AC Refrigerant Leak Symptoms: What to Watch For
An air conditioning system is a closed loop. The refrigerant charge is set at the factory and should never need topping off. If your AC is low on refrigerant, there is a leak somewhere in the system.
The problem with refrigerant leaks is that they are progressive. A tiny pinhole leak can take months to show symptoms. A larger leak from a puncture or corrosion hole can drain the system in days. In either case, running the system with low refrigerant damages the compressor over time.
This guide covers the symptoms, how technicians find leaks, what repairs cost, and the special situation with R22 systems that are being phased out.
Common Symptoms
- Warm air blowing from vents. The most obvious sign. Low refrigerant cannot absorb enough heat from indoor air to produce cold supply air.
- Ice on the refrigerant lines. The suction line (the larger insulated line) freezes when refrigerant pressure drops. Ice can spread to the outdoor unit valve.
- Hissing or bubbling sound. A hiss at the indoor or outdoor unit indicates an active leak. A bubbling sound from the lines may mean refrigerant is boiling at low pressure.
- AC runs constantly without satisfying the thermostat. The system runs nonstop because it never reaches the set temperature.
- High humidity indoors. Low refrigerant reduces the system ability to dehumidify. The house feels clammy even when the AC runs.
- High electric bills. The system runs longer cycles and the compressor works harder, pulling more power.
- Short cycling. The compressor can overheat and trip its internal overload, causing the system to turn off and on repeatedly.
- Oil stains near connections. Refrigerant carries compressor oil. An oil stain at a fitting, valve, or coil is a strong indicator of a leak.
- Bubbles in the sight glass. On units with a sight glass (common on older systems), bubbles in the liquid line mean low refrigerant.
Step by Step Diagnosis {#fix}
Confirming a Leak (HVAC Professional Methods)
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Check the temperature split. Measure the air temperature at the return grille and at the supply vent closest to the indoor unit. A healthy system has a temperature drop of 15 to 20 degrees. Less than that suggests low refrigerant.
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Measure the superheat and subcooling. This requires a manifold gauge set. Low suction pressure combined with high superheat indicates low refrigerant. Low subcooling confirms it on units with a TXV metering device.
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Electronic leak detector. The service technician uses an electronic sniffer that detects halogen gases. This is the most common method for finding active leaks. The technician moves the probe along the line set, coil, and service valves until the detector alarms.
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UV dye injection. A small amount of fluorescent dye is injected into the system and circulated. The technician then uses a UV light to find the glow. This works well for slow leaks that an electronic detector cannot find.
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Bubble test. For accessible fittings and service ports, the technician applies soapy water or a commercial bubble solution. Active leaks produce bubbles. This is effective only for larger leaks.
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Nitrogen pressure test. The system is evacuated and pressurized with nitrogen (typically 150-350 psi). A drop in pressure over time confirms a leak. Sections of the system can be isolated to pinpoint the location.
Where Leaks Happen
- Evaporator coil. The most common leak location in systems older than 8-10 years. Formic acid from the air eats through copper coil tubes. Microchannel coils in newer units leak at manifold joints.
- Condenser coil. Outdoor coils suffer from corrosion, debris impacts, and vibration fatigue. Beach homes and industrial areas see higher condenser coil leak rates.
- Line set fittings and braze joints. Factory and field-brazed joints can fail from vibration or poor workmanship. Flare nuts on mini-split connections are another common leak point.
- Schrader valve cores. The service port valve cores leak as they age. Replacing the core with a $3 tool is an easy fix.
- Compressor terminals. Failed compressor electrical terminals can leak refrigerant at the housing.
Repair Costs
Leak repair costs vary by location and severity:
- Schrader valve core replacement: $50-$150 (easiest, cheapest fix)
- Brazed joint repair: $150-$400
- Evaporator coil replacement: $800-$2,500 (includes refrigerant, labor)
- Condenser coil replacement: $1,200-$3,000
- Line set replacement: $500-$1,500
- Full system replacement: $4,000-$10,000 (recommended for R22 systems with coil leaks)
The R22 Phase-Out Factor
If your AC uses R22 refrigerant (manufactured before 2010), the economics of leak repair have changed significantly. Virgin R22 is no longer produced and available only from reclaimed supplies. Prices range from $500 to $1,500 per pound.
A system that needs both a coil replacement and an R22 recharge can cost as much as a new system. Most HVAC contractors recommend replacing the entire system rather than repairing the leak on an R22 unit. The new system uses R410A or R32, costs less to operate, and comes with a warranty.
Parts You May Need
- Electronic refrigerant leak detector
- UV leak detection dye kit
- Schrader valve core removal tool
- Acme 4-Port AC Manifold Gauge Set
- R22 replacement refrigerant (R407C, R421A)
- Coil coil cleaning solution
When to Call a Technician
Call an HVAC technician if you suspect a refrigerant leak. Refrigerant handling requires EPA Section 608 certification in the United States. It is illegal to vent refrigerant into the atmosphere, and adding refrigerant without finding the leak wastes money and damages the compressor.
If you have an R22 system, ask the technician for a repair vs. replace estimate. In most cases, replacing the system is the better financial decision.