Resources / Guide

How HVAC companies get more customers in 2026 (the complete playbook).

The Short Answer

HVAC companies get more customers by winning five battles, in this order: show up in the Google map pack (an optimized, active Google Business Profile), build a review engine (steady volume, recent dates, owner responses), run a website that converts (fast on phones, tap-to-call, a page per service), smooth out seasonality (maintenance plans and shoulder-season offers), and capture repeat and referral business systematically instead of by accident. Paid leads can supplement this system; they cannot replace it.

This guide is written for HVAC owners, not marketers. No jargon, no theory. Just the patterns I watched separate growing HVAC companies from stuck ones across a decade working with thousands of trades businesses. Everything here is something you can act on, whether you do it yourself or hire it out.

One framing thing first, because it explains everything that follows: your customer's behavior is the strategy. When an AC dies in July, a homeowner pulls out a phone, types "ac repair near me," scans the map results, glances at star ratings, and calls someone. Usually within minutes.. Every tactic in this playbook exists to win some part of that sequence.

01Win the map pack first

The "map pack" is the box of three businesses with a map that Google shows above the regular results for local searches. For HVAC, it's where the majority of emergency and service calls begin. It's powered almost entirely by your Google Business Profile (GBP), not your website.

Most HVAC companies claimed their profile once, filled in half of it, and walked away. That's the opportunity, because Google rewards completeness and activity:

One honest warning: nothing on this list works overnight. Map pack position builds over weeks and months of consistency, which is exactly why it's defensible once you have it.

02Build a review engine, not a review pile

Reviews do two jobs at once: they're a major map-pack ranking factor, and they're the trust evidence a stranger uses to decide whether to let your tech into their house. Three dimensions matter, and most companies only think about the first:

The engine part is making the ask automatic. The moment that works best is right at job completion, when the cold air is blowing again and gratitude is at its peak: the tech asks, then a text with a direct review link lands within the hour. If your review requests depend on someone remembering, you don't have an engine. You have a habit that breaks during the busy season, which is precisely when you're serving the most happy customers.

"Your work earns the reputation. A system makes sure it counts."

03Fix the website's conversion leaks

Here's the part most HVAC owners get backwards: the website's job is not to "look professional." That's table stakes. Its job is to convert the visitor your map pack and reviews already earned into a phone call, and most HVAC sites leak calls in the same four places:

If you want the full breakdown of what a conversion-built HVAC site looks like, that's exactly what we build. Here's the anatomy, piece by piece.

04Make seasonality work for you instead of against you

Every HVAC owner knows the rhythm: drowning in July and January, staring at the schedule in April and October. The companies that grow are the ones that treat the shoulder seasons as a marketing season instead of a waiting room:

05Stop letting referrals and repeat work happen by accident

Most HVAC companies already have a referral business. They just don't run it like one. Word-of-mouth feels free, so nobody systematizes it, and the leak is invisible. The fix is boring and it works: every completed job gets a follow-up (did everything work out?), every happy customer gets the review ask, and every review becomes public proof that earns the next stranger's call. One job becomes three things: revenue, reputation, and the next lead.

And remember that referrals check you out before calling. The neighbor's recommendation gets you considered; your map pack presence, reviews, and website get you chosen. A strong referral with a weak online presence is a coin flip you keep losing without knowing it.

06The honest truth about paid leads

Google Local Services Ads, Angi, HomeAdvisor. Do they work? Sometimes, and with eyes open: shared leads get sold to multiple companies, so you're racing to the phone and bidding against your own competitors. Costs trend up year over year. And the moment you stop paying, the leads stop. Nothing compounds..

That doesn't make them useless. Local Services Ads in particular can fill schedule gaps, and the Google Guaranteed badge carries real trust. The principle is the one that runs through this whole playbook: rent leads to fill gaps; own your presence to build the business. Everything in sections one through five is an asset that compounds and is yours permanently. Paid leads are a bill. Build the asset first; use the bill tactically.

07The order of operations

If you're starting from a neglected presence, here's the sequence that gets results fastest: first, fix your GBP completely (one weekend). Second, start the review engine (this week: it compounds longest, so start it earliest). Third, fix or rebuild the website with service pages and tap-to-call. Fourth, set the seasonal rhythm: GBP posts weekly, offers rotating with the calendar, customer-list reminders. Fifth, once the foundation runs, consider paid leads to fill remaining schedule gaps.

None of it is complicated. All of it requires consistency, which is exactly why it works. Your competitors know most of this too; they just don't keep doing it. The map pack rewards the company that's still posting in October.

Want this done for you?

This playbook is literally what Sitework does for HVAC companies: the site, the GBP, the reviews, the seasonal rhythm, managed month after month. We'll even build your demo site before we ever talk.

See What We Build for HVAC

Written by Carter, founder of Sitework, working with thousands of trades contractors. Here's the full story. Questions about your specific market? Email me. I answer.