Table of Contents
  1. Monthly: Filter Check and Replacement
  2. Quarterly: Visual Inspection
  3. Annually: Professional Service (Spring for AC, Fall for Heat)
  4. What Your Inspection Report Tells You
  5. When to Consider Replacement

HVAC Maintenance Schedule: What to Do and When

Your HVAC system is probably the most expensive thing in your house that you've never thought about until it stops working. A central air conditioning and heating system costs $6,000–$15,000 to replace, runs 24 hours a day in peak seasons, and has a straightforward maintenance schedule that most homeowners never follow.

Here's the complete picture: what you should be doing, when to do it, and what professional service actually covers.

Monthly: Filter Check and Replacement

This is the single highest-impact maintenance task for your HVAC system, and it costs $10–$30. A clogged filter restricts airflow, forcing the system to work harder. Over time, restricted airflow strains the blower motor, causes the heat exchanger to overheat (in heating mode), and can freeze the evaporator coil (in cooling mode). All of those failures are expensive.

How often to change it depends on filter type and household conditions:

The right answer for your home is to pull the filter and look at it. If it's gray and visibly clogged, change it regardless of when you last changed it. If it's mostly clean, check again in 30 days.

Quarterly: Visual Inspection

Every three months, spend five minutes looking at your system. You're checking for:

Annually: Professional Service (Spring for AC, Fall for Heat)

Annual professional maintenance is non-negotiable for any HVAC system you want to get full life out of. For a split system (separate furnace and AC), this means two service calls per year. For a heat pump (handles both heating and cooling), one thorough service call in spring or fall covers both.

What a professional tune-up covers:

Cost: $80–$200 per visit. The service call pays for itself when it catches a $40 capacitor before it becomes an emergency weekend call-out at $400+.

What Your Inspection Report Tells You

If you bought your home with an inspection, the report contains specific information about your HVAC system: make, model, approximate age, and the inspector's assessment of condition. This changes your maintenance calculus significantly.

An HVAC system installed in 2015 and noted as "in good working condition" needs standard annual maintenance. A system noted as "approaching end of expected service life with rust at the heat exchanger" needs either immediate professional evaluation or early replacement planning. The generic schedule above applies to the first scenario — the second requires a different approach.

When to Consider Replacement

Rule of thumb from HVAC contractors: if the system is over 10 years old and a single repair exceeds 50% of replacement cost, replace it. A $1,500 compressor repair on a 14-year-old system is almost always worse economics than a new unit.

Signs you're approaching replacement territory:

Keep your home running smoothly

KotiCare turns your inspection report into a personalized maintenance plan.

See How KotiCare Works