
Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Fairview, NC
The 'Emergency Heat' setting on your thermostat has a specific purpose — and most WNC homeowners use it at the wrong time. Here is what you need to know. Proudly serving Fairview & Buncombe County.
Professional Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Fairview, NC
When you need heat pump emergency heat — when to use it in Fairview, NC, Quality Mechanical & Fireplaces is just 15 minutes east from our Asheville headquarters — meaning fast response times and reliable service. We've been the NATE-certified team that Fairview area residents trust since 2005.
Just east of Asheville along Charlotte Highway, Fairview's rural mountain community is well within Quality Mechanical's primary service area. We provide full HVAC services to Fairview residents, from emergency heating repair to new system installations, with the fast response times that come from being only 15 minutes away.
Heating in Fairview comes with unique demands. At 2,375 feet elevation, winters are moderate but still require a reliable heating system. Fairview's rural character means many homes sit on large, wooded lots with longer driveway access — requiring planning for HVAC equipment delivery and replacement. The Cane Creek valley's agricultural setting produces exceptionally high pollen counts in spring and fall that can clog standard air filters in under two weeks. Many Fairview homes use well water and septic systems, and HVAC condensate drainage must be planned carefully to avoid septic interference. Our heating technicians factor in these Fairview-specific conditions for every repair and installation.
Emergency Heat Explained
Nearly every heat pump thermostat includes an "Emergency Heat" or "Em Heat" toggle, yet the majority of homeowners across Asheville and Western North Carolina are unsure what it does or when they should engage it. In short, emergency heat takes the heat pump completely out of the equation and runs your backup heating source alone — usually electric resistance strips inside the air handler. Because these backup strips consume far more electricity than the heat pump, the setting carries the "emergency" label — it exists strictly for situations in which the heat pump itself cannot operate.
When Emergency Heat Is Appropriate
Flip to emergency heat only when the heat pump has physically broken down and is unable to run — a damaged outdoor unit, a failed compressor, or a unit locked in solid ice that the defrost cycle cannot clear. The backup strips will keep your home warm while you arrange for repair. Do not engage emergency heat simply because outside temperatures are low. Today's heat pumps, particularly cold climate models, are engineered to produce efficient heat well below freezing. Using emergency heat while the heat pump is still functional burns through electricity at an alarming rate.
What Emergency Heat Costs You
Electric resistance strips consume roughly three times as much electricity as a heat pump to produce the same amount of warmth. A heat pump with a COP (coefficient of performance) of 3.0 generates three units of heat per unit of electricity; emergency heat strips have a COP of 1.0 — a straight one-to-one conversion. Even a few days on emergency heat during a WNC winter can inflate your electric bill by $100 to $300. This is precisely why getting a prompt heat pump repair matters so much.
Contact Quality Mechanical Promptly
If you have been forced onto emergency heat because the heat pump is down, call Quality Mechanical & Fireplaces without delay. We provide emergency heat pump repair throughout Western North Carolina. Every day the heat pump sits idle while backup strips run is money leaving your wallet — the faster we restore normal operation, the faster your energy costs stabilize.
HVAC Challenges in Fairview
Fairview's rural character means many homes sit on large, wooded lots with longer driveway access — requiring planning for HVAC equipment delivery and replacement. The Cane Creek valley's agricultural setting produces exceptionally high pollen counts in spring and fall that can clog standard air filters in under two weeks. Many Fairview homes use well water and septic systems, and HVAC condensate drainage must be planned carefully to avoid septic interference.
Seasonal Tip for Fairview Homeowners
Fairview's high pollen counts — among the worst in Buncombe County due to the mix of farmland and forest — demand more frequent filter changes. During peak pollen season (April–May and September–October), switch to MERV 11 or higher filters and change them every 2–3 weeks instead of monthly.

Serving Fairview & Buncombe County

Serving Fairview
- 15 minutes east from our Asheville office
- Same-day appointments available
- 24/7 emergency response
- NATE-certified technicians
- Free estimates on installations
- Financing available, subject to credit approval
Neighborhoods We Serve
Fairview Crossroads · Cane Creek Valley · Garren Creek · Charlotte Highway corridor · Reed Creek
Need help now?
(828) 252-8544FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions About Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Fairview
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Need Heat Pump Emergency Heat — When to Use It in Fairview?
Quality Mechanical is 15 minutes east away. Call today for fast, professional service.




