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AI Voice AgentsHVACApril 22, 2026Clint Research Team

AI Voice Agents for HVAC: The 2026 Buyer's Guide

HVAC shops miss 27% of inbound calls and lose $45,000 to $120,000 per year in voicemail dead ends. Here is the vendor-neutral buyer's guide nobody else will give you.

9 min read

Key takeaways

  • HVAC companies miss roughly 27% of inbound calls, translating to $45,000 to $120,000 per year in lost revenue per location
  • 78% of HVAC callers who hit voicemail never leave a message, so a missed call is almost always a lost job
  • Avoca customers report an average 27% booking-rate lift after six months, with one contractor jumping from a 55% to 90% booking rate
Contents
  1. 01Why Every HVAC Shop Needs a 24/7 Voice Layer Now
  2. 02What an HVAC AI Voice Agent Actually Does
  3. 03The Four Types of Vendors on the Market
  4. 04Pricing Reality Check for 2026
  5. 05Integration Checklist (The Actual Buying Criteria)
  6. 06The Build-vs-Buy Trap Developers Will Pitch You
  7. 07Real Contractor Numbers
  8. 08Where AI Voice Agents Still Fail in 2026
  9. 09How Clint Fits Into This Market
  10. 10The Buying Checklist
  11. 11Next Steps
  12. 12Frequently Asked Questions

HVAC contractors miss 27% of inbound calls according to Invoca research, and 78% of the callers who reach voicemail never leave a message. At a $4,500 average furnace replacement with a 20% margin, every missed call is real money on the floor.

The AI voice agent category blew up in 2024 and 2025. ServiceTitan, Avoca, Sameday, Goodcall, Dialzara, and dozens of VAPI-powered resellers are all pitching you. Most of the content ranking in Google is written by the vendors themselves.

This guide is vendor-neutral. Read it, pick what fits, and get back to running calls.

Why Every HVAC Shop Needs a 24/7 Voice Layer Now

Peak season breaks your front desk. Summer heat waves and winter freezes dump weeks of call volume into a 72-hour window. Your CSRs cannot keep up and homeowners will not wait on hold.

ServiceTitan's own blog cites Invoca's finding that a single missed install call is worth $5,000 to $10,000, with emergency calls worth 1.5x to 2x a standard job. The opportunity cost of one dropped summer AC-out call can cover a year of AI voice-agent subscription fees. One HVAC owner pulled his own split and found replacement quotes closing at 41 percent while repair quotes closed at 68 percent, which is the kind of gap voice routing alone can close.

Answer rate correlates directly to revenue. The Home Service Expert (Tommy Mello of A1 Garage Door Service, $220M annual revenue per the company's own public numbers) has said publicly that the fastest path to growth for a home service shop is picking up every call and booking every bookable job. Answer rate and cost per booked job sit near the top of our HVAC KPIs every owner should track list.

After-hours coverage is the easiest win. If your team clocks out at 5 PM, an AI voice agent is the difference between a booked Tuesday morning slot and a customer calling your competitor at 5:02. One HVAC owner ran profit at the job-type level and stopped selling tune-ups on cold-lead sources once he saw 43 percent of them were losing money after tech time.

What an HVAC AI Voice Agent Actually Does

Most platforms sit on top of GPT-4 or Claude with a speech-to-text layer (Deepgram or Whisper) and a voice synthesis layer (ElevenLabs or Cartesia). The agent answers, qualifies, books, and hands off. This is the voice slice of the broader AI agents for HVAC contractors stack, and the same build-vs-buy math applies as in AI receptionist build vs buy.

Core capabilities you should expect in 2026:

  • Answering inbound calls with under 1-second latency
  • Gathering name, address, unit type, and problem description
  • Detecting emergencies (no heat, no cool, gas smell, water leak) and routing to on-call
  • Booking directly into ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, Jobber, or Workiz
  • Sending confirmation SMS to the caller
  • Logging a call summary to the CRM

My Plumber Plus, a $129M plumbing and HVAC company with 356 employees, deployed Avoca for overflow calls and saw a 17% higher booking rate on AI-handled calls versus their previous third-party overflow vendor. The company has run over 1,000 calls through the system since launch per Avoca's customer page.

The Four Types of Vendors on the Market

Type 1: CRM-native voice agents. ServiceTitan's AI Voice Agent (inside Contact Center Pro) is the example. Deep CRM integration, dispatch board awareness, customer recognition on inbound. The downside is you have to be on ServiceTitan, and pricing is opaque and enterprise-flavored. If Jobber is your CRM, the same tradeoff appears in our breakdown of questions Jobber's dashboard cannot answer.

Type 2: Vertical-specific AI platforms. Avoca, Sameday, Dialzara, ServiceAgent.ai. Built for trades, integrations with the major field-service CRMs, flat-rate or per-minute pricing. Avoca has published a 27% average booking-rate improvement after six months with 45% payroll savings and 12% CSAT lift.

Type 3: Generic AI receptionists. Goodcall, Smith.ai, Rosie, Allo. Cross-industry plays. Cheaper sticker price ($49 to $349/month) but shallower integrations, and trades-specific use cases (emergency routing, after-hours dispatch escalation) are not their strong suit.

Type 4: Developer platforms. VAPI vs Retell vs pre-built. You pay $0.07 to $0.33 per minute and build the agent yourself (or hire an agency to build it for you). Not a finished product.

Pricing Reality Check for 2026

Every vendor prices differently. Here is what you should actually expect to pay.

VendorPricingNotes
Sameday$449/mo Launch (500 min), $789/mo Scale (1,000 min)Flat rate, no per-minute overages at normal volume. Pricing
AvocaPer-minute, undisclosed publiclyExpect $300 to $2,000+/month depending on volume
Goodcall$59 to $199/moStarter caps at 100 unique callers/mo, $0.50 per additional caller
RosieFrom $49/moBudget option, limited trades integrations
VAPI$0.05/min baseTrue delivered cost $0.23 to $0.33/min after full stack fees
Retell$0.07/min + $2/mo per numberSimpler than VAPI, still build-your-own

A 5,000-minute month (roughly 500 to 800 calls) will cost you $350 on Retell, $449 on Sameday Launch with overage, $1,150 to $1,650 on VAPI depending on stack choices, and whatever Avoca quotes you.

Integration Checklist (The Actual Buying Criteria)

Your CRM integration is the whole ballgame. If the AI books a job but does not land it on your dispatch board with the right customer record, you are worse off than before because your CSRs will double-book.

Confirm the vendor has a direct integration (not a Zapier kludge) with your stack:

  • ServiceTitan. Avoca, Sameday, ServiceTitan's own voice agent.
  • Housecall Pro. Most trades-focused vendors.
  • Jobber. Jobber now has a native AI receptionist in beta, Sameday integrates.
  • Workiz. Narrower list. Confirm before you sign.
  • GoHighLevel. Most generic vendors integrate here.

If you run Gmail for dispatch, Google Calendar for booking, Slack for on-call handoff, and QuickBooks for invoicing, you need the voice agent to write to all of those too. This is where most point solutions fall apart.

The Build-vs-Buy Trap Developers Will Pitch You

You will get cold-called by a dev shop selling a "custom AI receptionist on VAPI" for $5,000 to $15,000 upfront plus $0.15/minute. This is a bad deal for 95% of contractors.

The math does not work at HVAC call volumes. At 3,000 minutes/month, VAPI's true delivered cost is $690 to $990/month for infrastructure alone, before the dev shop's retainer. You are paying twice for something Avoca or Sameday has pre-built and tested across hundreds of trades shops.

The only contractors who should build on VAPI or Retell are the ones with 100+ locations and a real product team. Everyone else should buy off the shelf.

Real Contractor Numbers

Avoca published that one contractor switching from a legacy answering service hit a booking rate jump from 55% to 90%. Context per Avoca's case studies: the previous service was a human-staffed overflow desk. The AI was better at qualifying and booking because it never got tired and followed the script.

One Avoca customer in the HVAC and plumbing vertical reported 43 bookings in one-third of a month after switching from live answering, per vendor-published customer stories. Their dispatch board filled up fast enough that they had to hire more techs.

Front Range Momentum, a marketing consultancy working with HVAC contractors, frames it directly:

"For most contractors, missed call text-back pays for the entire system in the first month, usually in the first recovered call."

  • Front Range Momentum, HVAC marketing consultancy

The same applies to full voice-agent deployments at a slightly longer payback window.

Where AI Voice Agents Still Fail in 2026

Complex diagnostic calls are hard. If the homeowner is explaining a weird intermittent issue that your senior tech would diagnose by ear, the AI will book a diagnostic call but it will not help the tech show up prepared.

Upsells require human judgment. A good CSR turning a repair call into a maintenance plan is still worth their weight in gold. Most AI agents will not push that conversation well.

Regional accents and noisy backgrounds trip up the transcription layer. If you serve rural Louisiana or a Boston suburb with heavy accents, test the agent with real recorded calls before committing.

TCPA compliance matters. The FCC ruled in February 2024 that AI-generated voices are "artificial" under TCPA, which means outbound calls from your AI agent require prior express written consent or you face $500 to $1,500 per violation. Inbound answering is fine. Outbound proactive campaigns need a consent layer. The full legal picture lives in TCPA compliance for AI voice and SMS.

How Clint Fits Into This Market

Clint is built for $1M to $10M home service contractors. It plugs into the tools you already run (Jobber, Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan, Workiz, GoHighLevel, Gmail, Google Calendar, Slack, QuickBooks, HubSpot) and ships pre-built AI agents for missed-call follow-up, lead qualification, quote follow-up, company-trained chat, and a morning brief.

OpenAI and Claude are developer toolkits. VAPI and Retell are per-minute primitives. Avoca and Sameday handle voice but leave the rest of your workflow (email, quote follow-up, morning brief) untouched.

Clint is the end-to-end AI layer on top of your existing stack. If you are evaluating voice agents but also want quote follow-up, chat-on-your-data, and a daily brief, it is worth a look.

The Buying Checklist

Run every vendor through this list before signing:

  1. Does it integrate natively with your CRM (not via Zapier)?
  2. Can it detect and route HVAC emergencies to your on-call tech?
  3. Is pricing flat-rate or capped, or per-minute with real exposure at peak season?
  4. Will it write call summaries and customer data back to the CRM?
  5. Does it handle booking directly into your dispatch board?
  6. Is TCPA-compliant consent captured on any outbound use?
  7. Can you listen to real recorded calls before you commit?

If the vendor cannot answer all seven in the demo, walk away.

Next Steps

Pick three vendors. Run each through a two-week pilot with a forwarded number handling overflow only. Measure booking rate, caller satisfaction, and CRM data quality against your CSR baseline.

The contractors winning in 2026 are not the ones with the fanciest AI. They are the ones who never miss a bookable call.

Frequently Asked Questions

6 questions home service owners actually ask about this.

  • 01How much does an AI voice agent for HVAC cost?

    Pricing spans $49/month on Rosie up to $789/month for Sameday's Scale plan with 1,000 minutes. VAPI and Retell run per-minute primitives; a 5,000-minute month costs roughly $350 on Retell, $449 on Sameday Launch, or $1,150 to $1,650 on VAPI depending on stack choices. One missed summer AC-out call worth $5,000 to $10,000 covers a year of subscription.

  • 02Is an AI voice agent worth it for a small HVAC shop?

    Yes. HVAC contractors miss 27% of inbound calls per Invoca, costing $45,000 to $120,000 per year per location, and 78% of voicemail callers never leave a message. Avoca customers report a 27% booking-rate lift after six months, with one contractor jumping from 55% to 90%.

  • 03Does ServiceTitan have a built-in AI voice agent?

    Yes. ServiceTitan's AI Voice Agent sits inside Contact Center Pro with deep CRM integration, dispatch board awareness, and customer recognition on inbound. Pricing is opaque and enterprise-flavored. Superior Plumbing booked 500+ jobs in 30 days, 23% of their total monthly jobs, without adding a CSR.

  • 04What is the difference between Avoca, Sameday, and Goodcall?

    Avoca and Sameday are trades-specific with deep FSM integrations (ServiceTitan, Jobber, HCP, Workiz). Goodcall is a generic AI receptionist with cross-industry focus at a lower sticker price ($59 to $199/month). For trades-specific routing (emergency detection, dispatch escalation), Avoca and Sameday are the closer fit.

  • 05Should I build my own AI voice agent on VAPI?

    Only if you run 100+ locations with a real product team. At 3,000 minutes/month, VAPI's true delivered cost lands at $690 to $990/month for infrastructure alone, before a dev shop's retainer. You are paying twice for something Avoca or Sameday has pre-built and tested across hundreds of trade shops.

  • 06Does TCPA apply to AI voice agents?

    Yes for outbound. The FCC ruled in February 2024 that AI-generated voices are "artificial" under TCPA, which means outbound calls require prior express written consent or you face $500 to $1,500 per violation. Inbound answering is fine. Full legal picture lives in TCPA compliance for AI voice and SMS.

See Clint in action

Clint is the pre-built AI for home service shops. Connect your CRM, email, and phone system in minutes and the agents run on your real data.