Most South Florida homeowners think about their air conditioner in two terms: is it cooling the house, and how high is the electric bill? What they rarely think about is the evaporator coil — the single most critical component inside their HVAC system, and almost certainly the dirtiest part of it.
The evaporator coil sits inside your air handler and is where refrigerant absorbs heat from your indoor air, creating the cooling effect your system delivers. In South Florida, this coil runs near-continuously for most of the year, operates in a permanently wet environment, and collects everything that slips past your air filter. Without professional cleaning, it becomes coated with mold, biological growth, and compacted debris within 12 to 24 months — even in well-maintained homes.
If your air conditioner runs noticeably longer cycles to reach the same thermostat setting — or struggles on warm afternoons — a dirty evaporator coil is one of the most common causes. The debris layer on the coil surface directly reduces heat transfer. Before paying for a refrigerant recharge, have the coil inspected. Many systems diagnosed as "low on refrigerant" simply have a coil that has never been cleaned.
Your HVAC system circulates refrigerant between two coils: the evaporator coil inside your air handler and the condenser coil in the outdoor unit. As warm indoor air passes over the cold evaporator coil surface, heat transfers into the refrigerant — that exchange is what produces cooled air. For this process to work efficiently, the coil surface must be clean and unobstructed.
A coil coated in dust, mold, or biological matter has significantly reduced thermal conductivity. The refrigerant still flows, but the insulating layer of contamination prevents effective heat transfer. The result: your system runs longer, works harder, consumes more electricity, and delivers less cooling per dollar spent.
Professional evaporator coil cleaning is not a task that can be accomplished with a can of hardware-store coil spray. A proper service involves direct access to the coil, mechanical cleaning, and appropriate chemical treatment based on the contamination level found.
Research from ASHRAE and the Department of Energy shows that even moderate coil contamination reduces HVAC efficiency by 5–15%. In South Florida, where HVAC accounts for roughly half of a typical $200–$350 monthly electricity bill, a 10% efficiency loss costs $10–$17 per month — $120–$200 per year — in unnecessary electricity. Professional coil cleaning typically pays for itself within a single cooling season.
US DuctMaster recommends annual evaporator coil cleaning for South Florida homes. Given year-round operating conditions and elevated mold pressure in this climate, annual cleaning is the minimum interval that keeps your coil performing efficiently and prevents biological contamination from establishing itself. Call (645) 220-0535 for a free inspection — no obligation, no call fee.
The evaporator coil is the heart of your air conditioning system's cooling function. In South Florida, it operates under conditions that accelerate contamination faster than almost any other climate in the country. A dirty coil raises your electricity bill, distributes mold spores through your home on every cycle, and shortens your entire HVAC system's lifespan by forcing the compressor to overwork. Annual professional coil cleaning is the single highest-return HVAC maintenance investment a South Florida homeowner can make.
No obligation, no call fee, same-day available across South Florida.