HVAC Service Near Me in Yukon & West Canadian County, Oklahoma

Most people outside Oklahoma know Yukon because Garth Brooks grew up here. There is a water tower on Main Street that says “Yukon’s Son,” and the street running through town is Garth Brooks Boulevard. That is the kind of civic pride you do not find just anywhere. I am based in Kingfisher, about 30 miles northwest, and I run service calls in Yukon regularly. I know this town and I know what these homes need.

Before Yukon was an Oklahoma City suburb, it was a wheat-shipping town. The Yukon Mill and Grain Company operated here from the 1890s, and “Yukon’s Best” flour was a known brand across the region. Czech and German settlers who came through the 1889 Land Run built Yukon around the Rock Island Railroad and the grain elevator. You can still see the elevator complex on Main Street. That agricultural heritage is why Yukon exists where it does, and why the Czech community here has always been tight-knit enough to run a Czech Festival every October that draws people from across the state.

Yukon, Oklahoma: What I Know About This Town

Yukon has two very different housing stocks, and I work on both. The older side of town has 1970s and 1980s ranch homes where the original builder-grade system has been patched and repaired for decades. A lot of those systems are past the point of another repair. The newer side is one of the fastest-growing suburbs in the OKC metro, and in that new construction, getting the load calculation and the equipment sizing right from day one is what separates a system that runs efficiently for 20 years from one that short cycles and spikes your energy bill every August.

Yukon also has deep roots. Czech settlers came to Canadian County in the late 1800s, and that community is still here. Every October the Czech Festival takes over Main Street, one of the largest parades in Oklahoma. The Chisholm Trail and Route 66 both passed through Yukon, two of the most important corridors in American history running through the same town. That kind of layered history is exactly what you find when you get to know a place instead of just driving through it.

My name is Dave Hartzell. I have a Master HVAC license, I am NATE certified, and I have 45 years of experience in this trade. I serve Yukon, Mustang, Piedmont, and the rural west side of Canadian County. Rural Canadian County is some of the best geothermal territory in central Oklahoma, and I do more geo installs out here than in almost any other area I cover. Call 405-375-4822 for service, a free estimate on a new system, or just to ask a question.

Common HVAC Issues We Fix

  • AC not cooling or weak airflow
  • Short cycling or high energy bills
  • Loud compressor or unusual smells
  • Heat pump stuck in cool mode / no heat in winter
  • Aging system — replacement with flexible financing

📞  Call (405) 375-4822

AC Repair  ·  Heat Pumps  ·  Geothermal  ·  Maintenance Plans


Services in Yukon, Mustang & Canadian County

AC Repair

Same-day service available. $111 diagnostic upfront pricing. All major brands.

Heating Repair

Furnace, heat pump, and geothermal system repair. 24/7 emergency heating service in Canadian County.

HVAC Replacement

Trane TCS SELECT, Carrier, Mitsubishi Diamond Dealer. Free estimates. Financing available.

Geothermal Installation

IGSHPA Accredited. Rural Canadian County is ideal — land for loop fields, CVEC rebates available.

Ductless Mini-Splits

Mitsubishi Diamond Dealer. Shops, barns, additions, and any space without existing ductwork.

Maintenance Plans

$229 tune-up. Dave’s 360 Plan for ongoing service with no dispatch fee on all service calls.


Downtown Yukon Oklahoma — Canadian County city on Historic Route 66
Downtown Yukon — Canadian County city on Historic Route 66, home of Garth Brooks. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0)

Hartzell's Heat & Air service van at job site
Hartzell’s on the road — serving Yukon and surrounding communities for 15+ years.

Why Rural Canadian County Is Great for Geothermal

Rural properties west of Yukon and in the Piedmont and Mustang areas often have the one thing that makes geothermal affordable: land. A horizontal ground loop field on a few acres costs $3,000–$6,000 less to install than a vertical borehole system on a small city lot — same performance, lower upfront cost.

Canadian Valley Electric Cooperative (CVEC) serves much of rural Canadian County, and they offer geothermal rebates for qualifying installations. Combined with the long-term operating cost advantage of geothermal — Oklahoma homeowners typically see 40–60% lower annual energy bills compared to conventional systems — the payback timeline shrinks significantly.

Canadian County geothermal rebate programs:

  • Canadian Valley Electric Cooperative (CVEC): geothermal rebates available — call (405) 382-3680 or visit mycvec.coop to confirm current program amounts
  • OG&E: serves portions of eastern Canadian County; up to $1,000/ton geothermal rebate
  • Oklahoma utility rebates replace expired federal credits — call us to confirm which program applies to your address

Serving Yukon’s Growing Western Edge

The Yukon area has seen significant growth on its western and northern edges — newer subdivisions and acreage developments that are farther from OKC’s core HVAC service market. We’re closer than most OKC-based companies and don’t treat Canadian County calls as an afterthought.

We service all makes and models in the area — Trane, Carrier, Rheem, Goodman, Lennox, American Standard, and whatever the previous owner installed. Brand doesn’t limit our diagnostic ability.

Ready to Schedule?

Call 405-375-4822 or book online. Same-day appointments often available.

About Yukon, Oklahoma

Yukon is one of the fastest-growing suburbs in the OKC metro, sitting at the intersection of I-40 and Czech Hall Road in western Canadian County. It’s OG&E territory — $1,000/ton geothermal rebate, up to $3,000 for HVAC equipment — solid incentives for homeowners replacing systems. Newer Yukon subdivisions east toward OKC tend to have undersized equipment relative to square footage; the older 1970s–80s Yukon housing stock has its own ductwork issues. Suburban lots here usually mean vertical loops for geothermal. I’m about 45 miles northwest on I-40 — the drive is worth it when the rebate is this strong.


Frequently Asked Questions — HVAC in Yukon & Canadian County

Do you serve all of Canadian County or just the rural parts?

We serve all of Canadian County — Yukon, Mustang, Piedmont, El Reno, and rural areas. Call 405-375-4822 and we’ll confirm availability for your specific address.

Is geothermal worth it in the Yukon area?

For properties with land, yes — consistently. Rural Canadian County properties with a half-acre or more can do horizontal loop fields, which are the most cost-effective ground loop type. With CVEC rebates and long-term operating savings, most homeowners see payback in 7–12 years and meaningful savings every year after. Call for a free evaluation.

What rebates are available for geothermal in Canadian County?

Canadian Valley Electric Cooperative (CVEC) offers geothermal rebates for qualifying installations in their territory. OG&E serves the eastern edge of Canadian County with rebates up to $1,000/ton. The specific program that applies depends on your utility provider — we confirm this for you before you commit to any equipment.

How quickly can Hartzell’s get to Yukon for a repair?

We’re 30 miles from Yukon on US-81 and can typically reach Canadian County calls within 1–2 hours. Same-day service is available on most days. Emergency service is 24/7. Call 405-375-4822.

Do you install mini-splits for shops and barns in Canadian County?

Yes. We’re a Mitsubishi Diamond Dealer and install M-Series and P-Series ductless systems for shops, barns, offices, and additions throughout Canadian County. These work well for spaces that need their own zone without connecting to the main system.

What HVAC problems are most common in Yukon Oklahoma homes built in the 1990s and 2000s?

Yukon grew fast in the 1990s and 2000s, and a lot of those subdivision homes share the same problem: the air handler is in the attic. In an Oklahoma summer, the attic gets to 140 degrees or hotter, and the ductwork running through it leaks heat into the house all day long. That means your system runs longer, your bills are higher, and the equipment wears out faster. The fix is sealing the ducts and adding attic insulation above the duct runs, or in some cases moving the air handler to a conditioned space. I see this constantly in Yukon subdivisions. Call 405-375-4822 and I can tell you if your house has this setup.

Does Garth Brooks really have a connection to Yukon, Oklahoma?

Yes, and Yukon is proud of it. Garth Brooks grew up here, graduated from Yukon High School in 1980, and the water tower on Main Street still reads “Yukon’s Son.” Garth Brooks Boulevard runs through town. I have worked in dozens of homes in Yukon and people mention it. It is one of those local facts that gives the community its identity. Has nothing to do with HVAC, but it is worth knowing if you are new here.

Are there heat pump or HVAC rebates in Yukon, Oklahoma?

OG&E serves most of Yukon and offers rebates on qualifying heat pumps and HVAC systems. OG&E pays $1,000 per ton on geothermal and up to $1,500 per HVAC unit. Federal tax credits for HVAC expired December 31, 2025, so utility rebates are the main incentive now. I include rebate paperwork handling with every installation. Call 405-375-4822 and I can tell you exactly what your new system qualifies for before you commit.

How much does a new HVAC system cost in Yukon, Oklahoma?

A new system for a typical Yukon home, a 1990s or 2000s subdivision house of 1,800 to 2,400 square feet, runs $6,000 to $15,000 installed depending on the equipment. Heat pumps are in the middle of that range and usually the right choice for this area. Geothermal runs higher but the OG&E rebate and long-term operating savings bring the effective cost down significantly. I give free estimates on all new installs and I will show you the full cost comparison before you decide. Call 405-375-4822.

Looking for HVAC near me in Yukon, Oklahoma?

Hartzell’s Heat and Air services Yukon and the surrounding Canadian County area. Call 405-375-4822 for AC repair, heat pump installation, and new system estimates. Free estimates on all replacements. 4.8 stars and 271 Google reviews.

HVAC & Geothermal in Yukon & Canadian County

Same-day repair available. Free geothermal evaluations. 24/7 emergency service.

405-375-4822




405-375-4822


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