Keizer’s been good to us. For a couple of decades now our trucks have been pulling up on streets in Claggett Creek, along River Road, and past Keizer Station — replacing furnaces, adding AC, keeping systems running for families we’ve gotten to know over time. A lot of the homes we work on today are ones where we put in the original furnace fifteen years ago. Now those kids have grown up, and we’re helping them pick a system for their first house a few blocks over.
If something isn’t right with your Keizer home’s heating or cooling — or you’re just ready to stop worrying about it — call or text. (503) 581-6999. We’re about 10 minutes away and usually close enough to get someone out this week.
What Keizer Homes Usually Look Like
Most of Keizer went up between the 1980s and early 2000s — suburban tract builds with gas forced-air furnaces, ductwork that’s usually in pretty good shape, and attached garages — the kind of layout where the system can actually do its job well once it’s sized right. Our trucks are usually pulling up on streets like Claggett Creek, River Road, Chemawa area, Keizer Station, and the climate here is typical Willamette Valley, though you’re closer to the ag fields than downtown Salem so the summer sky feels a little wider.
For most homeowners here, that’s a helpful starting point. The conversation isn’t usually about overhauling the bones of the house. It’s about choosing the right new system for the one you already have.
What We Usually Work On Out Here
With gas service and decent ductwork as the starting point, most of these conversations land on one of three paths. A high-efficiency gas furnace paired with a standard AC is the familiar choice and still a good one. A cold-climate heat pump handles both heating and cooling from one system, meets Oregon’s current energy code, and qualifies for the strongest stack of rebates and tax credits right now. A dual-fuel setup splits the difference — heat pump efficiency most of the year, gas furnace reliability on the coldest nights. We’ll talk through which one actually fits your specific home.
Everything we do — repairs, replacements, annual tune-ups, indoor air quality add-ons, new-construction work — is available in Keizer the same as it is in Salem. One difference: permits route through Marion County. We handle that coordination, so it doesn’t slow your project down.
How the Conversation Usually Goes
Most Keizer homeowners start with a free estimate — we come to the house, look at the system, ask a few questions, and give you a written quote with the actual equipment, labor, permits, and anything else that needs doing. Nothing hidden. No same-afternoon decision required.
If the work makes sense, scheduling is usually a week or two depending on the season. Install day runs one to three days. We pull the permit, protect your floors, haul away the old equipment, and commission the new system before we leave — meaning we actually test it, measure airflow, set up the thermostat, and walk you through how everything works. Inspection from Marion County comes a week or two later.
After that we’re still here. Warranty service, maintenance, the occasional question that comes up in year six or seven — that’s what we do.
A Few Things Worth Reading
These are the Resources articles Keizer homeowners come back to most often:
- When It’s Time to Replace Your Furnace
- Should You Get a Heat Pump or a Furnace?
- Why Homeowners Are Switching to Heat Pumps
- Why a High-Efficiency Furnace Is Worth It
- Why Changing Your HVAC Filter on Schedule Matters
Ready to Talk to Stan?
Call or text when you’re ready. We’re ten minutes away and our trucks are already running through town most days.
Call or text: (503) 581-6999
Email: chssatt@gmail.com
Service area: Salem, Keizer, Dallas, Monmouth, Independence, Silverton, Stayton, Aumsville, Sublimity, Albany, Woodburn, Scio, and surrounding Mid-Willamette Valley communities.
Licensed & insured: CCB# 147550
We’ve been doing this since 2001 from one Salem address. Same phone, same family, same people answering when you call.