HVAC System Not Cooling: Diagnostic Checklist
A structured diagnostic checklist for an HVAC system that is not cooling helps homeowners and technicians isolate root causes before committing to parts, labor, or replacement. This page covers the definition of a cooling failure, the mechanical and electrical chain of events that produces conditioned air, the most common fault scenarios organized by component, and the decision boundaries that separate a DIY-appropriate fix from work requiring a licensed contractor. The scope applies to central split systems, packaged units, and mini-split configurations across residential US applications.
Definition and scope
A cooling failure is any condition in which an HVAC system runs — or attempts to run — without delivering a measurable reduction in indoor air temperature. This is distinct from a system that fails to start entirely. Cooling failures fall into two primary categories:
- Partial cooling failure: The system produces some conditioned air, but the supply air temperature does not reach the design setpoint (typically 15–20°F below return air temperature for a properly charged residential system).
- Total cooling failure: The system runs but delivers no temperature differential between supply and return.
This distinction matters because partial and total failures map to different fault trees. A split-system HVAC repair guide will address split-system-specific failure modes, while packaged unit diagnostics follow a separate path covered in the packaged HVAC systems repair reference.
Cooling failures are governed by several overlapping regulatory frameworks. Refrigerant handling is federally regulated under Section 608 of the Clean Air Act, enforced by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA Section 608). Technicians who purchase refrigerant or open refrigerant circuits must hold EPA 608 certification. Electrical work on HVAC equipment is subject to the National Electrical Code (NFPA 70 2023 edition), with local amendments enforced by the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ).
How it works
A residential split-system cooling cycle depends on four major components operating in sequence: the compressor, condenser coil, expansion device, and evaporator coil.
- Compression: The compressor pressurizes refrigerant vapor, raising its temperature.
- Condensation: High-pressure, high-temperature refrigerant flows to the condenser coil in the outdoor unit, where a fan dissipates heat to the outside air, causing the refrigerant to condense into a liquid.
- Expansion: The liquid refrigerant passes through a metering device (TXV or fixed orifice), which drops its pressure and temperature sharply.
- Evaporation: Cold, low-pressure refrigerant flows through the evaporator coil in the air handler, absorbing heat from indoor air. The blower motor circulates indoor air across this coil.
A failure at any of these four stages interrupts the cycle and results in a cooling failure. Electrical supply failures — at the capacitor, contactor, or control board — can prevent the cycle from starting at all, while refrigerant loss degrades it incrementally.
Common scenarios
The following structured breakdown organizes the most frequently diagnosed cooling failure causes by subsystem, from simplest to most complex.
Thermostat and controls
- Incorrect mode setting: System set to "fan only" or "heat" mode.
- Thermostat calibration drift: A miscalibrated thermostat may not trigger the cooling call. See HVAC thermostat repair and calibration for measurement procedures.
- Failed control board: The HVAC control board may not transmit the Y-signal (cooling call) to the outdoor unit.
Airflow restriction
- A clogged air filter reduces airflow across the evaporator coil, causing the coil to drop below 32°F and freeze. Ice formation blocks airflow entirely. This is one of the most common causes of both partial and total cooling failures. The HVAC system freezing up causes reference covers this failure mode in detail.
- Blocked or closed supply registers reduce system static pressure and can cause similar freeze-up behavior.
Refrigerant issues
- Low refrigerant charge: A refrigerant leak reduces the system's ability to absorb heat at the evaporator. Suction line pressures will read below manufacturer specification on gauges. Under EPA Section 608, only certified technicians may add refrigerant to a system or repair a leak. The HVAC refrigerant leak repair page covers the detection and repair workflow.
- Overcharge: Excess refrigerant causes high head pressure and compressor strain, reducing efficiency.
- R-22 phase-out impact: Systems still using R-22 refrigerant face supply and cost constraints following the EPA's January 2020 production ban. The R-22 refrigerant phase-out repair impact page addresses retrofit and replacement decisions.
Compressor and electrical
- Failed start capacitor or run capacitor: A failed capacitor prevents the compressor or condenser fan motor from starting. Capacitor failure is one of the most common single-component failures in outdoor units.
- Failed contactor: The contactor closes the high-voltage circuit to the compressor when the thermostat calls for cooling. A burned or pitted contactor prevents the outdoor unit from energizing.
- Compressor failure: A seized or short-cycled compressor requires compressor repair or replacement. Compressor failure is frequently a downstream consequence of prolonged low refrigerant or electrical stress, not an isolated event.
Condenser and evaporator coil fouling
- A dirty condenser coil increases head pressure and reduces heat rejection. A fouled evaporator coil reduces heat absorption. Both are addressable through cleaning, but accessing the evaporator coil in a sealed air handler often requires permits in jurisdictions that classify this as an equipment modification.
Decision boundaries
Not every cooling failure is within the scope of unlicensed repair. The following classification separates the fault categories by required credential and permit status.
DIY-appropriate (no license or permit required in most US jurisdictions):
- Filter replacement
- Thermostat mode and setting verification
- Thermostat battery replacement
- Register and return-air grille clearing
- Outdoor unit debris clearing (leaves, grass clippings)
Requires EPA 608 certification:
- Any work that involves opening a refrigerant circuit
- Adding refrigerant to an undercharged system
- Recovering refrigerant before component replacement
Requires licensed HVAC contractor (and may require a permit):
- Compressor replacement
- Coil replacement (evaporator or condenser)
- Refrigerant line repair or replacement
- Control board replacement in some jurisdictions
- Any electrical work on the disconnect box, line-set, or whip
Permit requirements for HVAC equipment repair and replacement are set by the local AHJ, informed by the International Mechanical Code (IMC) published by the International Code Council (ICC) and the International Residential Code (IRC). Jurisdictions that have adopted these model codes generally require permits for refrigerant system work and major component replacement, with inspections confirming installation to manufacturer specification and code.
The HVAC repair licensing requirements by state resource provides state-level licensing classifications, and HVAC technician certifications explained covers the EPA 608, NATE, and state-specific credential landscape. For cost modeling across these repair scenarios, see HVAC repair cost factors.
References
- US EPA — Section 608 Stationary Refrigeration
- International Code Council — International Mechanical Code (IMC)
- NFPA 70 — National Electrical Code (NEC), 2023 edition
- North American Technician Excellence (NATE)
- US EPA — Phaseout of Ozone-Depleting Substances (R-22)
- International Code Council — International Residential Code (IRC)