Federal courthouse representing the 2026 HVAC price-fixing class action lawsuit
    Series Hub - Federal Class Action Coverage

    HVAC Price-FixingClass Action LawsuitThe Complete 2026 Investigation

    Updated April 202612 min read2 federal cases - 7 defendants
    Mark Cantrell, founder of Upward Bound Media

    Mark Cantrell

    15-year HVAC veteran - Editorial coverage, not legal advice

    Quick Answer

    In 2026 two federal class action lawsuits were filed accusing the seven dominant U.S. HVAC manufacturers (Carrier, Trane, Daikin, Bosch, Lennox, Rheem, and AAON) of conspiring to fix equipment prices since January 2020. Berg v. Robert Bosch LLC represents homeowners and end users. Isom v. Trane Technologies (Case 2:26-cv-11294, E.D. Mich.) represents HVAC contractors, distributors, and wholesalers as the Direct Purchaser Class. Federal antitrust law allows treble (3x) damages. This hub is the complete investigation: who can join, what evidence has been filed, which states allow indirect-purchaser recovery, and what contractors should be doing right now.

    Section 04

    What HVAC Contractors Should Do Right Now

    • Preserve every equipment invoice from January 2020 onward (PO numbers, model numbers, distributor names, prices paid).
    • Confirm your state's status on the 30-state Illinois Brick Repealer list before deciding whether to recover federally or under state law.
    • Read the full Isom v. Trane complaint to understand the specific allegations and evidence already on the record.
    • Do not change accounting practices in a way that destroys historical pricing data.
    • Keep marketing your local business. Settlements are years away. Lead flow today is what protects margins now.
    Section 05

    Frequently Asked Questions

    There are two federal class action lawsuits filed in 2026. Berg v. Robert Bosch LLC represents homeowners and end users. Isom v. Trane Technologies (Case 2:26-cv-11294, E.D. Mich.) represents HVAC contractors, distributors, and wholesalers as the Direct Purchaser Class. Both name the same seven manufacturers: Carrier, Trane, Daikin, Bosch, Lennox, Rheem, and AAON, alleging coordinated price increases since January 2020.

    Direct purchasers (HVAC contractors, distributors, wholesalers) can join Isom v. Trane in any state. Indirect purchasers (homeowners, end users, and contractors in non-Repealer states) recover under state law in the 30 Illinois Brick Repealer states. See our State List for eligibility.

    Federal antitrust law allows treble (3x) damages. If a contractor was overcharged $100,000 between 2020 and 2026, the recoverable damages could exceed $300,000 plus attorneys' fees. Final amounts depend on class certification and settlement.

    As of April 2026, both cases are in the early pleading stage. Class certification is expected within 12 to 18 months. Eligible purchasers should preserve invoices now.

    Residential and commercial split systems, packaged units, heat pumps, furnaces, and air handlers manufactured or sold by Carrier, Trane, Daikin, Bosch, Lennox, Rheem, and AAON between January 2020 and the present.

    No. If the class is certified, eligible purchasers are automatically included unless they opt out. We are not lawyers and do not represent any party — this hub is editorial coverage. Document your invoices and consult an antitrust attorney about your specific situation.
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