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AC installation & replacement · Nationwide

New AC installation, routed to a licensed local contractor

New AC installation is one call away from a licensed local contractor. The call routes to a licensed pro in your area for an in-home sizing and a written quote — for a replacement or a first-time system.

SIZED, NOT GUESSED

A Manual J load calculation sets the tonnage — not a square-footage rule of thumb.

MATCHED SYSTEM

A new condenser and a matched coil, so you keep the efficiency you paid for.

WRITTEN QUOTE FIRST

You get a price before any work — decided in your home, not over the phone.

  1. STEP 01

    Call, no cost

    One call routes to a licensed local contractor. You describe the home and the system.

  2. STEP 02

    In-home Manual J

    The pro sizes the system on-site with a load calculation — not a guess off the old badge.

  3. STEP 03

    Written quote

    You get an itemised, fixed price before any work — equipment, labour, permit, and warranty.

  4. STEP 04

    Install & register

    Removal, matched install, EPA-608 charge, a full test, permit inspection, warranty registered.

Coverage check

Start with your ZIP — reach a licensed local contractor

Enter your ZIP and we'll route your call to a licensed pro in your area for an in-home sizing and a written quote. Calling is free, 24/7.

In a hurry? Call (888) 810-2291 now.

Licensed contractors serve . One call routes you to one for .

Call (888) 810-2291

Availability is subject to provider participation, location, technician availability, and demand.

01 · Is it time?

Signs you need a new air conditioner, not another repair

Four signals point to replacement over another repair: an AC past 15 years old, one still running on discontinued R-22 refrigerant, a repair quote that tops a third of a new unit's price, or weak cooling paired with climbing bills. Any single one of these usually means the money is better spent on a new system than on one more fix.

01

It's past 15 years

Central air conditioners last about 15 years. Past that, efficiency slips and a major repair rarely pays for itself.

02

It still runs on R-22

Systems on the old R-22 refrigerant are costly to recharge — R-22 has not been produced since 2020, so a leak is an expensive refill on an old machine.

03

A repair tops a third of a new unit

When a single fix approaches a third of replacement cost on an aging AC, the one-third rule points at a new system.

04

Weak cooling and climbing bills

An aging compressor works harder for less cooling, and the summer electric bill shows it.

If the unit is newer and the fault is a single part, a repair is likely the better call — start at AC not cooling, or run the numbers on repair or replace before you commit to a new system.

02 · Scope

What a real installation actually covers

A proper AC replacement is six jobs, not one: a load calculation, removal and disposal of the old system, a matched condenser and coil, the refrigerant line set, a compatible thermostat, then charging, testing and warranty registration. The suspiciously low quotes are usually low because they quietly skip one of these six.

StepWhat it isPhase
Load calculation A Manual J sizing on the house, not a guess off the old unit's badge 1Before the quote
Remove & dispose The old condenser and indoor coil pulled and responsibly disposed of 2Removal
Matched condenser + coil A new outdoor condenser paired with a matched indoor evaporator coil 3New system
Line set A new refrigerant line set, or the existing one flushed and pressure-tested 3New system
Thermostat A compatible thermostat, wired and configured to the new system 3New system
Charge, test, register EPA-608 refrigerant charge, a full operation test, and warranty registration 4Commissioning
The condenser-only trap

The most common way a quote comes in low is a new outdoor condenser bolted to your old indoor coil. It looks like a saving. It is not: an unmatched coil throttles the new condenser, and you lose much of the efficiency — and the SEER2 rating — you just paid for. If a quote is hundreds cheaper than the rest, ask what it leaves on the old system.

03 · Which system

The system types a contractor will price

There are four common ways to cool a home — a central split system, a packaged unit, a ductless mini-split, or a heat pump that both heats and cools. Which one a contractor prices depends on your existing ductwork, the space you have for equipment, and whether the furnace is also near the end of its life.

Most homes

Central split system

The common setup — an outdoor condenser and an indoor coil on the furnace or air handler, cooling the whole home through existing ducts.

Tight on space

Packaged unit

Condenser, coil, and blower in one outdoor cabinet. Used where indoor equipment space is tight, common on slab or rooftop homes.

No ducts

Ductless mini-split

Wall or ceiling heads fed by a small outdoor unit — no ductwork. Good for additions, older homes, or room-by-room control.

See ductless mini-split →
Heats + cools

Heat pump instead

A heat pump cools like an AC and heats too, replacing both units. Worth pricing if the furnace is also near end of life.

See heat pump instead →
04 · Sizing & efficiency

Size and SEER2 decide the bill, in that order

Get the size wrong and the efficiency rating stops mattering; get it right and SEER2 decides what you pay every summer. Size is the first decision, efficiency the second.

1

Size first

Correct tonnage comes from a Manual J load calculation, which accounts for the house — insulation, windows, orientation, air-sealing — not a square-footage shortcut off the old unit. Bigger is the expensive mistake: an oversized AC satisfies the thermostat fast, shuts off before it has pulled humidity from the air, and leaves the house cold and clammy while it short-cycles the compressor to an early death.

The math on what size AC do I need →
2

Then efficiency

SEER2 measures cooling delivered per watt across a season — higher is cheaper to run for the same cooling. Under the 2023 federal standard a new split-system AC must reach 13.4 SEER2 in the northern states and 14.3 in the South and Southwest; ENERGY STAR begins at 15.2, and premium equipment climbs past 20.

You buy efficiency once and pay for it every month either way.

05 · The 2026 timing angle

The refrigerant change — and what it does not mean

New AC systems now ship with a new low-GWP refrigerant, R-454B — but that is a fact about buying new equipment, not a reason to replace the working system you already own.

Beginning in 2025 the industry moved new equipment off R-410A to R-454B, whose global-warming potential is roughly 78% lower. Any air conditioner you install now uses it. Two things follow, and the order matters.

If you already own an R-410A system

Keep it. R-410A equipment stays legal to run and repair, and R-410A itself is still available to service existing systems — the phase-out applies to new manufacture, not to your machine. A working R-410A system does not need replacing because of the refrigerant change, and anyone telling you otherwise is selling.

What actually matters

The honest headline from the trade press is the opposite of the scare version: sizing and installation quality matter far more than which refrigerant is in the box. R-454B is mildly flammable (an A2L), so the installer needs to be current on the updated codes and leak-detection — one more reason to route to a licensed pro. The full timeline is on the refrigerant phase-out.

Coverage check

Ready to size a new system for your home?

Enter your ZIP — we'll connect you to a licensed local contractor for an in-home load calculation and a written quote. The call is free, 24/7.

In a hurry? Call (888) 810-2291 now.

Licensed contractors serve . One call routes you to one for .

Call (888) 810-2291

Availability is subject to provider participation, location, technician availability, and demand.

06 · What it costs

What a new AC really costs

A new central air conditioner runs roughly $6,958 to $13,418 installed on manufacturer figures, but real quotes that include ductwork, permits and labour commonly land at $10,000 to $17,000. The gap between the badge average and the number on your quote is the whole game — and four things move it.

Trane's 2026 guide puts a new central air conditioner at roughly $6,958 to $13,418 installed, with entry-level systems near $8,800 per American Standard. Those are equipment-led national averages. In practice, once ductwork, permits, electrical, and labour are in, real installed quotes commonly run $10,000 to $17,000, and a complex job goes beyond that. None of that is padding; it is the difference between a badge price and a finished install.

What moves the numberLower endHigher end
Efficiency (SEER2)14–15 SEER2, single-stage18–20+ SEER2, variable-speed
System typeStraight split swapNew ducts, packaged, or zoning
Size2–3 ton home4–5 ton, or oversized load
Site & electricalExisting service is adequatePanel upgrade, long line set, hard access

The itemised breakdown is on new system cost, and the only figure that counts is the written quote — actual prices come from the contractor after they see the house.

07 · Install day

What to expect on installation day

A straight replacement is usually a one-day job, about four to eight hours, and it runs in four stages: arrival and protection, removing the old system, setting the new equipment, then charging, testing and registering it.

  1. 01

    Arrival & protection

    The crew protects floors and walls, confirms the plan, and shuts off power and refrigerant.

  2. 02

    Remove the old system

    The old condenser and indoor coil come out; refrigerant is recovered to EPA rules, not vented.

  3. 03

    Set the new equipment

    The matched condenser and coil are set, the line set is run or flushed, and the thermostat is wired.

  4. 04

    Charge, test, register

    The system is vacuumed, charged, and run through a full operation test. Warranty is registered and the permit is closed at inspection.

08 · Warranty, permits & rebates

The paperwork that protects the money

Three things decided on install day quietly determine what the system is worth to you later: the manufacturer warranty (only valid if registered), the equipment-change permit and inspection, and any state or utility rebates tied to the efficiency tier you choose.

Warranty

Manufacturers cover parts for about ten years — but only with registration, usually within 60–90 days. Labour is a separate warranty from the contractor, often one to two years. Ask what each covers.

Permit & inspection

Most areas require an equipment-change permit and an inspection. The contractor pulls it. An unpermitted install can surface when you sell the home, so a quote that skips it is a red flag, not a saving.

Federal 25C credit

Central-AC tax creditended Dec 31, 2025. No longer applies.

Still live

State energy-office and local utility rebates, usually tied to higher-efficiency SEER2 equipment and varying by ZIP code. A local contractor knows which programs are active in your area — worth asking before you pick the efficiency tier. Timing helps too: the shoulder seasons, spring and fall, are quieter for installers than peak summer.

09 · Who installs it

What a real installer does — and the low bid skips

The price gap between two quotes usually hides in this checklist. A licensed installer does all six of the following; the low bid is low because it drops one or two of them.

  • Licensed and insured for HVAC work in your state
  • Sizes the system with a Manual J load calculation, in the home
  • Matches a new coil to the new condenser — no old-coil shortcut
  • Pulls the equipment-change permit and books the inspection
  • Recovers old refrigerant to EPA-608 rules, does not vent it
  • Registers the manufacturer warranty and hands you the paperwork

Not sure a new system is the right call yet? Weigh it on repair or replace, or start a diagnosis at AC not cooling.

10 · Coverage

Where we route calls

Calls route to licensed local contractors across the United States. Enter a ZIP in the coverage check above and we'll confirm the nearest routed pro; if your exact area isn't matched, the call still connects nationwide.

Ready for a quote?

One call routes you to a licensed local contractor for an in-home sizing and a written estimate.

(888) 810-2291 ☏ Call now

Same-day and 24/7 emergency services are subject to provider participation, location, technician availability, and demand. Availability is not guaranteed and may vary by market and appointment capacity.

11 · Questions

Questions homeowners ask first

How much does a new AC cost to install?

A new central air conditioner runs roughly $6,958 to $13,418 installed, per Trane's 2026 figures, with entry-level systems near $8,800 per American Standard. Those are equipment-led averages; real installed quotes that include ductwork, permits, and labour often land higher — $10,000 to $17,000 is common, and complex jobs go beyond it. The full breakdown is on our new-system cost page, and the exact figure is a quote from the contractor after they see the house.

How long does an AC installation take?

A straight replacement — a matched condenser and coil swapped into an existing, sound duct system — is usually a one-day job, about four to eight hours. Adding ductwork, moving equipment, or a packaged or zoned system can stretch it to two or three days. The contractor gives you the timeline with the written quote.

What size AC do I need?

It is set by a Manual J load calculation, not by square footage alone — insulation, windows, orientation, and climate all factor in. Bigger is not better: an oversized AC short-cycles, never pulls humidity out of the air, and wears out faster. Our AC sizing guide shows how the math works.

What does SEER2 mean?

SEER2 is the cooling-efficiency rating that replaced the older SEER measure under a more realistic test. A higher number means lower running cost for the same cooling. A more efficient unit costs more up front and less every summer to run.

How long is a new AC under warranty?

Most manufacturers cover parts for ten years, but only if you register the unit — usually within 60 to 90 days of install, which the contractor should do for you. Labour is a separate warranty from the installing contractor, commonly one to two years, so ask what each covers before you sign.

Are there rebates or tax credits for a new AC?

The federal 25C tax credit for central air conditioners ended on December 31, 2025, so it no longer applies. What remains are state energy-office and local utility rebates, which are often tied to higher-efficiency SEER2 equipment and vary by ZIP code. A local contractor knows which programs are live in your area and how to file them.

Do I have to replace the furnace when I replace the AC?

Not always, but if both are near end of life it is usually cheaper to do them together, and it keeps the indoor coil and blower matched to the new condenser. A new condenser bolted to an old, undersized blower and coil gives back much of the efficiency you paid for.

What is happening with AC refrigerant in 2026?

The industry moved off R-410A to a low-GWP refrigerant, R-454B, for new equipment beginning in 2025. New systems ship with the new refrigerant. Existing R-410A systems are fine to keep and can still be serviced — R-410A remains available for repairs — so this is not a reason to replace a working system. It only matters when you are buying new. The full story is on our refrigerant phase-out page.

Do I need a permit to replace my AC?

In most jurisdictions, yes — an equipment-change permit and an inspection. A licensed contractor pulls it as part of the job. A quote that skips the permit to look cheaper is a red flag, because an unpermitted install can surface when you sell the home.

☏ Call a licensed local contractor — (888) 810-2291