Summit Climate Solutions · Houston, TX
Best HVAC Maintenance in Houston, TX
The best HVAC maintenance goes beyond a filter swap — Summit Climate Solutions uses calibrated instruments to measure what less thorough companies only eyeball
Capacitor capacitance measurement, refrigerant charge verification, combustion analysis, static pressure testing — documented and left with you after every visit.
Everything Included
What You Get
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Twice-Annual Professional Tune-Ups
One spring AC tune-up and one fall heating tune-up, each covering 21 inspection points — proactively preventing the failures that happen when seasonal demand peaks.
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Priority Emergency Dispatch
Comfort Club members jump the queue when emergencies arise — no waiting behind non-member calls, because your long-term relationship matters more than one-off revenue.
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15% Member Discount on All Repairs
Every repair, part, and labor charge is discounted 15% for active members — a benefit that typically pays for the entire annual plan cost in a single service call.
Our Guarantees
- Satisfaction guarantee: if your tune-up does not uncover at least one actionable finding, your annual membership fee is fully refunded.
- licensed insured
- 20+ years
- 1-year parts & labor warranty
- NATE-Certified Technicians
- 2-hour emergency response
Social Proof
Why Customers Trust Us
- licensed insured
- 20+ years
- 1-year parts & labor warranty
- NATE-Certified Technicians
- 2-hour emergency response
“After a power surge during a tropical storm fried our compressor in Sugar Land, Summit had a temporary cooling unit set up the same evening and a new compressor installed two days later.”
“Clogged drain line was leaking water into our ceiling in Katy. They came out on a Saturday, fixed the drain, and found a failing capacitor during the same visit. Thorough.”
“The Woodlands humidity is brutal on HVAC. Summit's maintenance plan keeps our system running and our air quality clean. No surprise breakdowns in 3 years.”
Our Approach
HVAC Maintenance in Houston
Houston's brutal humidity and heat combination means AC systems run 8+ months a year at near-full capacity — the moisture-heavy air also breeds mold in ductwork and drain lines, making regular maintenance critical for both comfort and indoor air quality.
HVAC maintenance in Houston is structured around the realities of an 8-month cooling season and a climate that is actively hostile to every condensate drainage component in the system. The pre-season maintenance window in Houston falls in February and early March — before the sustained heat and humidity of April through October make emergency service response times longer and appointment availability tighter. Homeowners in Sugar Land, Katy, and The Woodlands who schedule maintenance in February are ensuring their systems are inspected and tuned before the season places maximum demand on every component. Condensate drain maintenance is the single most impactful task Summit Climate Solutions performs on Houston AC systems. The warm, humid air flowing across the evaporator coil supports rapid algae and biofilm growth in the drain pan and primary drain line. A drain line that is clear in March will frequently restrict by June and block entirely by August in Houston homes without preventive treatment. Summit's Houston maintenance visits include a full primary drain flush, a secondary drain pan inspection, and biocide treatment of the drain pan to inhibit algae growth for the season. In homes with a history of drain overflow issues, Summit installs float switches that shut the system off before a blocked drain can overflow — a $50 component that prevents thousands in water damage. Evaporator coil condition is the second major focus area for Houston maintenance. Humid air carries airborne biological material that accumulates on the damp evaporator coil surface over a season of operation. This biological fouling reduces heat transfer efficiency, restricts airflow, and — critically in Houston — can harbor mold colonies that circulate into the living space through the air distribution system. Summit's spring maintenance visit in Houston always includes an evaporator coil inspection and, where fouling is present, a chemical coil cleaning that removes the biological layer and restores heat transfer efficiency. The high electrical demand of running AC systems 8+ months per year also accelerates electrical component wear in Houston. Contactors and capacitors that might last 8–10 years in a mild climate can reach end of life in 5–6 years in Houston given the extended operating hours. Summit technicians measure capacitor capacitance and visually inspect contactors for burn pitting on every maintenance visit, replacing marginal components during the planned visit rather than leaving them to fail during a July heat wave.
The word 'maintenance' in HVAC is applied to service visits that vary enormously in thoroughness — from a technician who changes the filter and cycles the system for 15 minutes to one who spends 90 minutes with calibrated instruments verifying every measurable performance parameter. Summit Climate Solutions maintenance visits are built around what instruments can measure, not what looks clean to the eye. A capacitor that measures 35 microfarads on a component rated for 45 microfarads is failing — and replacing it at a maintenance visit costs a fraction of an emergency call. A refrigerant system that shows 400 psi on the high side when it should show 350 psi at the current ambient temperature indicates a condenser coil restriction. A furnace combustion analysis showing 150 ppm flue CO signals a problem that should be investigated before heating season. These are findings that only instruments reveal.
Our Comfort Club membership locks in your maintenance visits at today's rate for as long as you remain a member — and includes priority emergency dispatch so members never wait behind the general queue.
Problems We Solve
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Visual-only maintenance misses failing capacitors, low refrigerant charge, and developing heat exchanger issues
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Maintenance visits that take less than 45 minutes are not completing a thorough 21-point inspection
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Coil cleaning without measurement of coil pressure drop before and after cannot confirm the cleaning improved airflow
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Refrigerant charge 'verification' without manifold gauges is not a verification — it's an assumption
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Combustion analysis is skipped on most maintenance visits, missing CO and efficiency issues on gas appliances
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Most AC and furnace failures happen within days of peak demand — during the first heat wave or the first cold snap — because small problems that built up quietly over months reach their breaking point under full-load operation.
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Manufacturer warranties on most HVAC equipment require documented annual maintenance to remain valid; skipping a single tune-up can void thousands of dollars in parts coverage the moment you need it most.
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A dirty evaporator coil, low refrigerant, or a failing capacitor that goes unchecked reduces system efficiency by 10–25%, meaning you pay more every month for less comfort — silently and invisibly.
Have Questions?
Frequently Asked Questions
What instruments does Summit use during a maintenance visit?
Our maintenance technicians arrive with: digital manifold gauges for refrigerant pressure measurement, a clamp-style amp meter for motor current draw, a capacitance meter for capacitor testing, a combustion analyzer for furnace flue gas measurement, an anemometer for airflow measurement at supply registers, a digital thermometer for supply/return temperature differential, and a CO detector for ambient air quality verification. These are not optional — they're standard equipment on every maintenance visit.
How do you verify refrigerant charge during a maintenance visit?
Refrigerant charge verification requires connecting calibrated manifold gauges to the service ports and measuring suction and discharge pressure, then calculating superheat (for fixed-orifice systems) or subcooling and superheat (for TXV/EEV systems) against manufacturer charge tables for the current outdoor ambient temperature. A system that reads within specification at one temperature may be off at another — so we always record the ambient temperature alongside the charge readings.
What capacitor reading indicates a replacement is needed?
Most run capacitors are rated to a specific microfarad value with a ±6% tolerance. A capacitor that measures 10% or more below its rated value is degraded and should be replaced. A 45 µF capacitor measuring below 40.5 µF, or a 7.5 µF measuring below 6.75 µF, warrants replacement. Capacitors don't fail suddenly in most cases — they degrade over years until they can no longer supply enough starting torque to the motors they serve, causing hard-starts and eventual burnout.
What does combustion analysis reveal that visual inspection misses?
Combustion analysis measures flue gas concentrations of CO, CO2, and O2, from which thermal efficiency, excess air percentage, and CO air-free concentration are calculated. A furnace can look clean and operational while producing elevated CO from a gas pressure issue, a cracked heat exchanger, or fouled burners. CO air-free concentrations above 100 ppm in flue gas warrant further investigation. We record combustion analysis readings on every furnace maintenance visit and flag any values outside acceptable ranges.
How does Summit document the maintenance visit findings?
At the end of every maintenance visit, we provide a written service report that includes all instrument readings taken (refrigerant pressures and superheat/subcooling, capacitor microfarad values, motor amp draws, combustion analysis results), the condition of each item on the 21-point checklist, any items that were repaired or replaced during the visit, and any items flagged for attention before the next visit. This documentation travels with your service record and is available for reference at future visits.
What does an HVAC maintenance tune-up include?
Each visit covers 21 inspection and service points: refrigerant level check, coil cleaning, drain line flush and treatment, electrical connection tightening, capacitor and contactor testing, blower motor amp draw, thermostat calibration, and a written inspection report. Filter replacement is included if you provide the filter; we supply filters at cost.
How often should I have my HVAC system serviced?
Twice per year is the industry standard: once in spring before cooling season and once in fall before heating season. This timing ensures the system is clean and fully functional when demand peaks — the exact conditions when deferred problems turn into failures.
Will maintenance improve my energy bills?
Yes. A properly maintained system with clean coils and correct refrigerant charge runs 10–15% more efficiently than a neglected one. Most homeowners see annual energy savings that cover a significant portion of the maintenance plan cost.
What happens if a problem is found during a maintenance visit?
The technician will explain the finding, show you the evidence, and provide a written repair quote on the spot. As a member, you receive 15% off that repair if you authorize it the same day. You are never obligated to proceed — but most members appreciate catching problems before they become emergencies.
Ready to Get Started
Why clients choose us
★★★★★ Rated 4.9 · Trusted by 389+ customers in Houston
Prefer to call? 555-266-5247