South Florida has one of the most demanding HVAC environments in the country. Average humidity hovers between 70% and 90% for most of the year, temperatures stay above 80°F from April through October, and your air conditioning system runs almost continuously during those months. A unit that might last 18–20 years in a temperate northern climate will typically last 12–15 years here — and without proper maintenance, you're looking at 8–10. The difference is almost entirely maintenance.
The most important maintenance task for South Florida homeowners is keeping the condensate drain line clear. In high humidity, mold and algae grow rapidly inside the drain line. When it clogs — and it will clog without regular flushing — the drain pan overflows. That means water damage to your ceiling, your walls, and your flooring. Most modern systems have a float switch that shuts off the unit when the pan is full, which protects you from catastrophic damage but leaves you without cooling in the middle of summer. We recommend flushing the drain line with diluted bleach every 90 days.
Filter replacement is the second critical task — and the one South Florida homeowners most consistently under-do. A dirty filter restricts airflow, which makes your system work harder and run longer to reach your thermostat setpoint. In South Florida conditions, a standard 1-inch filter should be replaced every 30 days, not the 90 days printed on the packaging. The packaging was written for a house in Denver. If anyone in your home has allergies or asthma, consider upgrading to a MERV-11 or MERV-13 filter. The pressure drop is slightly higher, but the air quality benefit is significant.
Annual professional maintenance — not just filter replacement — is essential here in a way that it isn't in every climate. A qualified technician should check refrigerant levels, clean the evaporator and condenser coils, verify the electrical connections, test the capacitor and contactor, and measure the system's static pressure. In South Florida humidity, coils accumulate biological growth faster than anywhere else in the country. A dirty coil reduces efficiency by up to 40% and, more importantly, creates a breeding ground for mold spores that get circulated through your living space. Twice-yearly professional maintenance — typically fall and spring — is what we recommend for most homes in Miami-Dade and Broward County.