Your furnace is struggling — making odd noises, heating inconsistently, or running up your energy bills. The technician says it needs a significant repair. Now comes the real question: do you fix it, or replace it? Here is how to think through one of the most important financial decisions a homeowner faces.
The 5,000 Rule: Your Starting Point
The HVAC industry’s standard guideline is the ‘5,000 rule’: multiply the age of your furnace (in years) by the estimated cost of the repair. If the result exceeds $5,000, replacement is generally the wiser investment.
- 10-year-old furnace × $400 repair = $4,000 → Repair makes sense
- 15-year-old furnace × $400 repair = $6,000 → Replacement worth considering
- 12-year-old furnace × $600 repair = $7,200 → Strong case for replacement
Factors That Favor Repairing Your Furnace
- The furnace is less than 10 years old
- The repair cost is less than 15% of the cost of a new system
- The system has been well-maintained with a good track record
- Energy bills have been stable — efficiency has not noticeably declined
If most of these apply, scheduling a furnace repair is likely the right call.
Factors That Favor Replacing Your Furnace
- The furnace is more than 15 years old (average lifespan is 15–20 years)
- This is the second or third significant repair in the past few years
- Energy bills have been rising steadily
- The heat exchanger is cracked — a serious safety issue
- Comfort has declined — uneven heating, excessive noise, more dust
If most of these apply, explore your furnace replacement options. A new high-efficiency furnace can reduce heating costs by 20–40% and comes with a full manufacturer warranty.
The Hidden Cost of Keeping an Old Furnace
An older furnace running at 70–80% efficiency costs significantly more to operate each year than a new 95%+ AFUE unit. If your old furnace costs $1,800/year to heat your home and a new unit would cost $1,200/year, the $600 annual savings means a $4,000 furnace pays for itself in under 7 years.
What to Expect From a New Furnace Installation
A new furnace installation in Salt Lake City typically costs $2,500 to $5,000 for the unit and labor. Modern high-efficiency furnaces (90%+ AFUE) qualify for federal tax credits and sometimes utility rebates — ask your HVAC contractor what incentives are currently available in Utah.
Ask Your Technician These Questions
- What is causing the problem and what does the repair include?
- What is the warranty on parts and labor for this repair?
- What is the current efficiency rating of my furnace?
- Are there other issues you noticed during the inspection?
- What would a replacement cost, and what efficiency improvement could I expect?
Get a Professional Assessment
Saagah HVAC provides honest, no-pressure assessments. We will inspect your system, explain exactly what we find, and give you clear options — furnace repair, furnace replacement, or a maintenance plan to extend your system’s life.
Ready to book? Contact us to schedule your evaluation today.


