Expert Heat Pump Repair Services in Downers Grove, IL
When it comes to maintaining the comfort of your home, a properly functioning heat pump is essential. At Eco Temp HVAC, we offer top-notch heat pump repair services in Downers Grove to ensure your system operates efficiently all year round. Our team of skilled technicians is dedicated to providing reliable and prompt repair services to keep your home comfortable and your energy bills low.
Heat Pump Repair Costs and Local Response
Heat pumps fail hardest exactly when they’re needed most — deep-cold snaps stress defrost systems and compressors simultaneously across the village — and our Downers Grove team at 1001 31st St dispatches locally when it happens. Diagnostics run $89–$150, credited toward the repair; defrost controls, capacitors, and contactors typically land between $150 and $450; fan motors and reversing valves run $400–$1,100; compressor-level work runs $1,500–$3,500+, the point where written replacement math sits next to the repair quote. Same pricing at midnight as at noon.

Frequently Asked Questions About Heat Pump Repair in Downers Grove, IL
Very possibly, in a specific way: a bill spike usually means the electric auxiliary heat is carrying loads the heat pump should be handling itself — from low refrigerant, a failing compressor, a defrost fault, or a thermostat misconfiguration locking the backup strips on. The system still makes heat, so nothing seems "broken," but you're paying resistance-heat prices for heat-pump work. That's a diagnostic call that typically pays for itself within a billing cycle.
The classic culprit is the reversing valve — the component that flips the refrigerant flow between modes — either stuck mechanically or with a failed solenoid. Thermostat and control-board faults can mimic it. It's a proper diagnosis-first repair, because the fixes range from an inexpensive control part to a significant valve replacement.
Metal-on-metal sounds are the system asking you to shut it off: grinding points to failing motor bearings, screeching to a belt or the compressor itself, and running through it converts a repairable problem into a replacement. Clicks at startup and the periodic whoosh of defrost are normal; sustained mechanical noise never is.
Emergency heat bypasses the heat pump and runs your backup heat source alone. Use it when the outdoor unit is genuinely down — encased in ice, making mechanical noise, or dead — as a bridge until repair, not as a cold-weather setting. Running it routinely is the most expensive way to heat a Downers Grove home, which is also how we often find failed heat pumps: on the bill.
Diagnostics run $89–$150, credited toward the work. Defrost controls, capacitors, and contactors typically land between $150 and $450; fan motors and reversing valves between $400 and $1,100; compressor-level repairs run $1,500–$3,500+, always with itemized written pricing before anything is opened.
Weigh the repair against age and runtime: a heat pump works year-round, so a 12-year-old unit has a furnace's 20 years of wear on it. Modest repairs on younger systems are easy yeses; reversing-valve or compressor money on a unit past 10–12 years usually loses to a new system — especially with federal tax credits up to $2,000 and ComEd rebates shaving the replacement side of the ledger. Both numbers, in writing, your call.







