Home Cost Report

Central air conditioner replacement cost

Central air conditioner replacement costs about $3,500 to $12,000, with a typical price around $7,000 (as of June 2026).

What it costs to replace a central AC condenser and coil, including installation.

A complete central AC replacement — new condenser and evaporator coil, installed — runs about $4,500–$9,500 for an average home. Simple like-for-like swaps can come in lower; large or high-efficiency systems push higher.

Low
$3,500
Typical
$7,000
High
$12,000

Estimate your central air conditioner replacement

Adjust for your home and system. The estimate starts from our published range and narrows for the choices you make.

Adjusts the estimate to local cost levels. Pick a metro or leave on national.

Bigger homes need more cooling capacity (measured in tons).

Higher-efficiency units cost more upfront but use less power.

Estimated cost for your options
$3,500$12,000
Typical: $7,000

How we got this

Starts from our published central air conditioner replacement range of $3,500–$12,000, adjusted for:

  • Home / system size: Average (1,500–2,000 sq ft · ~3 ton)×1
  • Efficiency (SEER2): Standard (14–15 SEER2)×1
  • Ductwork: Reuse existing ducts×1

These figures are planning estimates compiled from public cost data on the dates shown — not quotes, bids, or guarantees. Real prices vary widely with your home, location, materials, permits, and contractor. Always get itemized written quotes from licensed local pros before budgeting or hiring.

Where the money goes

  • Equipment (condenser + coil)

    The outdoor condenser and matched indoor coil.

    45%60%
  • Labor & installation

    Removal, refrigerant, electrical, permits, and crew time.

    40%55%

What changes the price

  • System size (tonnage)Raises cost

    Larger homes need more cooling capacity, which raises both equipment and labor.

  • SEER2 efficiency ratingRaises cost

    Higher-efficiency units cost more upfront; federal minimum SEER2 standards rose in 2023.

  • Ductwork conditionVaries

    Reusing sound ducts keeps cost down; damaged or undersized ducts add to it.

  • Brand & warrantyRaises cost

    Premium brands and longer warranties carry higher prices.

  • Rebates & tax creditsLowers cost

    Utility rebates and federal efficiency tax credits can lower your net cost.

Get real quotes for your central air conditioner replacement

Our ranges are for planning. The only way to know your real price is itemized quotes from licensed local pros — always get at least three before you hire.

Tip: search for licensed, insured central air conditioner replacement contractors in your area, check reviews and references, and compare written itemized bids — not just bottom-line numbers.

Central air conditioner replacement cost — FAQ

How much does it cost to replace a central air conditioner?
Most homeowners pay roughly $4,500–$9,500 for a complete central AC replacement (condenser, coil, and installation), within a broader range of about $3,500 on the low end to $12,000+ for large or high-efficiency systems. The main drivers are system size, efficiency rating, and whether ductwork needs work.
Is it cheaper to replace just the AC or the whole HVAC system?
Replacing only the AC (condenser + coil) is cheaper than a full HVAC replacement that also swaps the furnace or air handler. But if both are near end of life, replacing them together usually costs less than doing two separate jobs later — and the components stay matched.
What's the most expensive part of an AC replacement?
Roughly half the cost is the equipment (condenser and coil); the rest is labor, permits, refrigerant, and any electrical or duct work. Replacing ductwork is the single biggest add-on when it's needed.
How long does a central AC unit last?
A well-maintained central air conditioner typically lasts 12–17 years. If yours is over about 15 years old and needs a major repair, replacing it is often the better value.

Central air conditioner replacement cost by city

Costs vary by metro. See central air conditioner replacement pricing adjusted to local levels:

Cost data compiled June 13, 2026.

Sources (4)

Ranges synthesize several public 2026 cost guides into a low–typical–high band rather than reproducing any single source's table. Metro-level breakdowns are coming as we verify local data.

Related cost guides