AC Repair vs Replacement in Summerville, SC
Most Summerville systems do not need replacing the first time they break. The honest answer comes down to your system's age, the cost of the repair, and whether it still keeps your home dry through a Lowcountry summer. Here is the framework we use on every call.
Call (843) 708-8735Repair or replace? Start with these two lists
No single factor decides it. When most of your answers fall in one column, the choice is usually clear. When they are split, that is exactly when a free second opinion is worth the call.
Lean repair
- The system is under 10 years old
- This is its first real breakdown
- The repair is well under the $5,000 rule
- It still uses current R-410A refrigerant
- It kept your home dry and even last summer
- It is still under manufacturer warranty
Lean replace
- The system is 12 years or older
- You have paid for repairs two or more times recently
- The repair clears the $5,000 rule
- It runs on phased-out R-22 refrigerant
- Some rooms never cool, or the house stays humid
- Energy bills keep climbing season over season
The $5,000 rule, in plain numbers
Over $5,000 usually means replace. Under it usually means repair.
It is the fastest gut check there is, and it works because it weighs what you would spend against how much life the system has left. Applied to real Summerville part and labor costs, the line shows up quickly.
A lot of Summerville equipment is hitting the window at once
Whole subdivisions were built in waves, which means their original AC systems are aging out in waves too. If you live in one of these areas, the repair-or-replace question is not hypothetical, it is arriving on schedule.
Wescott Plantation
Homes built roughly 1998 to 2005 are running systems that are now 20-plus years old, well past the 12 to 15 year mark when major repairs stop paying off. On these, a big-ticket fix almost always loses the $5,000 test.
Cane Bay & Nexton
The first-generation builder equipment in Cane Bay and Nexton is now 12 to 18 years old and entering the major-repair-or-replace window. The next real breakdown is the one worth running the numbers on before you spend.
Builder-grade systems were rarely the premium tier to begin with, so they tend to reach this decision point right on the early side of the range.
The most common mistake: buying bigger to fix humidity
"My newer house is still sticky, so I need a bigger unit."
This one comes up constantly, and the instinct is almost always wrong. If a fairly new home still feels clammy, that is usually a dehumidification problem, not a capacity problem. Your AC removes humidity only while it runs. An oversized unit cools the air fast, then shuts off before it has pulled the moisture out, so the thermostat reads 72 while the air still feels wet.
Going bigger makes that worse, not better. The real fixes are usually a right-sized system, a longer and gentler run cycle, or a dedicated dehumidifier, not more tonnage. Before anyone sells you a larger system to solve a sticky house, that is the question to push on.
Repair vs replacement FAQ
Not sure which way to go? Get a free second opinion.
We will run the $5,000 rule on your system, show you repair and replacement numbers side by side, and tell you straight which one we would choose. No pressure to replace.
Call (843) 708-8735