When an HVAC contractor tells you that your system needs a major emergency AC repair, the natural question is: should I fix it, or is it time for a new one? It’s one of the most consequential decisions a homeowner makes — and it’s often made under pressure, in the middle of summer, with a house full of uncomfortable people.
This guide gives you a clear, honest framework for making the decision — including the formulas contractors use, the factors that shift the math in Temecula’s demanding climate, and the questions you should always ask before committing to either path.
The most widely used rule in the HVAC industry is simple: multiply the system’s age in years by the repair cost in dollars. If the result exceeds $5,000, replacement is usually the better financial decision.
5,000 Rule — Worked Examples
Example 1
7-year-old system
$400 capacitor repair
7 × $400 = $2,800
Below $5,000 → Repair it
Example 2
14-year-old system
$1,800 compressor
14 × $1,800 = $25,200
Far above $5,000 → Replace it
Example 3
10-year-old system
$750 refrigerant leak repair
10 × $750 = $7,500
Above $5,000 → Borderline — read on
Example 4
5-year-old system
$1,200 evap coil repair
5 × $1,200 = $6,000
Above $5,000 but system is young — Consider other factors
The 5,000 rule is a starting point, not a verdict. These factors can push the decision toward replacement even when the math says repair — or justify repair even when the math says replace:
Always Replace If:
- The system uses R-22 refrigerant — escalating costs make continued operation increasingly uneconomical
- This is the 3rd or more major repair in 24 months — pattern failure indicates systemic aging
- The system is 15+ years old in Temecula’s climate — accelerated wear means unpredictable remaining life
- The compressor needs replacing and the system is over 10 years old — replacing just the compressor on an aging system often leads to more failures shortly after
Repair Can Still Make Sense If:
- The system is under 8 years old and this is the first significant repair — plenty of life remaining
- The compressor is still under warranty — part cost is covered; pay for labor only
- The repair is a minor, commonly failing component (capacitor, contactor, thermostat) and the rest of the system checks out well
- You’re planning to sell the home within 2 years and a working system matters more than an optimal one for your own use
The 5,000 rule only looks at repair cost vs. system age. A more complete analysis also accounts for ongoing energy savings from a new system. In Temecula where your AC runs 5–6 months at high load, efficiency differences matter significantly:
Example: 12-year-old 12 SEER system vs. new 16 SEER2 system
Keeping old system (+ $1,500 repair)
Repair: $1,500
Annual cooling cost (est.): $1,400
3-year total: $5,700
New 16 SEER2 system
Replacement: $9,000
Annual cooling cost (est.): $950
3-year total: $11,850
In this example, repair saves money over 3 years. But at 5 years: repair path totals $8,500 vs. replacement at $13,750 — still better. At 8 years, with likely further repairs on the aging system, replacement starts to win. The point: energy savings alone rarely justify replacement when repair cost is modest and system age is under 12 years.
- 1“Is the rest of the system in good condition?” — Ask the tech to assess the coils, ductwork, and electrical components beyond the failed part. Repairing one component on a system with several others near failure is a short-term fix.
- 2“Is the compressor still under warranty?” — Most manufacturers offer 5–10 year compressor warranties. If the part is covered, the repair becomes much more attractive financially.
- 3“What refrigerant does my system use?” — R-22 systems should almost always be replaced when facing any significant repair. R-410A systems have better long-term economics.
- 4“What will a new system actually cost installed?” — Get a real replacement quote before deciding. If replacement is $8,000 and the repair is $600 on a 9-year-old system, repair is clearly right. If replacement is $10,000 and the repair is $2,500 on a 14-year-old system, replacement deserves serious consideration.
- 5“Are there rebates available if I replace?” — Ask for a current rebate check before deciding. If $1,500–$3,000 in rebates are available on a new heat pump system, the financial gap between repair and replace narrows considerably.