A certified hvac contractor philadelphia technician installing a high-efficiency HVAC system on the exterior of an older brick home in Drexel Hill

Stop Throwing $200 Out Your Window Every Summer

I’m Yan, and after 20+ years doing Philadelphia HVAC work across Drexel Hill, Ardmore, Bryn Mawr, and the rest of Delaware and Chester County, I can tell you exactly what that extra $200 on your summer electric bill usually means: your system is working twice as hard as it should. That’s not bad luck — it’s a maintenance problem, and it’s fixable.

Why Your AC Is Eating Money in Drexel Hill

Older homes in Drexel Hill — the colonials and twins off Burmont Road, the rowhomes near Township Line — were built before modern HVAC efficiency standards existed. Add southeastern Pennsylvania’s brutal July humidity and you have a recipe for a system that never fully cycles off. When your AC runs constantly but barely keeps up, you’re not cooling your home — you’re cooling the neighborhood and paying for the privilege.

The most common culprits we find when we show up to these homes:

  • A dirty or clogged air filter strangling airflow (our guide on how often you should actually change your air filter is worth a read)
  • Low refrigerant — usually a slow leak that’s been quietly getting worse for two seasons
  • A condenser coil packed with cottonwood, pollen, and debris from last fall
  • Duct leaks in unconditioned spaces like attics and crawlspaces bleeding cold air into nowhere
  • A unit that’s simply undersized or oversized for the home — common in older Main Line and Delaware County stock

Any one of these can push your cooling costs up 20–30%. Together they can double your bill. And if you’ve already had another company out and you’re still sweating, there’s a good chance they treated the symptom and not the cause.

A system that runs all day but never quite cools down isn’t just uncomfortable — it’s a system telling you something is wrong. Don’t ignore it.

What a Real Philadelphia HVAC Tune-Up Actually Does

Two Air Pro HVAC branded blue service vans parked on a urban residential street near a stop sign in Philadelphia.

A proper seasonal tune-up isn’t a 20-minute sales call. When our techs service a system — whether it’s in Villanova, Media, or right here in Drexel Hill — here’s what actually happens:

  1. Refrigerant level check and leak inspection
  2. Condenser and evaporator coil cleaning
  3. Electrical connections tightened and tested
  4. Thermostat calibration verified
  5. Blower motor and capacitor inspection
  6. Drain line cleared to prevent moisture backup and mold

A tune-up typically runs $80–$150 depending on system age and condition. That’s usually less than one month’s extra electricity on a neglected system — and it extends equipment life by years. If you’re wondering whether a spring AC tune-up is really necessary, the short answer is: yes, especially in southeastern Pennsylvania where systems take a beating from humidity all season.

Before we arrive, a few simple steps on your end make a real difference — check out 5 things to do before your HVAC tech shows up so your appointment goes smoothly and efficiently.

When It’s More Than a Tune-Up

Two metal wrenches resting on top of an outdoor air conditioning condenser unit with a large fan grille.

Sometimes the honest answer is that a 15-year-old system in a 1960s Drexel Hill split-level has given you everything it’s got. Repair costs on aging equipment can pile up fast — $300 here, $400 there — and at some point you’re funding a system that’s going to fail on the hottest day of August anyway.

We’ll always give you a straight answer on repair vs. replace. We’re not here to sell you a new system if yours has life left in it. But if it does make sense to replace, there’s real money available — Pennsylvania HVAC rebates and federal tax credits can offset a meaningful portion of the cost, and we’ll walk you through what you qualify for.

We serve Drexel Hill and communities across Drexel Hill, PA — from King of Prussia and Malvern out to West Chester, Garnet Valley, Bala Cynwyd, and Radnor. If your system is struggling or your bill keeps climbing, don’t wait for a breakdown. Call Air Pro HVAC at (215) 240-8466 and we’ll give you a straight answer — no pressure, no guesswork.

Some content on this site is AI-assisted and may not reflect exact current details — please verify with Air Pro HVAC at (215) 240-8466. Learn more.

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