Why Is My AC Not Cooling in Tampa? Causes & Fixes
It is 96 degrees in Brandon, the air handler is humming, and the air drifting out of your vents feels like a warm sigh. In Tampa Bay, an air conditioner that runs but will not cool is one of the most common calls we get from May through September, and it almost never means you need a whole new system. The good news: a handful of failure points cause the large majority of “blowing warm air” problems, and a few of them you can rule out yourself in five minutes before anyone touches a wrench.
This guide walks through the real reasons a Tampa AC stops cooling, what you can safely check, and the point where it is smarter to stop poking around and have a licensed tech diagnose it. We see these failures stack up fast here because our cooling season runs eight to nine months and the salt-laced, humid air off the bays is brutal on outdoor equipment.
First, Confirm It Is Actually a Cooling Problem
Before chasing parts, narrow down what is happening. Walk to a supply vent and feel the air. Then check the thermostat reading against an actual room thermometer.
- Air is blowing but warm: The blower works, so the issue is in the cooling side, refrigerant, compressor, capacitor, or a frozen coil.
- No air at all from vents: Likely a blower motor, a tripped breaker, or a control board issue.
- Cools a little but never reaches setpoint: Often an undersized or struggling system fighting Tampa heat load, a dirty coil, or low refrigerant.
- Cools fine then quits after an hour: Classic frozen evaporator coil or a failing run capacitor that drops out when it heats up.
That single observation tells a tech most of what they need before they arrive.
The Quick Checks You Can Safely Do Yourself
None of these require tools or opening sealed equipment, and ruling them out can save you a visit.
- Thermostat: Confirm it is set to COOL, the fan is on AUTO not ON, and the setpoint is below room temp. A fan stuck on ON blows room-temperature air between cooling cycles and feels exactly like a broken AC.
- Air filter: A filter clogged with Tampa pollen and dust chokes airflow and is the number one cause of frozen coils. If you cannot see light through it, replace it. We recommend checking monthly during cooling season.
- Outdoor breaker: Florida summer storms trip breakers constantly. Many homes have a separate breaker or a pull-disconnect by the outside condenser. Reset it once. If it trips again, stop and call.
- The outdoor unit: Is the big fan on top spinning? Is the unit buried in shrubs, dryer lint, or grass clippings? It needs about two feet of clear air on all sides to dump heat.
- The condensate drain: If the system shut itself off, a clogged drain line and a tripped float switch may be the cause (more on that below).
If all of that checks out and you are still getting warm air, the problem is almost certainly one of the five mechanical causes below.
Cause 1: A Failed Run Capacitor
The capacitor is the single most common part we replace in Tampa, and it is the cheapest. It is a small cylinder that gives the compressor and outdoor fan motor the jolt of energy they need to start and keep running. Our relentless heat cooks capacitors, they bulge, swell, and quit, usually on the hottest afternoon of the year.
The telltale sign: the outdoor fan will not spin, or it spins if you nudge it, while you hear a low hum. The system tries to start, cannot, and blows warm air indoors. A bad capacitor is a fast fix and one of the most affordable repairs in HVAC. Replacement typically runs $279 to $450 depending on the capacitor type and access. Do not try to replace one yourself, capacitors store a dangerous charge even with the power off.
Cause 2: Low Refrigerant From a Leak
If your system is genuinely low on refrigerant, it has a leak. Refrigerant is not consumed like fuel, it circulates in a sealed loop, so “topping it off” without finding the leak just buys a few weeks. Low charge means the system cannot absorb heat from your home, so it runs nonstop and barely cools, and you may see ice forming on the copper lines at the outdoor unit.
Tampa’s coastal humidity and the age of a lot of our housing stock matter here. Coils corrode and develop pinhole leaks, and many homes still run older R-22 systems that are expensive to recharge now that R-22 is phased out. A proper repair means leak detection, sealing or replacing the leaking component, then recharging to spec. Leak diagnosis and repair ranges widely depending on what is leaking, generally $279 to $1,500 or more, which is why we give you the exact number after we find the source, not before. If the leak is in an aging coil on a 12-plus year old R-22 system, replacement may be the better long-term value, and we will tell you honestly which way the math points.
Cause 3: A Frozen Evaporator Coil
This one is sneaky because the cause is upstream. The evaporator coil lives in your indoor air handler. When airflow drops (dirty filter, blocked return, weak blower) or refrigerant is low, the coil gets too cold and condensation freezes into a block of ice. Ice does not cool, so warm air pours out, then water floods everywhere when it melts.
If you spot ice on the indoor unit or the line set, turn the system off at the thermostat and switch the fan to ON to thaw it, which can take a few hours. Then change the filter. If it freezes again, the underlying cause (low refrigerant, a failing blower, or a sizing issue) needs a tech. Running a frozen system can liquid-slug and destroy the compressor, the most expensive part in the whole machine, so do not keep forcing it.
Cause 4: A Clogged Condensate Drain
In our humidity, your AC pulls gallons of water out of the air every day and routes it out through a condensate drain line. That line clogs with algae and slime, and Florida code requires a safety float switch that shuts the system off before water overflows into your ceiling or attic. So a clogged drain often shows up as an AC that simply will not turn on, or one that runs and then quits.
A wet-dry vac on the outdoor end of the drain line can clear a minor clog. If it keeps backing up, the line needs to be professionally flushed and treated, and the float switch checked. This is one of the cheapest problems to fix and one of the most damaging to ignore, a backed-up drain is a leading cause of ceiling water damage in Tampa Bay homes.
Cause 5: Thermostat or Control Faults
Sometimes the equipment is fine and the brain is wrong. A thermostat with dying batteries, a loose wire, or a failed control board can tell the compressor to stay off while the fan keeps running, giving you warm air with no obvious culprit. Newer smart thermostats occasionally lose their configuration after a power blip. If swapping batteries and confirming the COOL/AUTO settings does not help, the wiring or the board needs a meter, which is a quick diagnostic for a tech.
When You Should Stop and Call a Pro
Call right away if you see or hear any of these: ice on the unit that returns after thawing, a breaker that trips more than once, a burning or electrical smell, the outdoor fan refusing to spin, water pooling near the air handler, or a system that has run nonstop for hours and still will not hit setpoint on a hot day. Those point to capacitor, refrigerant, compressor, or electrical issues that need test equipment and EPA-certified handling, not guesswork.
When you book same-day AC repair in Tampa, our diagnosis is FREE on every service call, so you find out exactly what is wrong and what it costs before you commit to anything. If you want to dig deeper into the symptom first, our breakdown of why an AC is not cooling walks through each cause with local pricing. You can also explore our full Tampa air conditioning services for maintenance plans that prevent most of these failures before summer hits. Catching a $279 capacitor before it cascades into a frozen, slugged compressor is the whole point of staying ahead of it, and a tech who knows Tampa Bay homes and our climate will spot the early warning signs you cannot.
Tampa-Specific Reasons This Happens So Often
None of this is bad luck. Our eight-to-nine-month cooling season means equipment runs roughly twice the hours of a northern home, so capacitors, motors, and coils simply wear out faster. The salt air off Tampa Bay, Old Tampa Bay, and the Gulf accelerates corrosion on outdoor coils and electrical contacts. Afternoon thunderstorms trip breakers and spike the grid. And a lot of Tampa Bay’s housing stock from the 1990s and early 2000s still runs original or aging systems sized for a milder reality than today’s heat. The fix is rarely dramatic, but it is almost always faster and cheaper when you catch it early.
Why is my AC running but blowing warm air in Tampa?
The most common causes are a failed run capacitor, low refrigerant from a leak, or a frozen evaporator coil. Start by confirming the thermostat is set to COOL and the fan to AUTO, then check your air filter and the outdoor breaker. If those are fine and the air is still warm, it is a mechanical issue that needs a tech.
How much does it cost to fix an AC that is not cooling?
It depends entirely on the cause. A capacitor replacement typically runs $279 to $450, while a refrigerant leak repair ranges from $279 to $1,500 or more depending on what is leaking. We give you the exact price after a FREE diagnosis, never a guess over the phone.
Can I fix an AC not cooling myself?
You can safely check the thermostat, replace a clogged air filter, reset a tripped breaker once, clear debris from the outdoor unit, and thaw a frozen coil by turning the system off. Anything involving refrigerant, capacitors, or electrical components needs a licensed tech, those carry dangerous charges and require EPA certification.
Why does my AC freeze up in Florida?
A frozen evaporator coil happens when airflow drops or refrigerant is low. In Tampa, the usual trigger is a dirty filter clogged with pollen and dust restricting airflow, which lets the coil get cold enough to ice over. Low refrigerant from a leak is the other main cause. Turn the system off, thaw it, and change the filter, if it refreezes, call a pro.
How long should it take my AC to cool the house in Tampa?
On a typical day a healthy system should drop the indoor temperature a few degrees per hour. On a 95-plus degree afternoon, expect it to run long and steady. If it runs nonstop for hours and never reaches the setpoint, that points to low refrigerant, a dirty condenser coil, or an undersized or aging system that needs evaluation.
Why did my AC shut off by itself and stop cooling?
The most common reason in Tampa is a clogged condensate drain line tripping the safety float switch, which shuts the system down to prevent water damage. A storm-tripped breaker or a thermostat fault can also do it. Check the drain and the breaker first, then call if it will not stay running.
Is it cheaper to repair or replace my AC if it stops cooling?
For a single failed part like a capacitor or a drain clog, repair is almost always the right call. Replacement only makes sense when an aging system, often 12 years or older, has a major leak or a failing compressor, or still runs phased-out R-22 refrigerant. We will show you the honest math both ways during your FREE estimate so you can decide.
Do you offer same-day AC repair in Tampa?
Yes. We offer same-day service across Tampa Bay with FREE estimates and FREE diagnosis on every service call. Call us and we will get a licensed tech out to find the problem and get your home cool again.
Get It Diagnosed Today, FREE
If your AC is running but not cooling, do not sweat through another Tampa afternoon guessing. Home Therapist offers FREE estimates and FREE diagnosis on every service call, so you will know exactly what is wrong and what it costs before you approve a thing. Call us at (813) 343-2212 and we will get a licensed tech to your door, often the same day. We are fully licensed and insured: HVAC CAC1819196 and Plumbing CFC1431159.
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