1. Make sure it's actually broken
Heat pump air feels different. A furnace blasts 120°F+; a heat pump delivers a steady 90–100°F, warmer than your skin but cool-ish to the hand. If the air feels lukewarm but the house is holding temperature, nothing is wrong. Only proceed if the indoor temperature is genuinely dropping.
2. Thermostat: the embarrassing classics
- Mode is HEAT, not COOL or OFF (someone always bumped it)
- Set point at least 2°F above current room temperature
- Fresh batteries if your model uses them, a dying thermostat fails weirdly
- A "hold" or vacation schedule isn't overriding you
3. The air filter
A choked filter starves airflow until the system protects itself by shutting down or icing up. If the filter looks like a lint trap, swap it, then give the system 30–60 minutes to recover before judging the result.
4. Breakers, both of them
Heat pumps typically have two breakers: one for the outdoor unit, one for the indoor air handler. A tripped outdoor breaker produces a very convincing "broken" system where the fan blows unheated air. Flip any tripped breaker fully OFF, then ON. If it trips again, stop, that's an electrical fault, and it's our job.
5. Is the outdoor unit doing anything?
With the thermostat calling for heat, the outdoor fan should spin and the unit should hum. Dead silence outside while the indoor fan runs points to a contactor, capacitor or power issue, quick fixes for a tech, not DIY territory.
6. Frost vs. ice block
A light frost coating in winter is normal, the unit periodically defrosts itself (you may see steam; also normal). But if the unit is encased in ice like a freezer-burned popsicle, the defrost system has failed. Switch to Emergency Heat at the thermostat to keep the house warm and book a repair, running it iced damages the compressor.
7. Vents and returns
Walk the house: supply vents open and unblocked by rugs and furniture, return grilles clear. Closed vents in a few rooms ("to save energy", it doesn't) throw off airflow balance enough to cause real problems.
When you call, tell us what you found
"Outdoor unit silent, breakers fine, filter new", that one sentence puts the right parts on the truck before we leave the shop. Most repairs that start with a good description finish in a single visit.
Call (984) 348-9940, same-day slots
Prevent the next one: the maintenance checklist covers the habits that stop most of these problems before they start.