The short answer: 15-20 years for a central air conditioner, 12-15 years for a heat pump, and 20-25 years for a ductless mini-split (indoor unit). But those numbers assume proper maintenance. Our technician Celvin, who handles system evaluations across the Simpsonville and Chesnee areas, sees the full spectrum: “I’ve worked on 22-year-old systems in Simpsonville that are still running strong because the homeowner did every tune-up. And I’ve condemned 9-year-old systems in brand-new subdivisions because nobody touched them after the builder warranty expired.” Without maintenance, expect significantly less.
What Affects Lifespan
Maintenance History
This is the single biggest factor. A system that receives annual professional maintenance and regular filter changes will outlast a neglected system by 5-7 years on average. Dirty coils, low refrigerant, and clogged filters make the compressor work harder, shortening its life.
Usage Intensity
In Upstate SC, cooling systems run 6-8 months per year. That’s more wear than systems in cooler climates see. Heat pumps that handle both heating and cooling cycle year-round, which is why they have shorter lifespans than cooling-only AC units.
Installation Quality
A properly sized, properly charged, properly installed system lasts significantly longer than one that was rushed, undersized, or overcharged. We’ve seen poorly installed systems fail in 7-8 years. The quality of the original installation matters more than most homeowners realize.
Equipment Quality
Not all brands and models are equal. Commercial-grade compressors, copper versus aluminum coils, and build quality all affect durability. That said, even a premium system will fail early if it’s poorly installed or never maintained.
Environmental Factors
Coastal salt air, heavy pollen, cottonwood, construction dust, and proximity to dryer vents all accelerate condenser coil degradation. In the Upstate, pollen and cottonwood are the primary environmental concerns — annual condenser cleaning is essential.
Signs Your AC Is Nearing End of Life
- Age 12-15+ with increasing repair frequency
- R-22 refrigerant — this refrigerant is no longer manufactured and costs $50-$150+ per pound. Any R-22 system is overdue for replacement.
- Compressor failure — if the compressor fails on a system over 10 years old, replacement is almost always the better investment than a $2,000+ compressor swap.
- Efficiency decline — energy bills rising 15-20%+ compared to the same period in previous years, with no rate change.
- Comfort decline — the system can’t maintain the set temperature on hot days when it used to.
- Frequent repairs — the “rule of $5,000”: multiply the repair cost by the age of the system. If the result exceeds $5,000, replace. Example: $400 repair × 14 years = $5,600 → replace.
Repair vs. Replace Decision Framework
Repair makes sense when:
- System is under 10 years old
- First major repair
- Repair cost is under $500
- System uses R-410A or newer refrigerant
- The system otherwise performs well
Replace makes sense when:
- System is over 12-15 years old
- Second or third major repair in recent years
- Uses R-22 refrigerant
- Compressor has failed
- Energy bills are significantly higher than comparable homes
- You’re planning to sell the home (new HVAC is a major selling point)
What You Get with a New System
Modern AC systems and heat pumps are dramatically more efficient than units from 15-20 years ago. A 2006 system rated at 10 SEER compared to a 2026 system rated at 16 SEER2 represents roughly 40% less energy to produce the same cooling. For a home spending $200/month on cooling, that’s $80/month in savings.
Variable-speed systems offer even greater savings plus better humidity control, quieter operation, and more consistent temperatures.
Plan Ahead
The worst time to buy a new HVAC system is during an emergency — you’re under pressure, options are limited, and installation is rushed. If your system is approaching 12-15 years old, start the conversation now. Get a load calculation, compare options, and plan the replacement on your timeline — not the system’s.
YOUTUBE EMBED: One Drain – Waldrop Plumbing Air Electric TV Commercial — @YallCallWally
Call Waldrop Plumbing Air Electric at (864) 536-0887 for a free replacement consultation.
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