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Why Is My AC Not Cooling? 9 Common Reasons (2026 Guide)

Updated May 2026 · By BACS HVAC Services · 6 min read

If your home is above 85°F right now and the AC is dead, skip to the emergency action steps at the bottom. Inland Empire homes heat up fast.

Or call (909) 552-3189 — same-day service

It's 105° outside. The thermostat says 78°. Your phone says it's actually 89° inside the house. The AC is doing… something. But cold air? No. If you're searching "why is my AC not cooling" while sweating onto your screen, this guide is for you.

Here are the 9 most common reasons your air conditioner isn't cooling your house, in order from "you can fix it yourself in 5 minutes" to "call a licensed HVAC technician immediately." We've fixed every one of these in Rialto, Fontana, San Bernardino, Colton, and Rancho Cucamonga homes — hundreds of times each.

1. Dirty or Clogged Air Filter

How common: #1 reason. Easily 40% of "AC not cooling" calls in the Inland Empire trace back to a filter that hasn't been changed in 6+ months.

A clogged filter restricts return airflow. With low airflow, the evaporator coil gets too cold, frosts over, and eventually freezes solid — at which point no air flows at all and the system blows warm. Worse, the compressor outside keeps running, building up pressure and stress.

Fix it yourself: Pull the filter out of the return grille or air handler. If it's gray-brown and you can barely see through it, replace it. Match the size and the MERV rating (MERV 8-11 is standard; MERV 13+ if you have allergies, but only if your blower can handle it).

2. Tripped Breaker or Float Switch

How common: Top 3 cause. Easy to miss because there are usually TWO disconnects involved.

Check both: (1) the breaker panel inside your home — look for an AC or "air handler" breaker that's flipped to the middle position, and (2) the disconnect box on the wall next to the outdoor condenser unit — it has a pull-out fuse holder. Also check the float switch on the indoor coil's condensate drain — if the drain line clogs, the float kills power to the system.

Fix it yourself: Reset any tripped breaker. If it trips again immediately, STOP — that's an electrical problem (shorted compressor, fried capacitor, damaged wiring) that needs a tech. For a clogged drain, pour a cup of distilled vinegar into the drain access port near the air handler.

3. Wrong Thermostat Setting

Sounds dumb, but it happens. Common errors: thermostat set to "FAN" instead of "COOL"; set to "HEAT" by accident; programmed schedule overriding manual settings; dead batteries in a battery-powered thermostat; or a smart thermostat in "Away" mode it never came out of.

Fix it yourself: Set to COOL, fan AUTO, temperature 5° below current room temp. Replace AAs if applicable. Force-reset smart thermostats from "Away."

4. Failed Capacitor (Won't Start Outdoor Unit)

How common: Top 5 cause, especially in 8+ year-old systems in Inland Empire heat.

The capacitor is a small cylindrical part inside the outdoor unit that gives the compressor and fan motor the jolt they need to start. When it weakens (capacitors die slowly), you'll hear a humming sound from the outdoor unit but no fan spinning, no compressor starting. The indoor blower works fine, but the air gets warm because nothing outside is removing heat.

Cost: $185-$285 installed by a licensed tech. DO NOT touch a capacitor yourself — they hold lethal voltage even when power is off.

5. Frozen Evaporator Coil

If you find ice or water dripping from the indoor unit, the evaporator coil has frozen. Causes: dirty filter (back to #1), low refrigerant, dirty coil, or weak blower motor.

Fix it yourself: Turn the AC OFF (set to fan-only) for 4 hours minimum to thaw. Replace the filter. If the system freezes again within 24 hours, it's refrigerant or coil — call a tech.

6. Low Refrigerant (Leak)

How common: Most common in systems 7+ years old.

Air conditioners don't "use up" refrigerant the way cars use gas. If you're low, there's a LEAK somewhere — usually a slow evaporator coil pinhole, a worn Schrader valve, or a flare-fitting weep. Symptoms: air comes out cool but not cold, system runs constantly, ice on the refrigerant lines outside, hissing or bubbling sound.

Cost: Recharge alone is $295-$575 depending on system size and refrigerant type (R-410A vs older R-22). But recharging without finding the leak is throwing money away — it'll bleed out in 6-12 months. Leak repair adds $385-$1,200 depending on location. EPA prohibits unlicensed refrigerant handling.

7. Dirty Condenser Coil (Outdoor Unit)

The outdoor unit has a finned coil that releases heat from the refrigerant into the outside air. When it's coated in dust, dirt, dryer lint, cottonwood seeds, or grass clippings, heat can't escape. The system runs constantly but never cools.

In the Inland Empire — especially Rialto and Fontana homes near the I-10 corridor — condenser coils foul 2-3x faster than coastal homes because of freight-corridor dust and brake particulate.

Fix it yourself (mild dirt only): Turn off power. Use a garden hose (NOT pressure washer) to spray the fins from inside-out. For caked grime, requires professional coil cleaning at next tune-up.

8. Failed Contactor or Bad Wiring

The contactor is the relay that energizes the outdoor unit when the thermostat calls for cooling. Burned/pitted contacts mean it doesn't make contact, so the compressor never gets power. Common in 10+ year old systems.

Cost: $185-$245 installed.

9. Compressor Failure or System Undersized

If the compressor itself fails, you'll need either a compressor replacement ($1,800-$3,200) or — more often the smart choice if the system is 12+ years old — a full system replacement quote ($6,500-$14,000 depending on tonnage and SEER rating). Failing systems often show: outdoor unit humming but no cooling, breaker trips constantly, oil stains around the unit, burning electrical smell.

An undersized system (system tonnage too small for the home's square footage) shows up as: AC runs 24/7 in summer, never reaches set temp on hot days, electric bill astronomical. Common in older Rialto homes where additions were built without HVAC capacity upgrades. See our AC installation guide for sizing.

Emergency Action Steps (Hot House, Right Now)

When to Call a Pro vs. DIY

You can DIY: filter change, breaker reset, thermostat check, condenser coil rinse with garden hose, condensate drain vinegar flush.

Call a licensed HVAC technician: anything involving refrigerant, capacitors, contactors, control boards, fan motors, compressor diagnosis. California requires HVAC contractors to hold a C-20 license and EPA Section 608 certification for refrigerant work — anyone offering to "recharge your Freon" without these credentials is breaking the law.

BACS HVAC Services is fully CSLB licensed (#1122557) and EPA certified. We're based in Rialto and serve the Inland Empire from a single shop — no chain dispatch, no franchise pricing. Book AC repair, schedule a tune-up, or call (909) 552-3189 — answer in under 60 seconds, 7am-7pm.

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