Ceiling Fan Installation & Repair in St. Louis
New installs on empty ceilings, fan-for-fan replacements, swapping in a fan where a light fixture used to be, and the small repairs that bring an existing fan back done right in a single visit.
Ceiling Fan Installation & Repair in St. Louis
FIX St. Louis installs and repairs residential ceiling fans across St. Louis. We replace existing fans, swap a ceiling light fixture for a new ceiling fan (with the proper rated electrical box and bracing), install fans on previously empty ceilings, repair non-working fans and fan lights, replace blades and pull chains, and install or replace fan wall control switches. Most ceiling fan jobs are completed in a single visit. No minimum job size. Firm quote before any work begins. BBB A+ rated. Phones answered 24/7.
The Most Efficient Cooling Device in Your Home – When It’s Installed Right
A ceiling fan moving air through an occupied room makes the room feel four to seven degrees cooler than the thermostat says. It costs pennies to run. It works in any room with a ceiling tall enough to clear it. And in a St. Louis summer, the difference between a working fan and no fan in the bedroom is the difference between sleeping and not.
But ceiling fans only deliver that benefit when they’re installed correctly. A fan mounted on a standard light-fixture electrical box will eventually loosen and wobble the fixture box isn’t rated for the dynamic load of a spinning fan. A fan with blades that aren’t balanced will rattle the ceiling and shake itself loose over months. A fan with a poorly rated junction box, miswired controls, or the wrong type of switch will burn out, hum, or trip a breaker.
FIX St. Louis has been installing and repairing ceiling fans in St. Louis homes for years from the older brick bungalows of Webster Groves and Maplewood to the newer construction of Chesterfield, Creve Coeur, and St. Charles County. We bring fan-rated boxes, the right bracing, and the wiring knowledge that turns a wobbly old fan or an empty ceiling into a fan that just works. See why St. Louis homeowners trust FIX before any work begins.
Why Ceiling Fans Matter So Much in St. Louis
St. Louis summers are humid and hot enough that air conditioning runs hard from June through September. Ceiling fans don’t lower the temperature in a room, but they create a perceived-temperature drop the moving air evaporates moisture from skin and accelerates body cooling. The practical effect is that you can run your AC two to four degrees warmer with a fan in the room and feel just as comfortable, which translates to a measurable reduction on the cooling bill across a St. Louis summer.
Winter has its own use case. Most modern fans have a reverse switch that runs the blades clockwise (looking up at them), which pulls cool air up and pushes warm air which has risen to the ceiling back down along the walls. In a room with a high ceiling or a room over an unheated basement, that’s a comfort improvement homeowners notice immediately.
Ceiling Fan Services FIX St. Louis Provides
Here’s the complete list of ceiling fan work we handle. For the full picture of our fan services, visit our Fans hub page.
| Service | What We Do |
|---|---|
| Replace an existing ceiling fan | Remove the old fan, inspect the box and bracing, install the new fan with proper rating and balance. |
| Swap a ceiling light fixture for a new fan | Replace the standard light box with a fan-rated box and bracing, install the fan correctly, wire to existing or new controls. |
| Install a fan on a ceiling with no fixture | Run new wiring, install a fan-rated box and bracing, install a wall switch, mount and balance the fan. |
| Fan won’t turn on | Diagnose the cause — wall switch, capacitor, motor, pull chain, remote receiver — and repair the actual failure. |
| Fan light doesn’t work but fan does | Diagnose light kit wiring, switch, bulb socket, or pull chain; repair or replace the failed component. |
| Fan wobbles or rattles | Balance the blades, tighten mounting hardware, inspect blade arms; replace blades if warped. |
| Pull chain broken or pulled out | Replace pull chain assembly inside the fan housing; restore manual control. |
| Wall switch problem (won’t turn fan on, doesn’t change speeds) | Diagnose and replace standard, dimmer, or fan-specific wall control switch as needed. |
| Replace fan blades | Source matching or compatible blades; install and re-balance. |
| Remote control or smart fan setup | Install or troubleshoot remote receivers, smart fan controllers, and Wi-Fi-enabled fan systems. |
The Most Common Ceiling Fan Calls We Get – And What’s Actually Going On
Dr. Steve’s Take:
Dr. Steve has put ceiling fans on his short list of small home upgrades that pay back the cost in some rooms, in a single summer. The math is straightforward: a fan running while AC is on lets you raise the thermostat two to four degrees with no comfort penalty, which translates to measurable savings every cooling cycle. Dr. Steve’s eco-friendly column makes the same point in environmental terms: the energy savings of widespread ceiling fan use across a St. Louis-sized metro is genuinely large.
From Dr. Steve’s Tips: Eco-Friendly Repairs: Tiny Fixes to Reduce a Home’s Carbon Footprint
Dr. Steve’s Take:
When Dr. Steve writes about the small home repairs that change daily life, ceiling fans show up because of one specific room: the bedroom. A working bedroom fan is the difference between a comfortable summer night and a restless one. A wobbling, rattling, or non-working fan over the bed is exactly the kind of problem homeowners absorb into the background and exactly the kind that disappears the moment it’s fixed.
From Dr. Steve’s Tips: The Secret to a Stress-Free Home: Small Repairs That Improve Daily Life
Keep Your Ceiling Fans Running Right
Ceiling fans need very little maintenance, but the small amount they do need will double the lifespan of the unit. For more home maintenance guidance, visit Dr. Steve’s Tips.
| Frequency | What We Do |
|---|---|
| Monthly | Dust the blades dust accumulates on the leading edge and contributes to imbalance. Wipe with a damp cloth or use a fan duster. |
| Seasonally (spring & fall) | Reverse the fan direction. Counter-clockwise (looking up) for summer cooling, clockwise for winter circulation. The reverse switch is on the motor housing. |
| Annually | Tighten the blade screws and the mounting screws. Vibration loosens both gradually. A 30-second tightening prevents wobble that becomes a real problem later. |
| When you notice a change | If a fan that’s been balanced suddenly develops a wobble, don’t wait. Loose mounting hardware will cause the wobble to accelerate, and a serious wobble can damage the motor. |
Dr. Steve’s Pro Tip:
When buying replacement bulbs for a ceiling fan light, check whether your wall switch is a dimmer. If it is, you need bulbs labeled “dimmable LED” standard non-dimmable LEDs in a dimmer circuit will flicker, hum, or burn out fast. The bulb packaging tells you which is which.
FAQs
Ceiling Fan Installation in St. Louis
Ready for a New Fan, or a Fix on the One You Have? Let’s Get It Moving.
Whether it’s a fan-for-fan swap, a new install on an empty ceiling, a wobble that drives you crazy every night, or a fan that just stopped working – FIX St. Louis handles ceiling fan work in a single visit, with a firm quote before we open a box. No minimum job size. Phones answered around the clock.