Common HVAC Problems and What They Mean
Common HVAC problems can have several possible causes. This guide helps homeowners understand symptoms, make safe preliminary checks, and recognize when professional diagnosis is the sensible next step.
AC Running but Not Cooling
What It May Mean
An air conditioner that runs without cooling may have restricted airflow, a dirty indoor or outdoor coil, frozen equipment, a thermostat problem, an outdoor-unit failure, or a refrigerant-related issue. A dirty filter is common; a failed compressor is possible but should not be assumed before testing.
What You Can Safely Check
Confirm that the thermostat is set to Cool and below the room temperature. Check whether the filter is visibly dirty, supply vents are open, and the outdoor unit is running. If you see ice, turn cooling off and let the fan run only if the system can do so safely.
When to Call a Professional
Call when the system still blows warm air, ice returns, the outdoor unit will not run, a breaker trips again, or the home cannot maintain a safe temperature. A technician should test airflow, temperatures, electrical components, and refrigerant performance before recommending a repair.
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Back to symptom navigatorWarm Air From Vents
What It May Mean
Warm air during a cooling call often means the thermostat is set incorrectly, the outdoor unit is not operating, airflow is restricted, or the refrigeration cycle is not removing heat. If only one room is affected, the problem may be airflow or duct-related rather than the central equipment.
What You Can Safely Check
Verify the thermostat mode and temperature setting. Check the filter and confirm that the outdoor equipment is operating without unusual noise. Make sure supply registers are open. Avoid opening equipment panels or repeatedly resetting a breaker.
When to Call a Professional
Schedule service when the outdoor unit is silent, the air never becomes cool, the system freezes, or electrical protection trips. Testing should determine whether the cause is controls, airflow, electrical components, or refrigerant performance.
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Back to symptom navigatorAC Freezing Up
What It May Mean
Ice usually forms when the indoor coil becomes too cold. Common causes include low airflow from a dirty filter or blower problem, a dirty coil, restricted ductwork, or a refrigerant issue. Continuing to run a frozen system can increase damage and will not restore cooling.
What You Can Safely Check
Turn cooling off. Check the filter and replace it if it is dirty and the correct replacement is available. Keep vents open and allow the ice to thaw fully. Do not chip ice from the coil or add refrigerant without a diagnosis.
When to Call a Professional
Call if the system froze without an obvious dirty filter, freezes again after thawing, has weak airflow, or cannot cool afterward. The cause should be identified before refrigerant or major components are discussed.
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Back to symptom navigatorWater Around HVAC Equipment
What It May Mean
Water near an air handler or furnace during cooling season often comes from a blocked condensate drain, damaged drain pan, disconnected line, failed condensate pump, or melting ice. It may also come from plumbing or another nearby source, so the origin matters.
What You Can Safely Check
Turn cooling off if water is spreading toward electrical components, ceilings, or finished surfaces. If safely accessible, check whether the condensate pump has power and whether a visible drain line is displaced. Protect the surrounding area without opening equipment.
When to Call a Professional
Call promptly when water is recurring, entering finished areas, reaching electrical equipment, or accompanied by ice or poor cooling. Drainage repairs are often straightforward when addressed before water damage develops.
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Back to symptom navigatorFurnace Blowing Cold Air
What It May Mean
A furnace may blow cool air briefly at startup or after the burner shuts off. Continuous cold air may point to a thermostat setting, dirty filter, ignition problem, safety shutdown, fuel interruption, flame-sensing issue, or a blower that is running without heat.
What You Can Safely Check
Confirm the thermostat is set to Heat and the fan is set to Auto rather than On. Check the filter. Confirm that other gas appliances operate normally if the home uses natural gas, but do not attempt to light or adjust furnace components.
When to Call a Professional
Call when the furnace repeatedly starts and stops, never produces warm air, displays a fault, or has a gas or burning odor. Leave the area and contact the gas utility or emergency services if a strong gas odor or carbon-monoxide alarm is present.
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Back to symptom navigatorFurnace Will Not Start
What It May Mean
A furnace that will not start may be responding to a thermostat issue, lost electrical power, an open service switch, a dirty filter, a condensate safety switch, ignition failure, or an internal safety control. The symptom alone does not identify the failed part.
What You Can Safely Check
Confirm the thermostat has power and is set above room temperature. Check the furnace switch, the labeled breaker, and the filter. Reset a tripped breaker only once. Do not remove access panels or bypass safety switches.
When to Call a Professional
Call if power and thermostat settings appear normal, the breaker trips again, the furnace attempts ignition repeatedly, or the home is becoming dangerously cold. A diagnostic visit should establish whether the interruption is electrical, control-related, airflow-related, or within the heating sequence.
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Back to symptom navigatorHeat Pump Running Constantly
What It May Mean
Long run times can be normal during very hot or cold weather because heat pumps deliver comfort gradually. Constant operation may also reflect a dirty filter, incorrect thermostat setting, airflow restriction, equipment that is undersized for current conditions, loss of capacity, or a developing fault.
What You Can Safely Check
Check the filter, thermostat mode, set temperature, and whether doors and windows are closed. Note whether the home is reaching the setpoint and whether auxiliary heat appears unusually often. Avoid large thermostat setbacks during cold weather.
When to Call a Professional
Call when the home cannot reach the setting, operation changed suddenly, energy use rises sharply, ice does not clear during defrost, or unusual sounds appear. Performance testing is more useful than judging the system by run time alone.
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Back to symptom navigatorHeat Pump Blowing Cool Air
What It May Mean
Heat-pump supply air often feels cooler than furnace air even when the system is heating normally. Air that is close to room temperature may indicate a defrost cycle, mild heating output, thermostat setting, outdoor-unit problem, refrigerant issue, or failed auxiliary heat.
What You Can Safely Check
Confirm the thermostat is set to Heat rather than Fan or Cool. Check the filter and compare the room temperature with the setpoint. Give the system time to complete a defrost cycle. Do not use Emergency Heat routinely unless the system instructions or a technician calls for it.
When to Call a Professional
Call when the indoor temperature continues falling, the outdoor unit does not operate, auxiliary heat never works, breakers trip, or the system produces no meaningful temperature rise. A technician can separate normal heat-pump behavior from lost capacity.
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Back to symptom navigatorFrozen Outdoor Unit
What It May Mean
A light frost on a heat pump can be normal in cold, damp weather. The system should periodically enter defrost and clear it. A solid coating of ice, ice that keeps growing, or a fan blocked by ice may indicate drainage, airflow, defrost-control, refrigerant, sensor, or equipment problems.
What You Can Safely Check
Keep snow, leaves, and debris away from the unit without striking or chipping ice. Make sure roof runoff or a downspout is not draining onto it. Observe whether the system enters defrost. Do not pour hot water on electrical equipment.
When to Call a Professional
Call when ice covers most of the coil, the fan cannot turn, the system never clears itself, or indoor heat is declining. Shut the system down if rotating parts are contacting ice or severe vibration develops.
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Back to symptom navigatorHigh Electric Bills
What It May Mean
Higher HVAC energy use may result from extreme weather, thermostat changes, dirty filters, electric auxiliary heat, airflow restrictions, duct leakage, aging equipment, poor system performance, or changes elsewhere in the home. One bill rarely proves that the HVAC system is failing.
What You Can Safely Check
Compare weather and usage with the same period last year. Check filters, thermostat schedules, and whether auxiliary or emergency heat is operating. Look for open windows, blocked returns, or a recent change in occupancy or appliance use.
When to Call a Professional
Schedule an evaluation when usage rises without an obvious reason, comfort worsens, auxiliary heat runs excessively, or the equipment operates differently. Maintenance and performance testing should come before assuming replacement is necessary.
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Back to symptom navigatorUneven Temperatures
What It May Mean
Hot and cold rooms can result from closed or blocked registers, dirty filters, duct leakage, poor return-air paths, insulation and air-sealing differences, solar exposure, equipment setup, or a system that was not designed for the home’s current layout.
What You Can Safely Check
Open supply registers, keep returns clear, check the filter, and note when and where the difference occurs. Confirm that interior doors do not cut off return airflow. Avoid closing many vents in an attempt to force air elsewhere.
When to Call a Professional
Call when the imbalance is persistent, airflow is weak, rooms changed after construction, or the system runs excessively. The solution may involve airflow correction or the building envelope rather than larger equipment.
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Back to symptom navigatorPoor Airflow
What It May Mean
Weak airflow commonly comes from a dirty filter, blocked return, closed register, dirty coil, blower problem, duct restriction, or leakage. If airflow is weak throughout the home, the cause is usually different from a single room with low airflow.
What You Can Safely Check
Check the filter, open registers, and make sure furniture or storage does not block returns. Compare airflow between rooms and note unusual blower noise. Do not reach into ductwork or operate equipment with access panels removed.
When to Call a Professional
Call when airflow remains weak with a clean filter, the system freezes, the blower sounds strained, or only part of the home receives air. Airflow measurements can locate the restriction and protect the equipment from further strain.
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Back to symptom navigatorThermostat Problems
What It May Mean
A blank, inaccurate, or unresponsive thermostat may have dead batteries, lost power, a tripped breaker, wiring trouble, a failed transformer, a condensate safety interruption, incorrect programming, or an internal thermostat fault.
What You Can Safely Check
Replace batteries if the model uses them. Confirm the mode, setpoint, schedule, and fan setting. Check the labeled HVAC breaker once. For smart thermostats, confirm the display and app show the same operating mode.
When to Call a Professional
Call when the thermostat remains blank, loses settings repeatedly, shows a large temperature error, causes short cycling, or the breaker trips. Thermostat replacement should follow basic control and equipment testing so the actual power or safety problem is not missed.
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Back to symptom navigatorStrange HVAC Noises
What It May Mean
Rattling may come from loose panels or debris; squealing can involve belts or bearings; grinding may indicate motor wear; buzzing can be electrical; and refrigerant or airflow can create hissing sounds. Normal expansion, defrost, and startup sounds should be distinguished from a new or worsening noise.
What You Can Safely Check
Note where the sound occurs, when it begins, and whether heating or cooling performance changed. Check for loose items near outdoor equipment and a dirty filter. Do not remove guards, reach near moving parts, or keep restarting equipment that grinds or strikes.
When to Call a Professional
Call promptly for grinding, metal contact, strong buzzing, repeated banging, smoke, burning odors, or a noise paired with lost performance. A recording can help describe an intermittent sound, but it cannot replace inspection.
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Back to symptom navigatorHVAC Short Cycling
What It May Mean
Short cycling means equipment starts and stops more often than expected. Common causes include thermostat location or settings, dirty filters, overheating, frozen coils, drainage safety switches, oversized equipment, electrical controls, or a system that cannot complete its normal operating sequence.
What You Can Safely Check
Check the filter and thermostat settings. Note how long each cycle lasts, whether the thermostat reaches its setpoint, and whether a fault message appears. Avoid repeatedly changing the temperature to force operation.
When to Call a Professional
Call when cycles last only a few minutes, the system fails to reach temperature, a breaker trips, ice appears, or the pattern is new. Repeated short cycles can increase wear, but the repair should address the cause rather than simply replacing controls.
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Back to symptom navigatorReviewed for Practical HVAC Guidance
Last reviewed: June 2026
This content is reviewed periodically for accuracy and reflects practical HVAC experience serving homeowners and property managers throughout Central Maryland.
Content reviewed by BCR Works LLC.
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BCR Works provides professional, repair-first HVAC diagnosis for homeowners and managed residential properties across Central Maryland.