Family-owned and licensed since 2003. We show up on time, give you a flat-rate quote before we start, and clean up after ourselves. That's it. That's the pitch.
"Called at 9am, they were here by noon. Quoted me $340, charged $340 β no upsell games. Fixed in 2 hours. This is how it's supposed to be done."
Flat-rate pricing on every service. No hidden fees. If we quote it, that's what you pay.
Same-day diagnostic and repair on 97% of calls. We carry common parts so most jobs are done in one visit.
From $149 service callFull installation with a 1-year labor warranty. Free in-home estimate. We'll show you 3 options at 3 price points.
From $1,800 installedTwice-a-year tune-ups starting at $199. Members get priority scheduling and 15% off all repairs.
From $19/moFree, in-home estimates. No service-call fee on quotes.
If we're more than 90 minutes late, the diagnostic is free.
Five-year warranty on labor for any installation we complete.
After-hours and weekends β same fair pricing, no surcharges.
A snapshot of what we do, week to week. Click any to see the full case study.
"They were on time, polite, fast, and the price they quoted was exactly what I paid. Will use again 100%."
"Got 3 quotes β they weren't the cheapest, but they walked me through every option without pressure. Glad I went with them."
"Emergency call on a Sunday night, they arrived in 45 minutes, didn't charge a dime extra. These are the good guys."
If you're inside the dotted line, we'll be there same-day on most calls. Outside the line? Call us anyway β we travel for established customers.
Fill out the form or call. We answer 7am β 9pm, 7 days a week.
Service contractors who run great businesses share four documents in common: a clean estimate template, a clear scope-of-work doc, a change-order form for when the customer wants more, and a job-completion checklist that protects them from "well I thought you were also going to..." disputes. This toolkit bundles all four. Used together, they reduce disputes, speed up payments, and project professionalism that justifies higher pricing.
Trades contractors, home service businesses, light commercial trades, and renovation generalists. Plumbers, electricians, HVAC, roofers, painters, general contractors with crews under 10. If you're running jobs from your phone with no consistent paperwork, this is the upgrade.
1. Estimate template. Pre-job document showing scope, line-item pricing, terms (payment schedule, validity period), and signature block. The estimate is what wins the bid; the scope-of-work is what defines what you actually deliver.
2. Scope-of-work doc. What's IN the job, what's NOT in the job, materials specified, completion criteria, warranty terms. Signed before work starts. The single most important document for preventing disputes.
3. Change-order form. The customer asks for "while you're here, can you also..." This form documents what's being added, the new cost, the timeline impact, and gets initials before the work happens. Without this form you're guessing what gets billed.
4. Job-completion checklist. Walk-through document signed at the end. Items inspected, items pending, customer's acknowledgment of completion. Triggers final invoice.
1. Customer calls with a project. You go look. Use the estimate template to write up the proposal β line items, price, payment terms, valid for 14 days.
2. Customer accepts. Before scheduling, you sign the scope-of-work doc together. This is the moment that the estimate becomes a contract. The customer initials each line item. Now there's zero ambiguity about what's getting done.
3. Mid-job, customer adds work. Stop. Get out the change-order form. Write the addition, get a signature, then do it. Verbal change orders are how subcontractors go broke.
4. Job complete. Walk through with the customer. Check each item on the completion checklist. Note any pending items. Both parties sign. Final invoice goes out same day.
Always specify materials by brand AND model. "Premium paint" is a future fight. "Sherwin-Williams Emerald, semi-gloss, in Pure White (SW 7005)" is a contract.
Bake a 14-day estimate validity into every quote. Materials prices move, and you don't want a customer calling you in June about a quote you wrote in March.
Put change-order pricing in writing BEFORE doing the work β even for $200 adds. "Five-minute job" become "I never agreed to that bill" disputes. The form protects both sides.
Take photos at completion. The completion checklist is paperwork; photos are evidence. Both live in the customer's file.
File these documents in a customer folder, not by job. Repeat customers = next job easier because you can see what was done last time.
The sample is generic. Your version is branded with your company, your license number, your insurance info, your standard terms, your specific trade language, and your payment-processing details. $19 personalization, $179 fully custom at yoursaas.diy. Print or email β yours forever.