Fake HVAC sites behind Orlando contractor’s lost business
Google searches for HVAC services in Orlando are now returning dozens of generic, seemingly AI-generated websites, pushing reputable contractors far down the results
Image: Adobe Stock
An Orlando-based HVAC contractor says that skewed Google results have devastated his business.
What’s happening: Chris Elsis, owner of Smart Home Air & Heat, last week told TV station Fox35 that over a year after starting his business in 2024, he was pulling in about $150,000 per month; however, in January, calls and website traffic suddenly — and mysteriously — dried up.
- “I’ve had to let go of five employees. I’ve had to sell two vans,” he said.
Go deeper: Google searches for HVAC services in Orlando are now returning dozens of generic, seemingly AI-generated websites, pushing reputable contractors far down the results.
- A Fox35 reporter visited some of the addresses listed on the fake sites and found herself in shopping plazas with empty storefronts and residential neighborhoods.
- She also called the listed phone numbers, finding they did not connect to real businesses or led to non-HVAC businesses.
- A website designer told the TV station that “somebody” has been spamming the Orlando market with fake websites, and that those sites are surfacing despite Google’s stated intentions to prioritize high-authority domains.
The big picture: Similar situations have been reported across the U.S.
- A Tampa-area TV station, for instance, found a victim of one such website purportedly for a local electric company. The victim paid $149 for a maintenance contract, but no technician ever came, and her credit card was charged by an entity with a different name: Premium Home Service (PHS).
- Reporters found that PHS was run by a Lamborghini-driving Chicago man named Yosef Shmuel Bernath. PHS operated a web of websites for phantom companies — more than 7,000 listings associated with nearly 16,000 phone numbers — and faced consumer complaints in the U.S. and Canada.
- Another victim who set up a website to expose the scheme wrote that PHS operated using a call center in the Philippines and was being investigated by authorities in Wisconsin.
Yes, and: Denver TV station KARE, investigating similar complaints last year, found that “companies associated with PHS hijacked Google listings of some legitimate home repair businesses.”
- A whistleblower ex-employee told the station that 90 phone operators in the Philippines fielded calls from U.S. consumers who thought they were speaking with local contractors.
- One victim was told by the technician who showed up that he’d been hired via Craigslist and sent to the home, and that he had to email a photo of the work after it was performed. The victim paid $7,000 for a faulty furnace install.
- The whistleblower showed the TV station — and federal investigators — company data suggesting that PHS brought in more than $79 million between 2018 and 2023.
What they’re saying: Elsis warned that the Orlando sites could be problematic for unsuspecting customers, perhaps leading to untrustworthy people entering their homes.
- He’s been reporting the fake sites to Google, but “the problem is, it takes time,” he said. “And by that time… I won’t have any customers left or any new customers coming in.”
- Elsis did not return a phone message from Homepros by press time.
📬 Get our stories in your inbox
Keep reading
Pulse check: The economy, small business, and the skilled trades with Gusto
A conversation about the state of the economy, its impact on small businesses, and what’s ahead — along with how to navigate it
The FTC banned fake, deceptive reviews. Here’s what it means for contractors
As of October 2024, "purchasing" fake reviews by offering customers discounts is banned, along with a few similar practices
EPA unclear on HVAC install rule as deadline nears
The EPA has proposed removing the Jan. 1, 2026, deadline for installing many R-410A systems, but it hasn't yet issued a final rule


