Indianapolis, IN — Parts by Manufacturer
HVAC Parts by Brand
Request HVAC replacement parts in Indianapolis for Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Goodman, Rheem, York, Daikin, and American Standard equipment. Each brand page covers OEM and compatible parts and used and surplus options — reviewed by model number, part number, and condition before any pricing or availability is assumed.
Brand name is only the starting point. The equipment model number, serial number, and part label from the failed component are what allow a request to be matched accurately.
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Submit the brand, model number, part details, and ZIP code for review.
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About This Page
HVAC Parts Requests by Manufacturer in Indianapolis, IN
This page routes a parts request to the correct manufacturer page. Indianapolis, IN homeowners, contractors, and property managers can find Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Goodman, Rheem, York, Daikin, and American Standard parts pages below.
Each brand page is built around a single purpose: helping you describe a replacement part clearly enough that it can be matched to your equipment. The equipment model number, serial number, and the part number or label on the failed component matter more than the brand name alone. Two systems from the same manufacturer can use entirely different components depending on model family, production year, and revision.
These brand pages are not manufacturer or dealer pages. They don't cover product lineups, warranty status, or authorized-dealer claims. Submit a parts request to get current availability and compatibility review before assuming pricing, stock, or delivery timing.
Most visitors arrive here with a specific failure in hand: a furnace that won't ignite, a condenser that trips on startup, a control board with a burned connector, or a blower motor that's gone quiet. Commercial and rooftop equipment requests follow the same logic, with voltage, phase, and tonnage added to the identifying details. If the equipment doesn't carry one of the listed brands, the HVAC parts page and the used and surplus parts page cover unlisted manufacturers using the same model-and-serial approach.
Find Your Manufacturer
Select a Brand to Request Parts
Each brand page covers OEM, compatible, used, and surplus parts requests, including model-number and part-number matching for Indianapolis requests.
- 8 manufacturer parts pages
- OEM, compatible, and surplus parts requests
- Availability reviewed by model and part number

Carrier
The inventor of modern air conditioning. Carrier leads in residential and commercial split systems, rooftop units, and VRF technology.

Trane
Built for reliability in demanding climates. Trane supplies premium residential systems and commercial packaged units across North America.

Lennox
Energy-efficient residential HVAC engineered for quiet, precise comfort. Lennox SunSource and XC series are among the highest SEER-rated systems available.

Rheem
A full-line manufacturer covering residential and commercial heating and cooling, with strong availability of OEM parts nationwide.

York
One of the oldest commercial HVAC brands in the U.S. York (Johnson Controls) dominates the commercial rooftop unit market.

Goodman
The value leader in North American HVAC. Goodman provides dependable residential equipment at contractor-friendly price points.

Daikin
The world's largest HVAC manufacturer. Daikin specializes in ductless mini-split and VRF systems for zoned residential and commercial applications.

American Standard
American Standard HVAC — built on the same platform as Trane — offers dependable Gold, Silver, and Platinum series residential systems.
Parts Sourcing Paths
OEM, Compatible, or Used and Surplus
A parts request can move in three different directions depending on urgency, budget, and how critical the component is. None of these paths is automatically the right answer — the equipment, the failure, and the timeline decide.
An OEM part is manufactured or approved directly by the equipment brand and matched to the exact model and revision. This is usually the safer default for control boards, gas valves, compressors, and any component tied closely to a system's safety or refrigerant circuit, where a near-match substitute can create more problems than it solves. OEM availability and lead time vary by brand and part age — older or discontinued models sometimes have longer waits than the repair can tolerate.
A compatible part is built to the same specifications and fits the same application without being the original manufacturer part. Capacitors, contactors, common motor types, and several other components have well-established compatible alternatives that perform the same as OEM when the ratings — voltage, microfarad, horsepower, rotation — are matched correctly. Compatible parts are often faster to source and lower cost, but the matching still has to be done by specification, not by appearance. For a full overview of what to check before buying, the HVAC part numbers guide covers model number, serial number, and label matching for all major brands.
Used and surplus parts are pulled from existing systems or sourced as unused overstock, and they can be a reasonable option when the system is older, the repair is urgent, or an OEM part is backordered at a price that doesn't make sense for the remaining life of the equipment. Condition and documentation matter more with this path — a used part should come with a clear photo, a stated source, and, where possible, some indication of testing before it's treated as a like-for-like replacement. The used HVAC parts page covers this request path in more detail.
None of these three paths is reviewed automatically. A request that specifies "OEM only" or "open to used or surplus" gets matched faster because it narrows the search to options that are actually acceptable for that repair.
Before You Submit a Request
What Helps a Parts Request Get Matched Correctly
Brand name alone is rarely enough to identify a replacement part. Two systems from the same manufacturer can use different motors, boards, coils, capacitors, and compressors depending on model, production year, and revision. The equipment model number and serial number — usually on a data plate inside the unit or furnace cabinet — narrow that down.
The failed part itself often has its own label or stamped number, separate from the equipment model. Sending a clear photo of that label, along with the equipment data plate, gives the most accurate basis for a compatibility check before any part is sourced or priced.
When the exact part number isn't available, the equipment model, serial number, and a description of the failure are still useful starting points. Each brand page below outlines what details are most useful for that specific manufacturer.
Commercial and rooftop equipment adds a few details that residential requests usually don't need: voltage, phase, and tonnage. A 3-ton single-phase package unit and a 5-ton three-phase unit from the same brand can share a model prefix while requiring completely different electrical components, so confirming these specs up front avoids a second round of questions before sourcing can start.
The most common compatibility mistake isn't a missing part number — it's assuming a part is interchangeable because it looks the same or came off a similar-looking unit. Capacitors with the wrong microfarad rating, motors with the wrong rotation direction, or boards built for a different control sequence can fit physically and still fail once installed. Matching by rated specification rather than appearance is what a compatibility check is actually verifying.