HVAC Service Near Me in Garber, Oklahoma | Hartzell’s Heat & Air
Hartzell’s Heat & Air provides heating, cooling, and geothermal service to Garber and Garfield County. Locally owned, 15+ years. NATE Certified. Upfront pricing on every call.
Serving Garber, OK · NATE Certified · Same-Day Available · 405-375-4822
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
AC Repair · Heat Pumps · Geothermal · Maintenance Plans
HVAC Services in Garber
AC Repair
Same-day AC repair in Garber. All major brands. Upfront pricing before any work begins. $111 diagnostic credited toward repair.
Heating Repair
Furnace and heat pump repair for Garber homes. 24/7 emergency service. NATE Certified technicians on every call.
System Replacement
Full HVAC replacement in Garber starting with a Manual J load calculation — equipment sized right for your home, not the last one we replaced.
🌐 Geothermal
Garber area has good well water for open-loop geothermal — an often-overlooked option for wells with sufficient yield. IGSHPA Accredited installer. Ask about utility rebates for Garfield County.
Maintenance
$229 tune-up covers all safety checks, refrigerant, electrical, and filter inspection. Dave’s 360 Plan includes two tune-ups per year.
Emergency HVAC
Heating or cooling failure in Garber? We answer 24/7 including weekends and holidays. Call 405-375-4822.
Garber, Oklahoma: Cherokee Outlet Land and Oil at 27,000 Barrels a Day
Martin Garber claimed 160 acres in the September 16, 1893 Cherokee Outlet land run, the largest land run in American history. The town that grew up around his claim was named for him. He was not a railroad official or a politician. He was a man who ran and claimed his piece of the six million acres that opened that day.
Oil drilling started in Garber around 1904 and 1905, just after Oklahoma statehood. In November 1925, a well in Section 18 of the Garber field came in at 27,000 barrels per day initial production. That is a number that would be significant anywhere in the world’s oil history. Garber was producing serious oil at a time when the industry was defining the Oklahoma economy. The land that wheat farmers settled in 1893 turned out to have something more valuable underneath it.
The homes in Garber and the surrounding Garfield County area reflect that farming and oil history. Some older construction from the early 20th century boom years, working farms, and the same equipment challenges that come with rural Oklahoma housing stock. I service this part of Garfield County. Call 405-375-4822.
Utility Rebates in Garber
OG&E (Oklahoma Gas & Electric) territory: $1,000/ton geothermal rebate. Hartzell’s helps process your utility rebate paperwork as part of every installation — we provide the AHRI certificate, contractor license, and IGSHPA credentials your utility requires. See all Oklahoma rebates ›
Why Garber Homeowners Choose Hartzell’s
- Upfront pricing — you know the cost before we start, every time
- NATE Certified technicians — nationally certified, not just trained in-house
- Manual J sizing on replacements — we calculate the load, we don’t guess
- IGSHPA Accredited geothermal installer — one of very few in Oklahoma
- Trane TCS SELECT & Mitsubishi Diamond Dealer — premium brands installed right
- Serving Garfield County for 15+ years — we’re not a franchise, we’re your neighbors
Frequently Asked Questions
Common HVAC Questions › · Current Specials › · Equipment Warranties › · See Pricing ›
Garber, Oklahoma: Oil Country HVAC With a Unique Geothermal Advantage
Garber is oil country — northeast Garfield County, about 45 miles from my shop in Kingfisher, with a housing stock that reflects its oil-boom history: lots of 1950s and 1960s construction, thick walls, and systems that have been patched and coaxed along for years. I enjoy working in Garber because these older homes reward proper engineering — the wall and ceiling assemblies are often better than what’s built today, and a correctly sized system installed in a tight 1960s ranch outperforms the same equipment in a sloppy new build. The challenge is finding a contractor willing to take the time to figure that out instead of just sizing by square footage.
Garber has something not many communities can offer: the area’s well water quality and yield can support open-loop geothermal systems, which use groundwater directly as the heat exchange medium instead of a closed buried loop. Open-loop systems cost significantly less to install than closed loops in the right conditions, and Garber’s aquifer access can make that option viable for qualifying properties. OG&E’s $1,000/ton geothermal rebate applies to qualifying systems in Garfield County, and we verify eligibility and handle the paperwork. If you’ve got a decent well on your property, it’s absolutely worth a conversation. Call 405-375-4822.
More Questions About HVAC Service in Garber
What is an open-loop geothermal system and does it work in Garber?
An open-loop geothermal system uses groundwater from a well as the heat exchange fluid instead of a buried closed loop. The water is pumped through the heat pump and returned to the aquifer via a discharge well or surface discharge. Open-loop systems cost significantly less to install than closed-loop systems — sometimes 30–50% less — and Garber’s groundwater access can make this viable. We assess your well yield and water quality as part of the geothermal site evaluation. Call 405-375-4822 for a free assessment.
What is the OG&E geothermal rebate for Garber homeowners?
OG&E (Oklahoma Gas & Electric) offers $1,000 per ton on qualifying geothermal heat pump installations in Garfield County. On a typical 3-ton system that is $3,000 back at installation. We provide all required documentation, including the AHRI certificate, IGSHPA credentials, and contractor license, and submit the rebate paperwork on your behalf. Call 405-375-4822 to confirm your address qualifies.
How do you handle HVAC service in older Garber homes with original ductwork?
We start with a duct inspection — measuring static pressure, looking for collapsed flex sections, checking trunk sizing and return-air balance. In older Garber homes we frequently find duct leakage rates of 25–35%, meaning a quarter to a third of your conditioned air is going into the attic or crawlspace. Sealing and balancing the existing duct system before equipment replacement can sometimes deliver as much comfort improvement as the new equipment itself — and at a fraction of the cost. We’ll give you a full picture of your options before recommending anything.
Looking for HVAC near me in Garber?
When you search for HVAC near me in Garber, Oklahoma, Hartzell’s Heat & Air comes up because we actually serve Garber. Not a national call center. Dave Hartzell has 45 years of HVAC experience and runs a local crew out of Kingfisher. We cover all of Garfield County with same-day AC repair, heating service, tune-ups, and full system replacements. 4.8 stars from 271 reviews. Call 405-375-4822 or book online.
About Garber, Oklahoma
Garber is a small Garfield County community northeast of Enid — oil field history, wheat farming, and the kind of rural properties where equipment gets pushed past its useful life because nobody qualified wants to make the drive. I do make the drive. Garber is OG&E territory: $1,000/ton geothermal rebate. Properties in this area tend to have enough acreage for horizontal loop geothermal. Same upfront pricing, same $111 diagnostic credited toward repair — call 405-375-4822.
Our HVAC Services
Schedule Service in Garber
Same-day service available. Upfront pricing. NATE Certified technicians.
Garber is part of Hartzell’s Garfield County service area. We serve all communities across Garfield County with NATE-certified technicians and the same upfront pricing as our Kingfisher home base. See all Garfield County communities we serve →

