Furnace Replacement in Newark, NJ
Newark's Century-Old Buildings Need More Than a Temporary Fix
Gas Furnace Replacement Newark, NJ
Newark winters are unforgiving. January lows average around 25°F, and when a Nor’easter rolls through, a furnace that’s been limping along for years doesn’t get a second chance. A properly installed replacement system means your Newark home holds heat the way it should no cold spots, no strange smells, no wondering if tonight’s the night it finally fails.
For homeowners in Forest Hill and Weequahic, where a significant portion of the housing stock dates back to before 1939, the heating systems inside those walls are often just as old. Steam boilers, oil-fired units, radiator systems installed when Eisenhower was president these aren’t just inefficient, they’re running at a fraction of their original capacity and costing more every month to produce less heat. A new system stops the financial bleed.
If you’re a landlord managing a multifamily building in the North Ward or the Ironbound, the stakes are clearer still. Tenants without heat is not a situation you want to manage at midnight. Getting ahead of it with a licensed replacement done right, with permits pulled and inspections passed is the move that protects you, your tenants, and your property.
HVAC Furnace Replacement Companies Newark, NJ
We’ve been replacing furnaces in Newark and Essex County since May 15, 1973. That’s not a marketing line it’s a founding date you can verify. We’re family-owned and operated by the Pucci family, and Ross Pucci answers the phone himself, including on holidays. When you call, you’re talking to the person responsible for the work.
Newark is the county seat of Essex County, and it’s been part of our service territory for over five decades. The Forest Hill Victorians, the Ironbound’s pre-war row houses, the older homes in Weequahic these aren’t unfamiliar territory. We’ve been working on the kinds of systems that fill those buildings since before most of them were due for their first replacement.
Our credentials are real and public: NJ HVACR Contractor License #19HC00022600 and Home Improvement Contractor Registration #13VH05686500, both searchable on the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs website. Five hundred-plus Google reviews at a 5.0 rating. HomeAdvisor Screened and Approved for five consecutive years. These numbers don’t happen by accident.
HVAC and Furnace Replacement Cost Newark, NJ
It starts with a free estimate. You describe what’s going on or what stopped working and we come out to assess the system. This matters more in Newark than in a newer suburb, because what you think is a furnace issue might actually be a boiler problem, or an oil-fired system that’s a better candidate for conversion than repair. We give you the honest answer first, even if it means a smaller job.
Once the scope is clear, you’ll get a straight number. If replacement is the right call, we handle the permit through Newark’s Building Division because under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, furnace replacement requires a mechanical permit, not just a swap. Newark also has its own Air Pollution Control Code that applies to combustion equipment. Skipping that process isn’t a shortcut; it’s a liability that lands on the property owner. Every job we do goes through the proper channels.
Most residential furnace replacements take between four and ten hours and are completed in a single day. We remove the old unit, install the new system and size it correctly for your space, and schedule a post-installation inspection. Financing through FTL Finance is available if you’d rather spread the cost than pay it all upfront. Our goal from start to finish is a system that works, documented properly, with no surprises left behind.
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Furnace Replacement Service Newark, NJ
Newark’s housing stock is not uniform, and the furnace replacement service we deliver reflects that. In a Forest Hill Victorian or a pre-war Ironbound row house, the existing system might be a steam boiler, a hot water radiator setup, or an aging oil-fired unit not the standard gas furnace you’d find in a newer suburban home. We service all of it: Trane, Lennox, Weil-McLain, Utica, and virtually every other major brand. If that’s what’s in your building, it’s not a problem.
For Newark homeowners still on oil heat and heating oil delivery companies actively serve this city, which means oil-fired systems are still very much in use oil-to-gas conversion is a real option worth discussing. We’ve offered this specialty for decades, and for many Newark properties, it’s the smarter long-term path over continuing to service an aging oil system.
The cost of furnace replacement in Newark typically runs between $3,500 and $7,000 for a standard gas furnace installation, with more complex jobs reaching higher depending on the system, the building, and any ductwork or gas line work involved. Full HVAC replacement in Newark can run $6,000 to $11,000 or more. We provide free estimates so you know the number before you commit to anything. Financing through FTL Finance is available for those who need it because a $5,000 to $10,000 replacement shouldn’t require a cash reserve to get done right.
Do I need a permit for furnace replacement in Newark, NJ?
Yes, and this is one of the most important things to confirm before you hire anyone. Under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code specifically N.J.A.C. 5:23-2.14 furnace replacement is classified as a mechanical alteration, which means it requires a permit issued by Newark’s Building Division, not just a like-for-like swap. This applies even when you’re replacing an old unit with the same type and size of system.
Newark adds another layer that most suburban towns don’t have: the city’s own Air Pollution Control Code, which requires permits for combustion equipment that may emit air pollutants. That’s an additional municipal requirement on top of the state-level code. Unlicensed contractors working in Newark’s competitive market often skip both. If that happens, the liability doesn’t fall on the contractor it falls on you as the property owner. We pull every required permit and schedule the post-installation inspection as part of the job, every time.
How much does furnace replacement cost in Newark, NJ?
For a standard gas furnace replacement in Newark, you’re generally looking at a range of $3,500 to $7,000 for the installed system. More complex jobs older buildings with non-standard ductwork, systems that require gas line modifications, or properties with additional code compliance requirements can push that figure higher. Full HVAC replacement, meaning furnace and AC together, typically runs $6,000 to $11,000 or more in this market.
Northern New Jersey carries higher labor rates than the national average licensed HVAC technicians in this region bill at the top of the state’s range and Newark’s urban environment can add complexity that a straightforward suburban install doesn’t have. The best way to get a real number for your specific situation is a free estimate, which we provide before any commitment is made. If cost is a concern, financing through FTL Finance is available so the replacement can happen now rather than waiting until the system fails completely.
My Newark home has a steam boiler is that different from furnace replacement?
It is, and it’s a distinction that matters a lot in Newark specifically. Steam boilers and hot water radiator systems are far more common here than in newer suburban towns, particularly in neighborhoods like Forest Hill, the Ironbound, and Weequahic where the housing stock dates back to the early 1900s. A steam boiler heats your home through a completely different mechanism than a forced-air furnace it circulates steam or hot water through radiators rather than pushing heated air through ductwork.
Replacing or converting a steam boiler system is a different scope of work than a standard furnace swap, and not every HVAC contractor has real experience with it. We service boilers alongside furnaces including Weil-McLain and Utica systems that are common in older Newark buildings and we also specialize in oil-to-gas conversion for properties still running oil-fired boilers. If you’re not sure what type of system you have or what the right solution is, the free estimate is the place to start. You’ll get an honest answer about what’s actually in your building and what makes sense for it.
How do I know if I should repair or replace my furnace in Newark?
A useful starting point is what the industry calls the $5,000 rule: multiply the age of your system by the cost of the repair being quoted. If that number exceeds $5,000, replacement is typically the smarter financial decision. So if your furnace is 20 years old and you’re looking at a $300 repair, that math points toward replacement. If it’s 8 years old and the repair is $200, fixing it probably makes sense.
In Newark, this calculation carries extra weight because so much of the housing stock is running systems that are already well past the standard 15 to 20-year lifespan for gas furnaces. A furnace that’s still technically running at 25 or 30 years old isn’t running efficiently it’s consuming more fuel to produce less heat, and it’s one cold snap away from failing completely. There’s also a safety dimension: a cracked heat exchanger can allow carbon monoxide to leak into your living space while the furnace still appears to be working. If there’s any question about the integrity of an older system, getting a professional assessment before winter is the right call. We’ll tell you honestly whether repair or replacement makes more sense that’s documented in hundreds of reviews, not just claimed on a website.
Should I replace my furnace and AC at the same time in Newark?
If both systems are aging, replacing them together often makes more financial sense than doing them separately. The biggest reason is labor: a significant portion of the installation cost covers the technician’s time and the associated work permits, ductwork inspection, gas line assessment. When you combine a furnace and AC replacement into one project, you’re not doubling the labor cost; you’re sharing it across both systems. That typically results in a lower total cost than scheduling two separate jobs.
There’s also a performance argument. A new high-efficiency furnace paired with an old, undersized AC unit doesn’t give you a matched system the components aren’t engineered to work together optimally, and you may end up with efficiency losses that offset some of the savings from the new furnace. For Newark homeowners who are already managing the cost of one major replacement, the financing option through FTL Finance makes it easier to handle both systems at once rather than kicking the AC decision down the road another year or two.
How do I verify that an HVAC contractor in Newark is actually licensed?
New Jersey requires HVACR contractors to hold a state license issued by the Board of Examiners of Heating, Ventilating, Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Contractors within the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. Individual technicians cannot legally perform this work independently they must work under a licensed contractor. The license is searchable on the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs website, and it takes about two minutes to look one up.
In a large urban market like Newark, where unlicensed operators compete on price and often skip permits, this verification step is genuinely worth doing before you book anyone. Our NJ HVACR Contractor License is #19HC00022600, and our Home Improvement Contractor Registration is #13VH05686500. Both are publicly searchable. The reason those numbers are published openly is straightforward: if you’re going to trust someone to work on the heating system in your home or your rental property, you should be able to confirm their credentials yourself without taking anyone’s word for it.
Other Services we provide in Newark