If you've ever asked an HVAC contractor how long your AC will last, you've probably heard "15 to 20 years." That's the marketing line. Carrier, Trane, Lennox, all the manufacturers, will quote that range in their consumer materials.
The reality in Florida is harsher. We see plenty of unmaintained systems calling it quits in year 10. We see plenty of well-maintained systems still cruising at year 16. The difference between those two outcomes is almost entirely about what happened during years 1-10. Florida is the most punishing climate in the country for HVAC equipment, and the systems that survive it are the ones owned by people who treated them like they would.
The Florida penalty
Three things make Florida the toughest climate in the US for residential AC equipment:
Duty cycle
The average American AC runs about 2,000 hours per year. A South Florida AC runs 3,800-4,400 hours per year, that's roughly double. Mechanical wear is roughly proportional to run hours, so a Florida system experiences in 8 years what a New England system experiences in 16. This alone explains why HVAC fails earlier here.
Humidity
Florida averages 65-80% relative humidity year-round. The indoor coil of every AC in Florida is constantly wet (water condensing out of the air it's cooling), and that wet, dark, cool environment is a perfect mold and biofilm habitat. Without UV-C protection or aggressive maintenance, the coil eventually develops a layer of biological growth that insulates it from the air, lowering efficiency and shortening coil life. We've seen 8-year-old coils that look like they came out of a swamp.
Salt air
If you live within 5 miles of the Atlantic (most of Palm Beach, Martin, and Broward Counties), salt particulate is constantly attacking your outdoor unit. The aluminum fins of the condenser coil oxidize and pit; copper components corrode; electrical contacts get pitted. Coastal-grade equipment (with copper-fin coils and protective coatings) can largely mitigate this, but most contractors don't recommend or install coastal coils because they cost a bit more upfront. Without them, a coastal Florida AC can lose 30-40% of its potential lifespan to salt corrosion alone.
Realistic Florida lifespan numbers
- Unmaintained, low-end equipment: 8-10 years before failure or major repairs make replacement smarter
- Routine-maintenance, mid-tier equipment: 12-14 years
- Twice-yearly maintenance, mid-tier equipment with surge protection: 14-16 years
- Premium variable-speed equipment, twice-yearly maintenance, coastal-grade if applicable: 16-20 years
Note the 8-12 year gap between the low end and high end. That's roughly $4,000-$6,000 of replacement timing avoided per system, just from doing the maintenance and protection right.
Twice-yearly tune-ups across 14 years of equipment life cost less than a single replacement system. The math is overwhelmingly in favor of doing it. The hard part is remembering, which is why we build it into our Champions Club membership, automatic scheduling so you never forget.
The four habits that add years
1. Twice-yearly professional tune-ups
The single highest-ROI habit you can develop. A spring tune-up before peak cooling season catches weak components before they fail; a fall tune-up addresses anything that wore down during the brutal summer. Department of Energy studies put the lifespan benefit at 4-6 additional years, and the energy efficiency gain at 15-25%, a tune-up routinely pays for itself in lower FPL bills alone.
2. Monthly filter changes during cooling season
For 1-inch filters: every 30 days April-October, every 60 days the rest of the year. For media filters (4-5 inch): every 6-12 months. Set a phone reminder. The vast majority of premature AC failures we diagnose can be traced to a filter that wasn't changed often enough, dirty filters cause coil freezes, blower motor strain, and compressor cycling issues.
3. Surge protection
Florida has more lightning strikes per year than any state, and grid surges are routine during summer storms and hurricane recovery. A whole-home surge protector (about $300-450 installed) routinely intercepts surges that would otherwise destroy the compressor, the most expensive single component in the system. We've replaced compressors on 6-year-old systems that lost the lightning lottery; we've also seen 14-year-old systems shrug off direct strikes because they had proper protection.
4. Coastal-grade equipment if you live near the ocean
If you're within 5 miles of the Atlantic, ask any installation contractor for coastal-grade condenser coils (copper fins or coated aluminum). They're a $300-500 upcharge over standard coils and they'll add 4-6 years to the outdoor unit's life. We default to coastal coils on every install in Boca Raton, Delray Beach, Hobe Sound, Pompano Beach, and similar coastal markets.
Signs your AC is reaching end of life
Even with good maintenance, every system eventually wears out. The signals it's time to think seriously about replacement:
- Repair costs in the past 12 months exceed 40% of the cost of a replacement. The 40% rule is the industry standard. Above that threshold, replacement is almost always the better economic decision.
- The system is 12+ years old AND uses R-22 refrigerant. R-22 is being phased out, and the refrigerant itself now costs $80-120/lb (vs. $5-15/lb for current R-410A). Any leak repair on R-22 systems is now uneconomic.
- Energy bills are trending up despite no usage changes. An aging compressor loses efficiency over time. A 12-year-old SEER 13 system typically operates closer to SEER 10 by then; replacing with a SEER2 16 system can cut cooling bills 30%.
- Multiple components have failed in a short window. Capacitor, then contactor, then fan motor, then refrigerant leak, the system is telling you it's tired.
- The system can't hold setpoint on hot days. Even after maintenance and any obvious repairs, if the AC is asked to cool a 95ยฐ afternoon and can't get the house below 80ยฐ, it has lost capacity.
What to do
If your AC is under 8 years old: focus on maintenance habits. Get on a twice-yearly tune-up schedule. Add surge protection if you don't have it. You're investing in the back end of the lifespan, and the math is overwhelmingly in your favor.
If your AC is 8-12 years old: maintenance becomes more important, not less. Replace the parts that are wearing out (capacitors, contactors) before they fail; consider whether your existing system is salt-graded properly if you're coastal; have an honest conversation with your tech about whether you're approaching the replacement decision.
If your AC is 12+ years old: get a tech opinion on remaining life and start budgeting. We'll always tell you straight whether your system has another 2 years or another 5, no upselling. Read our repair-or-replace framework for the math.
Either way, we're here. (561) 503-3003 or request a visit. Palm Beach, Martin, and Broward Counties.