⭐ Top Contractor Program

Want to Stand Out?

Fill out the form below to apply and get featured as one of our Top Contractors.
Gain visibility, attract more clients, and showcase your expertise to a wider audience!


🔒 Your information is private and secure

Free to apply
Verified contractors only
Canada-wide visibility
No hidden charges
Free Service
No obligation

Get Your FREE HVAC Quote Today

Compare prices from top-rated local contractors in minutes

🔒 Secure
SSL encrypted form
Fast reply
Within 2 hours
Canada Flag Canadian
Local contractors only

🔒 Your info is private. We never sell your data.

What size furnace should I buy?

Square FootageFurnace BTU
1,000-1,200 sq. ft. Home40,000 - 60,000 BTU
1,200-1,500 sq. ft. Home60,000 BTU
1,500-1,800 sq. ft. Home60,000 - 80,000 BTU
1,800-2,500 sq. ft. Home80,000 - 100,000 BTU
2,500-3,500 sq. ft. Home100,000 to 120,000 BTU

Spring AC Maintenance Checklist for Canadian Homeowners

Your AC maintenance checklist for spring is the single most valuable thing you can do before the Canadian summer heat arrives. Skip it, and you’re gambling with a machine that costs $4,000–$7,000+ to replace — one that’s been sitting completely idle all winter and faces maximum load the moment the first heatwave hits.

This guide covers exactly what to inspect, clean, and tune before cooling season kicks in: what you can safely handle yourself, what needs a licensed HVAC technician, and how to catch problems early before they become expensive mid-July emergencies.

🔧
Written by the FurnacePrices.com Editorial Team ✅ Reviewed by a Certified HVAC Technician (Red Seal) · Updated April 2026

Our content is developed with input from licensed HVAC professionals with hands-on experience servicing Canadian homes across Ontario and beyond. We follow a strict editorial review process to ensure accuracy and compliance with Canadian regulations.

⚡ TL;DR — Quick Checklist Summary

  • Replace your air filter — every 30–60 days during cooling season; do this first
  • Clear and rinse the outdoor condenser — remove debris, gentle hose rinse (power off first)
  • Flush the condensate drain — one cup of white vinegar prevents algae blockages
  • Run a test cycle in April — before the first hot day, not during it
  • Book a professional tune-up — refrigerant, capacitors, coils, and electrical need a licensed tech
  • Check visible ductwork — seal gaps with foil-backed tape to stop cooling loss
  • A pro tune-up costs $100–$250 in Canada — far less than a summer emergency call
💡 Why spring specifically? Most AC failures happen during the first week of heavy use. A system that sat idle all winter needs to be inspected before that first 30°C day — not during it. Booking your service in April or early May means you beat the summer rush and give any discovered issues time to be fixed.

A common misconception: because Canada has shorter summers, AC systems need less attention than in hotter climates. The opposite is true—and that’s exactly why an AC Maintenance Checklist matters.

Units sit idle for 6–8 months, allowing dust to clog condenser coils, pests to nest in outdoor units, and capacitors to weaken. When the first June heatwave hits, a neglected system faces maximum load with no warm-up period.

Emergency HVAC service in Canada typically runs $300–$600 or more. A standard spring tune-up costs $100–$250. The math is straightforward. Well-maintained AC units also last 15–20 years versus 10–12 years for neglected ones — a significant return on a $4,000–$7,000+ investment. For a full breakdown of what a new system costs if yours fails early, see our Air Conditioner Prices in Canada guide.

The Government of Canada’s Natural Resources department confirms that HVAC systems account for roughly 60% of home energy consumption — making proper maintenance one of the highest-leverage actions you can take on your energy bills. The Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Institute of Canada (HRAI), the country’s leading HVAC industry body, recommends annual professional servicing as the baseline standard for all central cooling systems.

15 step spring AC maintenance checklist Canada DIY and professional tasks infographic

Tasks are organized by who performs them. DIY tasks are safe for most homeowners. PRO tasks require a licensed HVAC technician.

#TaskWhoFrequency
1Replace or clean the air filterDIYEvery 1–3 months
2Clear debris from outdoor condenser unitDIYEvery spring + after storms
3Rinse condenser coils with garden hoseDIYOnce per spring
4Inspect and straighten condenser finsDIY / ProAnnually
5Check and clear condensate drain lineDIYAnnually
6Test thermostat accuracy and settingsDIYAnnually
7Check refrigerant lines for insulation damageDIY (visual)Annually
8Inspect electrical disconnect and wiringPROAnnually
9Test capacitor and contactorPROAnnually
10Check refrigerant charge and pressurePROAnnually or if cooling drops
11Clean evaporator coil (indoor unit)PROAnnually
12Lubricate fan motor bearingsPROAnnually
13Inspect ductwork for leaks (visible sections)DIY / ProEvery 2–3 years
14Run a full system test cycleDIYAnnually (before first hot day)
15Review manufacturer warranty requirementsDIYAnnually

✅ Step 1: Replace or Clean the Air Filter


This is the highest-impact task on the AC Maintenance Checklist—and the one skipped most often. A clogged filter forces the AC to work harder, reduces airflow across the evaporator coil (causing freeze-ups), and circulates dust through your home. During cooling season, check monthly and replace when visibly grey.

Standard 1-inch filters: replace every 30–60 days. Thicker 4-inch media filters: every 6–12 months. Homes with pets or allergy sufferers should lean toward the shorter end. Not sure whether your problem is the filter or something bigger? Use our free AC Troubleshooting Wizard to narrow it down before calling anyone.

✅ Step 2: Clear and Rinse the Outdoor Condenser Unit

After a Canadian winter, your outdoor condenser will have leaves, twigs, seeds, and sometimes animal nests packed around it. Clear everything within two feet on all sides. Then — with power off at the disconnect box — rinse the condenser fins from the top down with a garden hose on gentle spray. This flushes compacted dirt out of the coil without damaging the delicate fins. Never use a pressure washer.

⚠️ Always cut power first. Before rinsing the condenser, shut power off at the outdoor disconnect box — the grey box mounted on the wall near the unit. Never spray water on a live electrical system.

✅ Step 3: Flush the Condensate Drain Line

Your AC pulls humidity from the air, and that water exits through a condensate drain line — usually a PVC pipe running from your air handler to a floor drain. Over winter, algae and mold can grow inside, causing a blockage that leads to water leaking into ceilings or walls.

Prevention is simple: pour one cup of distilled white vinegar into the drain line access port each spring. If you see standing water in the drain pan under your air handler, the line is already blocked — clear it with a wet vac before the season starts.

✅ Step 4: Test Your Thermostat in April

Switch to “Cool” and set it 3–4°C below current room temperature. The outdoor unit should kick on within 1–2 minutes. If it doesn’t, check the breaker and filter before calling a technician. Not sure whether to repair your existing system or start fresh? Our Repair or Replace guide walks through the decision framework clearly.

✅ Step 5: Inspect Visible Ductwork for Leaks

Check all accessible duct sections in your basement or attic for gaps, disconnected joints, or visible damage. The Government of Canada estimates duct leakage accounts for 20–30% of cooling loss in many homes. Sealing gaps with foil-backed tape — not regular duct tape, which fails quickly — is an easy DIY fix with outsized results.

🔧 Unsure whether your AC needs a tune-up or a full replacement? Our free AC Repair Cost Calculator estimates both scenarios instantly — before you call anyone.


The DIY steps above are impactful—but they’re only part of a complete AC Maintenance Checklist. Several critical tasks require tools, certifications, and expertise homeowners don’t have. Here’s what a licensed HVAC technician handles during an annual tune-up—and why it matters.

  • Refrigerant pressure check: In Canada, handling refrigerant requires federal certification. A technician measures refrigerant pressure to confirm the system is operating at the correct charge.
    Low refrigerant is a primary cause of reduced cooling and compressor damage — two problems that compound each other quickly. Use our AC Recommendation Wizard if you’re wondering whether your aging system is worth repairing versus replacing.
  • Capacitor and contactor testing: Capacitors are among the most common parts to fail — especially during the first heatwave of the season.
    A technician tests capacitor health with a multimeter and replaces marginal ones proactively. This one task alone prevents the majority of summer “no-start” failures.
  • Evaporator coil cleaning: The indoor coil is difficult to access and requires specific cleaning solutions. A dirty evaporator coil can drop system efficiency by 30% or more — a direct hit to both comfort and your monthly electricity bill.
  • Electrical inspection: Loose or corroded wiring connections are a fire and failure risk. A technician tightens connections and checks for arcing or heat damage — something that’s invisible during a homeowner’s visual inspection.
  • Fan motor lubrication: Bearings in the blower and condenser fan motors need proper lubrication to run quietly and efficiently. Dry bearings lead to premature motor failure — a repair that typically costs $300–$600 and is entirely preventable with annual service.

In Canada, a professional AC tune-up typically costs $100–$250 for a standard visit. For a full picture of what a new system would cost if yours fails early, our AC Cost Calculator gives you an instant estimate based on your home size and province. You can also compare your current system’s running cost against a new one using the AC Operating Cost Calculator.

Book Your Spring AC Tune-Up Before the Rush

HVAC technicians fill up fast once warm weather arrives. Get connected with a certified local contractor — free, no obligation.

Get Free Quotes → View All HVAC Calculators

✅ Pre-vetted contractors 🔒 No obligation 🏆 Licensed & insured 🇨🇦 Serving all major Ontario cities

Knowing what to do is half the job. These are the most common mistakes that turn a preventable issue into a mid-summer emergency.

Mistake 1: Wrapping the Outdoor Unit Completely in Winter

A partial, breathable cover over the top only is fine. An airtight wrap around the entire unit traps moisture, accelerates corrosion, and creates shelter for rodents that will chew through wiring. Whatever cover you used last fall — remove it completely before your first spring test cycle.

Mistake 2: Maintaining the AC Unit but Ignoring the Ducts

A perfectly maintained AC pushing cold air through leaky ducts is like a car engine running well with a hole in the fuel line. Duct leakage is one of the most underaddressed efficiency problems in Canadian homes.

Seal visible gaps with foil-backed tape and consider a professional assessment if rooms never seem to cool properly. Our AC Savings Calculator can show you how much efficiency you’re leaving on the table.

Mistake 3: Not Running a Test Cycle Until the Heat Arrives

The worst time to discover your AC doesn’t work is the first genuinely hot day of the year, when every contractor in your city is already booked solid. Run a test cycle in April — when it’s 12–18°C outside — and let the system run for a full 15 minutes.

Listen for abnormal sounds, feel the airflow at vents, and check for ice forming on the refrigerant lines outside the house.

Mistake 4: Servicing the AC but Skipping the Furnace System

Your central AC shares the air handler and blower motor with your furnace. A dirty or struggling blower motor compromises cooling just as much as a clogged filter. Spring is ideal for bundling both — furnace inspection pricing is often reduced when paired with an AC tune-up.

Use our Furnace Cost Calculator to budget for the heating side, and our Furnace Size & BTU Calculator to confirm your unit is correctly sized for your home.

Mistake 5: Attempting to Top Up Refrigerant Yourself

In Canada, purchasing and handling refrigerants requires federal certification under environmental regulations.

Beyond the legal issue, adding refrigerant to a leaking system doesn’t solve anything — it delays the failure and risks compressor damage from overcharge. If you suspect low refrigerant (warm air, ice on lines, hissing near the unit), use our AC Troubleshooting Wizard to confirm the symptoms, then call a licensed technician.

Tune-up pricing varies across Canada based on local labour rates, contractor density, and seasonal demand. Here’s a realistic pricing guide for major cities based on industry data:

CityStandard Tune-Up (CAD)AC + Furnace BundleBest Time to Book
Toronto, ON$150–$250$250–$400April (high demand June–Aug)
Calgary, AB$120–$200$200–$350April–May (short summer season)
Vancouver, BC$130–$220$220–$370April (wildfire smoke stresses systems)
Ottawa, ON$130–$210$220–$360April–May
Edmonton, AB$110–$190$190–$330May (shorter peak season)
Winnipeg, MB$100–$180$180–$300April–May (extreme summer swings)
Hamilton, ON$120–$200$200–$340April (book early, high contractor demand)

These ranges reflect standard service visits without additional repairs. Use our AC Operating Cost Calculator to see how your city’s climate affects your annual cooling bill — and whether a more efficient system would pay off in your specific market. For full system replacement cost context, see our Air Conditioner Prices in Canada guide.

Maintenance extends AC life significantly — but not indefinitely. These are the honest signals that continued investment in an aging system is costing more than a replacement would.

  • Age over 15 years: Most central AC units have an effective lifespan of 12–20 years depending on maintenance history. Systems over 15 years old — especially pre-R410A models — are strong replacement candidates. Our Repair or Replace guide gives a full framework for making this call.
  • Repair cost exceeds 50% of replacement cost: The industry rule of thumb — if a single repair quote is more than half the cost of a new system, replacement is usually the smarter long-term investment. Use our AC Repair Cost Calculator to benchmark any quote you receive.
  • SEER rating below 13: Modern high-efficiency units achieve SEER ratings of 18–22+. An old 10 SEER unit costs nearly twice as much to run as a modern 18 SEER system. Our AC Savings Calculator shows the exact annual cost difference based on your province’s electricity rates.
  • Two or more breakdowns in a single season: Cumulative repair costs on a failing system frequently exceed what a replacement would have cost — with none of the reliability benefit. Use our AC Cost Calculator to understand the full installed cost of a replacement before your next repair decision.

The most reliable approach is to build a simple seasonal rhythm instead of treating AC maintenance as a one-time spring event:

MonthWhat To Do
🌸 AprilFull spring AC maintenance checklist. Book professional tune-up. Replace filter. Run test cycle. Use our AC Size & Tonnage Calculator if you’re unsure your system is the right size for your home.
☀️ June–AugustReplace filter monthly. Keep condenser clear of vegetation and debris. Act immediately on unusual noises or reduced cooling. Use the AC Troubleshooting Wizard before calling a technician.
🍂 SeptemberFinal filter change of the cooling season. Power down the AC. Begin fall furnace prep — use our Furnace Savings Calculator to evaluate whether an upgrade heading into winter makes financial sense.
❄️ October–NovemberBook fall furnace tune-up. Check heat exchanger, burners, flue, and CO detectors. Use our Furnace Operating Cost Calculator to assess heating efficiency. Our Furnace Recommendation Quiz helps if you’re considering an upgrade.
🌨️ February–MarchMid-winter furnace filter check. No error codes or unusual sounds? Use the Furnace Troubleshooting Wizard if anything seems off. Book your spring AC appointment early — before the April rush begins.
💡 Simplest habit you can build: Set a recurring calendar reminder for April 1st every year: “AC filter + spring maintenance.” That one habit, consistently acted on, prevents the majority of avoidable summer breakdowns and the emergency service calls that follow.

Not all contractors are equal, and pricing varies meaningfully across Canada. Here’s what to look for when booking your spring service:

  • Red Seal certification: Look for technicians with Red Seal (Inter-Provincial) credentials or province-specific gas fitter and refrigeration tickets. This is the Canadian trades baseline and indicates proper training and code compliance.
  • Written scope of work upfront: A reputable company provides a written breakdown before starting. Be cautious of unusually low “inspection only” pricing used to upsell unneeded parts on the visit.
  • Get two quotes for any repair over $300: This is widely accepted practice. Legitimate contractors won’t be offended — and the comparison often reveals significant price differences for identical work.

FurnacePrices.com connects Ontario homeowners with pre-vetted, certified HVAC contractors. Request a free, no-obligation quote from a local professional — or use our Repair or Replace Quiz first if you’re still deciding whether service or full replacement is the right call.

A properly followed AC maintenance checklist each spring is the difference between a system that reliably cools your home for another 15 years and one that fails on the hottest day of the year — when every contractor is booked and emergency rates apply.

  • Start with DIY tasks: filter replacement, condenser clearance and rinse, condensate drain flush, and a test cycle in April.
  • Book a professional tune-up for what requires a licensed tech: refrigerant check, capacitor testing, coil cleaning, and electrical inspection.
  • Build a year-round rhythm — your furnace needs the same seasonal attention heading into winter.
  • Know the replacement signals — age, SEER rating, and repair frequency — so you’re not spending money on a system that’s past its prime.

Ready to Get Your AC Checked Before Summer?

Connect with a certified local contractor through FurnacePrices.com — free quotes, no obligation, licensed professionals only.

Get Free Quotes → Estimate AC Cost

✅ Trusted by homeowners across Ontario 🔒 Free, no obligation 🏆 Vetted & licensed contractors only

How often should I service my AC in Canada?

At least once a year before summer; older or problem-prone systems benefit from twice-yearly service.

Can I do AC maintenance myself?

Basic tasks like filter change, cleaning, and drain flushing are DIY. Technical work needs a licensed HVAC technician.

What does a professional AC tune-up include?

Refrigerant check, coil cleaning, electrical inspection, capacitor testing, drain flush, and full system testing.

How much does an AC tune-up cost in Canada?

Typically $100–$250 depending on city and service package.

What is the most important AC maintenance task?

Air filter replacement — it protects airflow, efficiency, and air quality.

What’s included in a full AC checklist?

DIY + professional: filter, cleaning, drain flush, thermostat test + refrigerant, electrical, and coil servicing.

How do I prepare my AC before summer?

In April: change filter, clean outdoor unit, flush drain, run test cycle, and schedule a professional tune-up.

Hans Vaillancourt
Hans Vaillancourt
Articles: 109