AC Maintenance & Tune-Up in Southern California — Spring AC Service

Annual AC maintenance for residential SoCal homes — refrigerant level check, condensate drain cleaning, capacitor testing, electrical inspection, coil cleaning. Single visit $145–$245. Annual Comfort Club membership $189–$599 includes 1-2 visits + repair discounts. CSLB #1138898 (C-20). Call (424) 766-1020.

AC maintenance is the cheapest insurance against summer breakdowns. The first 105°F day in July is when capacitors fail, refrigerant leaks become apparent, and clogged condensate drains flood. We do AC tune-ups year-round but recommend spring (March–May) for cooling system work — before the heat dome events when call volume spikes 4-5x normal. Single tune-up runs $145–$245 depending on system complexity. Most customers get better long-term value from our Comfort Club membership ($189–$599/year) which bundles tune-ups + repair discounts + priority dispatch.

What an AC tune-up actually includes

13-point inspection (this matters — most LA HVAC chains do "23-point inspections" that are mostly visual):

  1. Refrigerant level verification — superheat/subcool readings, NOT just gauge pressures (which can mislead)
  2. Capacitor testing — measured mfd reading, replacement if outside 10% of rated value
  3. Condensate drain inspection and cleaning — line, P-trap, drain pan
  4. Outdoor coil cleaning — physical removal of debris, gentle wash with appropriate cleaner
  5. Indoor coil inspection — visual check, mold growth assessment
  6. Blower wheel inspection — buildup of biological growth
  7. Electrical connection tightening — disconnects, contactors, capacitor wiring
  8. Thermostat calibration check — actual temperature vs displayed
  9. Filter inspection and replacement (filter included)
  10. Refrigerant leak test — UV dye check on suspect connections
  11. Amp draw measurement — outdoor unit running amps vs nameplate
  12. Delta-T verification — supply/return air temperature differential (should be 18–22°F on properly charged system)
  13. System cycling test — startup current, shutdown smoothness

Tune-up cost: $145–$245 single visit. Includes filter, no upsell add-ons.

When AC tune-up is most valuable

Best time: March–May (before summer heat dome). Catches problems with months of buffer time before peak demand.

Critical for:

  • Systems 5+ years old (when components start drifting from spec)
  • Systems with prior repairs (verify repair quality)
  • Systems following major renovation (verify ductwork integrity)
  • Systems entering peak summer (May–September) without recent service
  • Coastal homes (Newport Beach, Manhattan Beach, Malibu) — salt-air corrosion needs more attention
  • Inland Empire homes (110°F+ heat dome events stress aging compressors)

Less critical for:

  • New systems (under 5 years) — manufacturer warranty often covers component failure
  • Systems already on Comfort Club PM contract (already getting 2 visits/year)

Common findings during AC tune-ups

What we typically find on 5-15 year old systems:

  • Capacitor at 80% of rated value (15–25% of inspections) — replace before failure to avoid summer emergency call: $245–$385
  • Refrigerant 5-15% low (10–20% of inspections) — leak diagnosis required: $385–$885
  • Clogged condensate drain (20–30% of inspections) — flushing prevents flood damage to ceilings: included in tune-up
  • Outdoor coil heavily soiled (30–40% of coastal inspections) — cleaning restores capacity: included
  • Loose electrical connections (15–25%) — tightening prevents arc damage: included
  • Failed flame sensor on heat pump (when in heating mode) — replacement: $245–$385

Honest take: tune-ups catch problems at $245–$385 that would otherwise become $1,200–$2,500 emergency calls. The math works.

Real-world example

4-bedroom Westside home, 9-year-old Carrier 24ABB6 3-ton AC, customer scheduled spring tune-up in April:

  • Findings: capacitor reading 32 mfd (rated 35/5 dual-run), 9% low — within tolerance but trending toward failure
  • Refrigerant: 8% low (slow leak suspected, scheduled follow-up)
  • Coil: light soil, cleaned during tune-up
  • Result: customer chose to replace capacitor proactively ($295) AND scheduled refrigerant leak diagnosis ($385 follow-up)
  • Total preventive work: $680
  • What was avoided: typical July emergency call when capacitor fails ($295 + $149 emergency diagnostic) + ice-up event when refrigerant fully depletes ($485 service)
  • Customer saved approximately $250–$400 by addressing in spring vs summer emergency

Service area

AC maintenance across all 5 SoCal counties:

Phones answered 24/7. Truck dispatch 8 AM–8 PM same-day. After-hours scheduled for first dispatch the following morning.

Related: heating maintenance, HVAC maintenance hub, Comfort Club membership, AC repair, heat pump repair.

CSLB License C-20 #1138898 | Roman HVAC 777 LLC dba Venta Heating & Air | TECH Clean California Certified

Frequently Asked Questions

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