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Georgia's humid subtropical climate sustains a four-season HVAC market — hot, humid summers require consistent cooling capacity, and winters are cold enough to keep heating service calls steady from November through March. Atlanta is the anchor market, with rapid suburban growth in Alpharetta, Cumming, Woodstock, and Peachtree City driving residential installation work alongside the retrofit and replacement demand that fills service departments. Savannah and Augusta each add regional commercial markets, and the state's expanding logistics and industrial sector generates consistent demand for refrigeration and industrial HVAC technicians.
Georgia issues HVAC licenses through the Secretary of State's office under the Conditioned Air Contractor category. Class I and Class II licenses cover different system sizes, with Class I required for systems over 25 tons. Atlanta employers frequently list NATE certification as a requirement for senior service roles. Wages in Georgia HVAC have tracked upward as population growth outpaces the technician supply, particularly in the northern suburbs where new construction volume is highest.