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Commercial HVAC Technician Salary by Role & Region (2026)

The 2026 commercial HVAC salary benchmark — by role, region, and credential — and how the firms that staff well actually hire in a tight market.

Commercial HVAC technician compensation in 2026 has climbed for the fifth year in a row, and the credentialed end of the pay scale is climbing fastest. This guide breaks down what each role actually earns nationally and in major markets, what credentials drive the premiums, and how the firms that staff well actually hire in a labor market where most qualified techs are not applying to anything.

HVAC technician salary by role (2026 national ranges)

Commercial HVAC compensation differs sharply by role. The ranges below reflect 2026 commercial-side base pay before bonuses, overtime, and on-call premiums.

Commercial HVAC compressor units arrayed on a service deck
  • HVAC service technician (entry to mid): $48,000–$72,000 base, climbing with EPA 608 Universal + 2–5 years of commercial experience.
  • HVAC service technician (senior, NATE certified): $72,000–$95,000 base, with 8–12% wage premium attributable to NATE.
  • HVAC install technician (commercial): $52,000–$80,000 base depending on rooftop / chiller / VRF experience.
  • HVAC controls technician (BAS / Tridium / Niagara): $75,000–$110,000 base — one of the most under-supplied skill sets in 2026.
  • HVAC service manager: $85,000–$120,000 base plus performance bonus.
  • HVAC project manager (commercial): $90,000–$140,000 base; senior PMs in major metros exceed $150,000.
  • HVAC sales engineer / outside sales: $80,000 base + commission, $130,000–$220,000 OTE.

Why HVAC wages have climbed 5–7% per year

Around 52% of the current commercial HVAC workforce is over 45. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects roughly 41,000 new HVAC technician openings each year through 2032 — most from retirement — and apprenticeship pipelines are filling slower than the retirement curve. The result is sustained wage pressure: 5–7% annual increases across the trade, with controls and senior service running hotter.

What credentials drive the salary premium

  • EPA 608 Universal — required by federal law to handle refrigerants. Table stakes for any commercial work.
  • NATE certification — voluntary, harder to earn, and the most reliable signal of field competence. Typically commands an 8–12% wage premium.
  • Controls platform experience — Honeywell, JCI Metasys, Siemens, Tridium Niagara. A senior tech who knows your platform can run a service truck productively on day one.
  • PE license for design or engineering roles — adds 15–20% to base. Rare and slow to produce.
If your job description is not filtering on these, you will spend interview cycles screening for things you could have screened for in 60 seconds.

How to hire HVAC technicians in a tight market

About 90% of qualified HVAC technicians are not actively applying to job postings — they are already employed somewhere. Reaching them takes the work most internal hiring teams cannot sustain alongside running the business: phone, direct LinkedIn outreach, referrals from other techs, sustained relationship-building over months. Posting and waiting catches the 10% of candidates who are actively looking; pipeline building reaches everyone else.

Compete on more than the hourly wage

Wages are climbing but rarely the only reason an experienced tech changes jobs. The questions worth answering before you make an offer:

  • Truck quality, tool program, and uniform — service techs spend their day in a vehicle.
  • Schedule — straight days vs. on-call rotations matter more than most contractors think.
  • Career path — where does a great service tech go in three years? Lead, service manager, or PM?
  • Continuing education — paid time and tuition for NATE upgrades, controls training, EPA renewals.

None of these are cheap. None of them cost what 90 days of an empty service truck costs.

Frequently asked questions

How long does it usually take to hire a commercial HVAC technician?

For service technicians, 30–60 days from kickoff is realistic when you have an active pipeline. Senior project managers run 90+ days because the pool is small and the people in it are almost always already employed.

What is the difference between EPA 608 and NATE certification?

EPA 608 is required by federal law to purchase or handle refrigerants and is table stakes for commercial work. NATE is voluntary, harder to earn, and the most reliable signal of field competence on installs and service. NATE certification typically commands an 8–12% wage premium.

Why is the HVAC technician shortage getting worse?

Around 52% of the current commercial HVAC workforce is over 45, and the trade is not replacing them fast enough. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 41,000 new HVAC technician openings each year through 2032, most from retirement.

How do you reach HVAC technicians who are not actively applying?

About 90% of qualified HVAC techs are not applying to job postings — they are already employed somewhere. Reaching them takes direct outreach: phone, LinkedIn, referrals from other techs, and sustained relationship-building over months. That is the work most internal hiring teams cannot sustain.

About the author

Michael Carter

President of Talent Solutions

Michael has spent more than a decade building outbound talent pipelines for commercial trades contractors. He leads recruiting for Talent Solutions, with a focus on hiring strategies that scale beyond the next vacancy.

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