Home / Air Conditioners / When to Replace an Air Conditioner: Signs to Watch
GUIDE · 2026

When to Replace an Air Conditioner: Signs to Watch

CWBy Casey Walsh, Home, Kitchen & Pet Products Editor· Updated Jun 2026
We earn a commission if you buy through our links, at no extra cost to you. Prices are pulled live from Amazon and may change — see our disclosure.

The short answer: most air conditioners are worth replacing once they cross roughly the ten to fifteen year mark and start needing repeated repairs, or sooner if they use the old R-22 refrigerant, cannot keep your room at its set temperature, or have a CEER or SEER2 rating far below what current models deliver. A single failed part on a young unit is usually a repair. A pattern of failures on an older unit, climbing electricity use, or a system that no longer fits your space is a replacement. This page walks through the specific signs that tip the decision, with a reference table you can check your own unit against.

We do not run a physical lab at TheTestedHub. The guidance here is built from manufacturer specification sheets, published efficiency standards, and patterns we see across hundreds of verified owner reviews for brands like Midea, LG, Frigidaire, GE, Hisense, Friedrich, Daikin, Mitsubishi, and Pioneer. The goal is to help you read your own situation honestly rather than replace on impulse or limp along with a unit that is quietly costing you money.

Sign 1: Age has crossed the reliability cliff

Window and portable units commonly serve well for eight to twelve years. Mini split systems from brands like Mitsubishi, Daikin, and Senville often run fifteen to twenty years when maintained. Once a unit passes that window, internal components such as the compressor, capacitor, and fan motor begin failing in clusters rather than one at a time. If you want the full breakdown of expected service life by type, our companion piece on how long air conditioners last covers it in depth. As a rule of thumb, when the age of the unit multiplied by the cost of the next repair starts approaching the cost of a new unit, replacement wins.

Sign 2: It still cools, but not the way it used to

A healthy AC pulls a room down to its set temperature and then cycles off. If yours runs constantly and never quite gets there, something has degraded. The causes range from a clogged coil to low refrigerant to a tired compressor. Before you assume the worst, rule out the cheap fixes covered in why your AC is not cooling, because a dirty filter or blocked condenser can mimic a dying unit. But if the airflow and refrigerant are fine and the room still will not cool, the compressor is likely losing capacity, and that is rarely worth fixing on an older window or portable model.

Check the sizing too

Sometimes the unit is not failing, it was simply never the right size. An undersized AC runs flat out and still loses on a hot afternoon, which wears it out faster and feels like a failure. If your room changed (you finished a basement, removed a wall, added west-facing glass) the math may have shifted. Confirm against our BTU chart by room size before replacing with the same capacity, because buying the same wrong size again just repeats the problem.

Sign 3: Refrigerant type makes it a dead end

This is the cleanest replacement signal of all. Older systems charged with R-22 refrigerant are effectively obsolete; production was phased down and the cost to recharge a leaking R-22 system has climbed steeply. Modern units use R-410A or R-32. If a technician tells you your system runs R-22 and is low on charge, you are paying premium money to top up a system that is on borrowed time. Replacing it with an R-32 mini split or a current window unit ends the problem permanently and usually pays back through lower running cost.

Sign 4: Your electricity bill keeps climbing in summer

Efficiency degrades as a unit ages, and the standards it was built to may be years behind current ones. A window AC from a decade ago might carry a CEER around 9 to 10, while many current models sit at 12 or higher. That gap shows up directly on your summer bill. If you have noticed the same thermostat setting costing more each year, that is the unit working harder for the same cooling. Our explainer on how much electricity an air conditioner uses shows how to estimate your own draw, and a newer high-CEER unit can meaningfully cut it.

Sign 5: Noise, smell, and moisture problems

New sounds are warnings. Grinding, rattling, or a loud hum that was not there before points at a failing motor or compressor bearing. A burning or musty smell can mean electrical trouble or mold deep in the unit. Water pooling where it never used to is another red flag. Some of these are repairable, so it is worth diagnosing first; the causes behind a noisy unit are explained in why your AC is making noise. But when noise, weak cooling, and high bills all show up together on an older unit, they are usually symptoms of the same underlying wear, and that combination is your replacement trigger.

Repair or replace: a quick reference

Use this table to weigh your own situation. It is a guide, not a verdict, and assumes the unit is otherwise in normal condition.

Situation Typical lean Why
Unit under 5 years, single part failure Repair Plenty of service life left; one part is cheap relative to the unit
Unit 8 to 12 years, repeated repairs Replace Failures cluster; repair spend approaches new-unit cost
Uses R-22 refrigerant and is leaking Replace Refrigerant is being phased out and costly to recharge
Compressor failure on older unit Replace Compressor is the most expensive component; rarely worth it past mid-life
Cannot reach set temp, but filter and coil are clean Replace or resize Lost capacity or wrong size for the room
Bill rising yearly at same setting Replace if old Efficiency has degraded; newer CEER/SEER2 recovers cost
Loud new mechanical noise on aging unit Diagnose, lean replace Motor or bearing wear often signals broader decline

Common mistakes when deciding

Replacing because of one symptom

A clogged filter or a frozen coil can make a perfectly good unit feel dead. Always clean the filter and clear the coils first; our step-by-step on cleaning your AC filter takes ten minutes and resolves more “broken” units than people expect.

Buying the same size again

If the old unit struggled, matching its BTU rating repeats the mistake. Recalculate for the actual room, factoring in ceiling height, sun exposure, and occupancy, not just floor area.

Ignoring efficiency in the cost math

People compare the repair cost against the sticker of a new unit and stop there. The running cost over the next several summers belongs in that math. A low-efficiency survivor can cost more to keep than to retire.

Replacing a central or ducted problem with a like-for-like

If a central system is failing, a ductless mini split is sometimes the smarter replacement, especially for additions or rooms that were never comfortable. The tradeoffs are laid out in mini split vs central AC.

What to buy when you do replace

Once you have decided to replace, match the new unit to the room and the install type. For a bedroom you will weight noise heavily; for a whole apartment you may prefer a quiet, efficient portable or a window unit you can move. If you want curated picks across formats and room sizes, our roundup of the best air conditioners for every room is the place to start, and from there you can branch into portable, window, or mini split shortlists depending on your install constraints.

Sizing the replacement correctly

BTU is the headline number. A small bedroom of around 150 square feet typically wants 5,000 to 6,000 BTU, a living room near 400 square feet wants roughly 9,000 to 10,000 BTU, and a large open space can need 12,000 BTU or more. Oversizing is not free; an oversized unit short-cycles, cools fast but pulls little humidity, and leaves the room clammy. Right-sizing matters as much on the replacement as it did originally.

Noise level

Modern inverter-driven units from LG, Midea, and Friedrich run noticeably quieter than older fixed-speed compressors, often in the low-to-mid 40s in decibels on lower fan settings. If the old unit kept you awake, this alone can justify the upgrade.

Efficiency and install type

Look at CEER for window and portable units and SEER2 for mini splits. Higher numbers mean lower bills for the same cooling. Match install type to your home: window units need a suitable sash, portables need a hose vent to a window, and mini splits need a small wall penetration and professional setup but deliver the best efficiency and quietest operation. Filter maintenance is simple on all three; a rinseable mesh filter cleaned monthly during the season keeps efficiency up and prevents many of the “not cooling” complaints that send people shopping in the first place.

Final verdict

Replace your air conditioner when the evidence stacks rather than on a single bad day. Age past its expected life, repeated repairs, an R-22 refrigerant dead end, a unit that can no longer reach the set temperature with clean filters and coils, a summer bill that climbs every year, and new mechanical noise are the signs that matter. Any one of them on a young, efficient unit is usually a repair. Two or more on a unit past mid-life is your cue to move on. When you do, size it for the actual room, weigh noise and CEER or SEER2 alongside the purchase, and choose the install type that fits your home. Replaced thoughtfully, the new unit cools better, runs quieter, and quietly pays you back every month it runs.

Common questions

At what age should I replace my air conditioner?

Window and portable units commonly warrant replacement around eight to twelve years, while mini split systems often serve fifteen to twenty years with maintenance. Age alone is not decisive, but once a unit passes its expected life and starts needing repeated repairs, replacement usually wins on cost.

Is it worth repairing an AC that uses R-22 refrigerant?

Usually not if it is leaking. R-22 has been phased down and is costly to recharge, so you are paying a premium to extend a system that is on borrowed time. Replacing it with a current R-410A or R-32 unit ends the problem and typically lowers running cost.

My AC runs constantly but the room stays warm. Replace it?

First rule out cheap causes: a dirty filter, blocked coils, or a clogged condenser can all mimic a dying unit. If airflow and refrigerant are fine and the room still will not reach the set temperature, the compressor is likely losing capacity, which is rarely worth repairing on an older window or portable model.

How do I know if my AC is too small rather than failing?

An undersized unit runs at full power and still loses on hot afternoons, which feels like failure. If your room changed (added glass, removed a wall, finished a basement) recheck the BTU needed against a room-size chart. Buying the same wrong size again just repeats the problem.

Will a new AC actually lower my electricity bill?

Often yes, especially if the old unit is several years old. Efficiency degrades with age and older units were built to lower standards. A current model with a higher CEER or SEER2 delivers the same cooling for less energy, and that difference shows up directly on summer bills.

Is loud noise from my AC a sign I need to replace it?

New grinding, rattling, or a loud hum can point to a failing motor or compressor bearing. On a younger unit some of these are repairable, so diagnose first. But when new noise appears alongside weak cooling and rising bills on an older unit, those symptoms usually share one cause: general wear, which points to replacement.

Should I replace a failing central AC with the same type?

Not always. For additions, hard-to-cool rooms, or homes where ductwork is a problem, a ductless mini split can be a more efficient and quieter replacement than another central system. Compare the cost, cooling, and install tradeoffs before defaulting to like-for-like.

CW
Casey WalshHome, Kitchen & Pet Products Editor

Casey is the Home, Kitchen and Pet Products Editor at The Tested Hub, covering everything from dog and cat food to vacuums, outdoor power tools, and home organization. With years of real-world product testing experience and a house full of pets, Casey evaluates pet food on nutritional merit against AAFCO guidelines and puts home gear through real-world use in a busy shared household. Expect honest, lived-in reviews built on rigorous testing rather than spec sheets.

10+ years of real-world consumer product testingEvaluates pet food against AAFCO nutritional guidelinesReal-world testing across home, kitchen, and outdoor categoriesMulti-pet household reviewer for pet food and accessories

More guides