Replacing an air conditioner is one of the bigger calls a Buckeye homeowner makes — and it isn't always the right one. Here's how to weigh a repair against a replacement, what the 2025 refrigerant change actually means for you, and a licensed Arizona HVAC professional to size it right when it's time. The professional sets any price; we just lay out what to weigh.
The big decision
There's no single rule that fits every system — and no reason to push a replacement on a unit that's worth fixing. These are the five factors a good professional actually weighs with you. A sound system with one fixable fault usually gets repaired.
One fixable fault on an otherwise healthy unit leans toward repair. A pattern of breakdowns — different parts, multiple summers — is the system telling you it's nearing the end.
A capacitor or a contactor is a routine repair. A failed compressor or a leaking evaporator coil is a major component — and on an older system, that's often where replacement enters the conversation.
An older system running R-410A is not banned and stays serviceable1 — that alone is never a reason to replace. But it's a factor worth understanding, and we lay it out in plain terms just below.
Federal efficiency minimums rose in 20232, so a much newer system generally does the same cooling with less runtime. On a very old unit, that gap is part of the math — though never the whole of it.
A repair-friendly default: if it's a single fixable fault on a sound system, fix it. The licensed professional confirms the diagnosis and makes the call with you — and sets any price. We don't.
If your system is fixable rather than worn out, start at the AC Repair guide. If it's borderline, regular upkeep can buy a sound system time — see AC Maintenance.
What changed in 2025
You may have heard that air-conditioner refrigerant is changing. Here's the plain-English version — and the part that matters most: a working system you already own is fine.
GWP = global warming potential (AR4 basis). New residential systems use refrigerants under a 700-GWP threshold1 — a large drop from R-410A's 2,088.
Since January 1, 2025, new residential equipment is built for the lower-GWP refrigerants — R-454B or R-321. They're mildly flammable (A2L) and installed by licensed professionals trained for them. Existing inventory can still be installed during the transition (as of 2025–2026).
You're fine. Working R-410A (and older R-22) systems are not banned — they stay legal to run and service1. You're not required to replace equipment that works; the refrigerant is just one factor to weigh if you're already considering a new system for other reasons.
The deeper repair-vs-replace question is above; this section is here so the refrigerant piece is one you understand rather than one that pressures you.
Two kinds of install
Buckeye is unusual: it stacks brand-new construction against a wave of systems now old enough to replace. Which one you are shapes the whole conversation.
New communities — Teravalis (ground broken 2022) and the newest Verrado and Tartesso phases4 — go in with modern, variable-speed systems on the new refrigerants. Here the install conversation is about sizing it right for the desert and protecting the investment from day one.
Buckeye's 2000s growth (Verrado opened 2004; the mid-2000s boom)4 means a large cohort of systems is now past the Arizona window — squarely in repair-vs-replace territory, where the five factors above do the deciding.
Done right
A new system is only as good as the install. In 110°F+ heat, the details below are what separate a unit that lasts from one that struggles. Every specific traces to a cited source.
The right size comes from a load calculation a licensed professional does for your specific home and our extreme heat5 — not from matching the old unit or a rule of thumb. Oversized and undersized systems both cool poorly and wear faster.
Federal efficiency minimums rose in 20232, and a professional helps you weigh how efficient a system makes sense for your home and how long you plan to stay — without overselling tiers you won't use.
New equipment runs the low-GWP refrigerants — R-454B or R-321 — which call for licensed professionals trained and equipped for A2L. It's one more reason the install is no place to cut corners.
Installs are done by contractors licensed by the Arizona ROC5 — verify any license at roc.az.gov. Your utility may offer efficiency rebates on qualifying equipment; ask the professional and check with your utility for what applies.
Simple from the first call
Tell us your system's age and what it's doing — or that you're putting cooling in a new build.
We connect you with a licensed Arizona HVAC technician — a real, ROC-licensed professional who sizes systems for the desert.
You get a straight assessment and an upfront estimate from the professional, who does the work and sets the price and timeline — we don't.
Good to know
Call and we'll connect you with a licensed Arizona HVAC professional — a straight assessment, an upfront estimate, and a system sized right for the Buckeye heat if it's time. The professional sets the price; we just get you to the right help.
Call (480) 936-1258Sources
Every load-bearing figure on this page traces to a cited source. Verify any contractor's license yourself at roc.az.gov.