The compressor is the most expensive single component in a central air conditioning or heat pump system. When it fails, you’re suddenly facing a bill that can range from $800 to over $3,000 just for the compressor replacement, and that’s before you find out the rest of the system has issues too. The decision to repair or replace the whole system is one of the most financially significant HVAC choices a homeowner will make.
This guide breaks down compressor replacement costs by system type and unit age, lays out the repair vs. replace decision framework, and tells you when each option is the right call.
What Does an AC Compressor Do?
The compressor is the pump of your refrigerant circuit. It pressurizes refrigerant gas from the indoor coil (where it absorbed heat from your home) and forces it into the outdoor coil (where it releases that heat to the outside air). Everything else in the system, the metering device, the coils, the refrigerant itself, depends on the compressor to move the refrigerant through the cycle.
When the compressor fails, the system can still blow air, but it won’t remove any heat. You’ll get nothing but warm indoor air blowing from your vents.
Signs Your Compressor is Failing
- System blows warm air despite running continuously
- Loud clicking, grinding, or screeching from the outdoor unit
- Circuit breaker trips when the AC starts
- Outdoor unit fan runs but outdoor unit hums without starting
- Error codes: flash code 11 or 12 on most units, or compressor-specific codes on communicating systems
- Compressor short-cycles (turns on and off rapidly)
How to Fix It
How Much Does AC Compressor Replacement Cost?
Costs vary significantly by system type, compressor model, refrigerant type, and region. These ranges represent national averages including labor.
Replacement Cost by System Type
| System Type | Compressor Cost (Part Only) | Total Installed Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard central AC (1.5–3 ton) | $400–$900 | $1,200–$2,200 |
| Standard central AC (3.5–5 ton) | $600–$1,200 | $1,600–$2,800 |
| Heat pump (1.5–3 ton) | $500–$1,000 | $1,300–$2,500 |
| Heat pump (3.5–5 ton) | $700–$1,400 | $1,800–$3,200 |
| Variable-speed / inverter system | $900–$2,200 | $2,200–$4,500 |
| Mini-split (per zone) | $400–$1,000 | $1,000–$2,000 |
What Drives the Cost Up
Refrigerant type: R-22 (Freon) systems are significantly more expensive to service. R-22 has been phased out and runs $50–$150 per pound versus $10–$20 for R-410A. If your system uses R-22 and the compressor failed due to a leak, expect refrigerant costs alone to add $300–$800 to the bill.
Hard-start kit: Many technicians recommend adding a hard-start kit (a start capacitor and potential relay) when replacing a compressor. This reduces startup stress on the new compressor and adds $50–$150 to the job.
Labor market: Labor rates vary dramatically by region. HVAC labor in the Northeast and Pacific Coast runs $100–$175/hour. The South and Midwest typically runs $75–$125/hour.
Warranty requirements: Many compressor manufacturers require a licensed installer and specific installation procedures to honor warranty. Skipping a licensed install to save money can void a 5–10 year compressor warranty.
Refrigerant recovery and recharge: Any compressor replacement requires the existing refrigerant to be recovered before the old compressor is removed and the system recharged after the new one is installed. Expect $150–$350 for this step alone.
The Age Decision: When Does Compressor Replacement Make Sense?
The age of your system is the single most important factor in the repair vs. replace decision. Here’s a practical framework:
Under 5 Years Old
Almost always repair. A compressor failure on a system under 5 years old is usually a warranty item. Most residential AC systems carry a 5-year parts warranty; many carry 10 years if registered. Call the manufacturer’s warranty line before agreeing to any out-of-pocket repair.
Even if the system is barely out of warranty, replacing a new system for a single component failure is rarely justified. Repair it.
5–8 Years Old
Usually repair, but evaluate carefully. At this age, the system has significant life remaining, typical lifespan is 12–20 years. However, a compressor failure in this age range can sometimes signal broader system stress (improper installation, refrigerant leaks, poor maintenance).
Before approving a repair:
- Ask the technician to check refrigerant charge, capacitor health, and coil condition
- Get a clear answer on why the compressor failed
- If the answer is “it just wore out” with no other findings, repair is likely the right call
- If there are signs of a systemic problem (persistent refrigerant loss, undersized ductwork, repeated electrical issues), factor that into the decision
8–12 Years Old
The gray zone, compare carefully. A system in this age range may have 5–10 good years remaining, or it may be approaching end of life. The calculation: divide the compressor replacement cost by the remaining life you expect to get.
The 50% rule: If compressor replacement costs more than 50% of the installed cost of a new system of the same size, serious consideration of full replacement is warranted.
Also factor:
- If the existing system uses R-22 refrigerant, replacement becomes much more attractive, R-22 equipment is an orphaned platform
- Current SEER rating: systems from 2010–2014 are often 13–16 SEER. Today’s standard is 18–20 SEER. The efficiency improvement from replacing a 13-SEER 10-year-old system can offset some of the replacement cost through lower utility bills
- Coil condition: if the indoor coil is showing signs of corrosion or leaks, factor in a likely coil replacement in the near future
12+ Years Old
Replacement is usually the better financial decision. A system that’s 12+ years old has limited remaining life. Putting $1,500–$2,500 into a 13-year-old system that might only last another 2–4 years rarely makes financial sense.
The exception: if the system is in excellent condition otherwise (clean coils, tight refrigerant charge, original coil, good ductwork), a compressor swap can make sense, but get an honest assessment from the technician.
What to Ask Before Approving a Compressor Replacement
- Is this unit under warranty? Ask for the serial number and manufacturer’s warranty lookup result.
- Why did the compressor fail? Understanding the root cause tells you whether a replacement compressor will last.
- Is the refrigerant charge correct? Low refrigerant stresses compressors. If there was a leak, it must be found and repaired before the new compressor goes in.
- What is the condition of the rest of the system? Coil, capacitor, contactor, and refrigerant charge should all be checked as part of a compressor replacement job.
- What warranty comes with the new compressor? Most aftermarket compressors carry a 1-year parts warranty. OEM replacements often carry 5 years.
- Get a quote on a new system. Any time a compressor replacement is in the $1,500+ range, you should have a replacement quote in hand to compare.
Parts You May Need
When a compressor fails, certain other components are frequently replaced at the same visit:
| Part | Why | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Dual run capacitor | Compressor failure is often caused by or associated with weak capacitor | $25–$75 (part) |
| Contactor | Pitted contacts can cause voltage drops that stress the new compressor | $20–$60 (part) |
| Hard-start kit | Reduces inrush current stress on new compressor | $50–$150 installed |
| Refrigerant charge | System must be recovered and recharged | Included in most quotes |
| Part | Purchase Link |
|---|---|
| Dual Run Capacitor (45+5 µF, 440V) | View on Amazon |
| 2-Pole 30A Contactor | View on Amazon |
| Hard Start Kit (5-2-1 or equivalent) | View on Amazon |
| Coil Cleaning Spray | View on Amazon |
When to Call a Pro
Compressor replacement is not a DIY job. It requires EPA 608 certification for refrigerant handling, brazing or flare fittings for refrigerant line connections, a vacuum pump and manifold gauge set to evacuate and recharge the system, and torque specs for electrical connections. A DIY error on a compressor replacement can damage the new compressor immediately.
What you CAN do yourself before calling:
- Confirm the fault is actually the compressor (not just a bad capacitor or contactor)
- Test the run capacitor with a multimeter, a weak capacitor mimics compressor failure
- Check the contactor and verify voltage is reaching the compressor terminals
- Pull the model and serial number so you’re ready for the warranty lookup
FAQ
How long does an AC compressor replacement take? A straightforward replacement on a standard residential system takes 3–5 hours. Variable-speed systems with inverter drives can take 5–8 hours. The longest part is typically refrigerant recovery, vacuuming, and recharge, the refrigerant work cannot be rushed.
Can I add a hard-start kit myself to try to get an aging compressor running again? Yes, a hard-start kit is one of the few compressor-related tasks that’s homeowner-accessible. It connects in parallel with the run capacitor and reduces the current spike at compressor startup. On a compressor that struggles to start (hums then trips), a hard-start kit sometimes buys months or years of additional life. Cost is $25–$75 for the kit. See the parts table above.
My contractor said the compressor is seized. What does that mean? A seized compressor has a mechanically locked piston or scroll element, it hums but the crankshaft won’t turn. You can sometimes confirm this: with the unit powered down and the capacitor discharged, try turning the compressor shaft by hand (on scroll units, this isn’t always accessible). No rotation = seized. A seized compressor cannot be repaired, it must be replaced.
Does replacing the compressor require replacing the indoor coil too? Not always, but if you’re changing refrigerant type (which is common when replacing an R-22 compressor), a matched indoor coil is typically required. If the refrigerant type stays the same and the indoor coil is in good shape, it can stay.
Is a 10-year parts warranty on a new system worth paying extra for? Yes, strongly, especially for the compressor. A 10-year warranty on a 5-ton heat pump compressor that costs $1,400+ retail is genuinely valuable. Confirm the warranty requires registration (most do) and register the unit the same day it’s installed.