevant for duplex-and-up work. We pull the permit in our name and run inspections so you never have to sit through a counter visit.
- How long does a hvac & heat pumps project take in San Francisco?
- 7–10 weeks from contract to keys for a typical San Francisco project, including SF Department of Building Inspection plan check. The biggest schedule risk in San Francisco is utility coordination — we open the utility request the same week we submit the permit so the two timelines run parallel, not sequential.
- What's specific to San Francisco that affects this project?
- San Francisco's cool marine climate (CEC Zone 3) rarely needs heavy cooling — ducted or ductless mini-split heat pumps with good envelope sealing usually outperform legacy gas furnaces, and California's Title 24 efficiency credits often make the all-electric option the lower-cost permit path. CEC Climate Zone 3 (cool marine) drives the Title 24 energy envelope spec — that flows into HVAC sizing, glazing U-factor, and insulation thickness in the permit set.
- Who pulls the SF Department of Building Inspection permit on a San Francisco hvac & heat pumps job?
- Alpha Dream pulls the San Francisco permit in our license — CSLB #1145233. You stay off the line for the contractor of record on your San Francisco project. We handle SF Department of Building Inspection plan check, response to corrections, and all inspections through close-out.
- Is hvac & heat pumps in San Francisco a good investment vs. moving?
- For most San Francisco owners, yes — the $10K – $28K spend usually beats a 6% commission + transfer tax + buying-up-the-block, and Prop 13 keeps your tax base intact. We share comparable-cost analysis in the first walk so you can decide before signing anything.
- Does the Coastal Commission review hvac & heat pumps in San Francisco?
- Parcels inside the Coastal Zone need a Coastal Development Permit on top of the SF Department of Building Inspection building permit. We pre-screen the parcel against the Coastal Zone boundary before contract — adds 4–8 weeks if your lot is inside the zone.
- Is my San Francisco home in a historic district, and what does that mean?
- Much of San Francisco sits under a historic overlay (HPOZ in LA jurisdictions, Mills Act districts elsewhere). Exterior alterations on contributing structures need design-review approval before plan check — we file the historic clearance package in parallel with the building permit to keep timelines tight.
- Why is hvac & heat pumps more expensive in San Francisco than inland CA?
- Three reasons: (1) licensed-trade labor runs 30–55% higher than the Inland Empire or Central Valley, (2) SF Department of Building Inspection plan-check and inspection fees are higher and slower, and (3) staging/parking constraints on small lots add real cost. The $10K – $28K band reflects all three baked in.
- What warranty comes with hvac & heat pumps in San Francisco?
- One-year workmanship warranty on everything we install, plus the manufacturer warranty on every product (typically 10–25 years on roofing, 25 years on HVAC, lifetime on cabinetry hardware). Warranty service is in-house — same crew comes back if anything needs attention.
- Do you provide references for hvac & heat pumps projects in San Francisco?
- Yes — at least three past clients per scope, ideally in San Francisco or an adjacent city in San Francisco County. We share addresses (with owner permission), final invoices vs. signed contract, and the punch-list close-out doc so you can verify how the project actually finished.
More we build in San Francisco.
San Francisco ADU Builder
San Francisco Garage Conversion
San Francisco JADU Builder
San Francisco Kitchen Remodeling
San Francisco Bathroom Remodeling
San Francisco Home Additions
San Francisco Whole-Home Remodeling
San Francisco Detached ADU
San Francisco Roofing
San Francisco Concrete & Flatwork
San Francisco Foundation
San Francisco Seismic Retrofit
HVAC & Heat Pumps in nearby cities.
Got a San Francisco project in mind?
Send us the address and we’ll pull San Francisco zoning, setbacks, and hvac & heat pumps feasibility before you spend on drawings.
Start a San Francisco project →Then you're serious. Let's put it on a clipboard.
- 10-minute call with the foreman
- We tell you what your build actually costs, today
- No follow-up unless you ask
Free · Same-week scheduling