DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How Much Does an AC Tune-Up Cost?
An AC tune-up is the cheapest visit an HVAC company makes, which is exactly why it is often a loss leader. The low price gets a technician in front of your system, and sometimes in front of a list of recommended repairs. A real tune-up is genuinely worth it for keeping the system alive and the warranty valid. Knowing what should be included helps you tell maintenance from a sales call.
The quick version
- A tune-up is a low-cost seasonal visit, often priced as a loss leader to get a technician in the door.
- A real one includes cleaning the coils, checking refrigerant and electrical parts, and testing performance.
- Many manufacturer warranties require documented annual maintenance to stay valid.
- Watch for upsells, since a tune-up is where a small capacitor or a refrigerant recharge gets recommended.
- Maintenance plans bundle spring and fall visits, which can be worth it or just a subscription.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 10% less than the advertised list price for ac tune-up.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases and from a small sample so far. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- $225“think i pay about $225 a year or so”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
The base tune-up price is low and fairly consistent, which is the point, since it is designed to get a technician to your system. What varies is everything that gets recommended once they are there. A genuinely worn capacitor or a low refrigerant level turns a cheap visit into an AC repair, and a refrigerant recharge in particular is a common add-on. Multi-visit maintenance plans, region, and whether the company is a national chain or a local shop move the sticker price. The honest tune-up and the upsell machine can look identical on the invoice, so the variation is as much about the company's style as the work.
How to pay less
- Ask exactly what the tune-up includes in writing, since 'tune-up' is not a standard checklist.
- Take upsell recommendations with a grain of salt and get a second opinion on anything big.
- Do the easy maintenance yourself, like changing filters and clearing debris around the outdoor unit.
- Compare a maintenance plan's cost against two standalone visits before subscribing.
- Book in the shoulder season, since spring and fall specials beat mid-summer pricing.
- If a tune-up 'finds' low refrigerant, ask them to locate the leak rather than just do a refrigerant recharge.
Common questions
What should an AC tune-up include?
A proper one cleans the condenser and evaporator coils, checks refrigerant level and pressures, tests the capacitor and electrical connections, inspects the blower and drain line, and confirms the system is cooling to spec. Ask for the checklist in writing. If the 'tune-up' is just a quick look and a sales pitch, it is not worth much.
How often does my AC need a tune-up?
Once a year is the usual advice, ideally in spring before cooling season. A heat pump that runs year-round is often serviced twice, in spring and fall, since it works in both seasons. Regular filter changes between visits do a lot of the heavy lifting.
Is a maintenance plan worth it?
Sometimes. Plans bundle two seasonal visits plus perks like priority scheduling and a discount on repairs. Add up what two standalone visits would cost and compare, and read whether it auto-renews. For some homeowners it is convenient, and for others it is a subscription they barely use.
They found a problem during the tune-up, is it real?
It might be, and it might be an easy upsell. A weak capacitor or a low charge can be genuine, but a tune-up is also the moment companies pitch add-ons. If the recommendation turns a cheap visit into a real AC repair, get the failed part named and consider a second opinion before saying yes.
Can I skip the tune-up to save money?
You can, but it often costs more later. Skipped maintenance can void a manufacturer warranty, and a dirty, unchecked system runs less efficiently and fails sooner. A neglected unit is more likely to need a real AC repair in the middle of summer, which is the expensive time to need one.