Is your AC still under warranty? Learn exactly how to check if my ac is under warranty, what's covered, what voids it, and how to file a claim. Expert guide from City ACS in Fort Lauderdale, FL.
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HVAC Guide  ·  City ACS Blog

How to Check if Your AC Is Under Warranty

By City Air Conditioning Solutions  ·  Fort Lauderdale, FL  ·  Licensed HVAC Experts Since 2012

Before you pay out of pocket for an AC repair, you need to know what's already covered. Here's exactly how to find your warranty, what it covers, what can void it, and how to actually use it.

There's a specific kind of frustration that comes with paying for an AC repair, and then finding out afterward that the broken part was under warranty the whole time. It happens more often than you'd think. Most homeowners have no idea what their air conditioner's warranty covers, when it expires, or where to even look for that information.

This guide fixes that. Whether your unit is brand new or a few years old, we'll walk you through exactly how to find out if your AC is still under warranty, what's actually covered, and what steps to take before you spend a dollar on repairs.

Quick answer: To check your AC warranty, find the model and serial number on your unit, then look up that serial number on your manufacturer's website or call their warranty line. Most units have a 5 to 10-year parts warranty, but only if it was properly registered after installation.

Step 1: Find Your AC's Model and Serial Number

Everything starts here. Your model and serial number are the two pieces of information that identify your specific unit and allow a manufacturer to look up its warranty status. Without these, you can't look up a single thing.

Here's where to find them:

A

Outdoor Condenser Unit (the box outside your home)

Look for a metal nameplate sticker, usually on the side panel of the unit. It will list the model number, serial number, electrical specifications, and the refrigerant type. This is your primary source of information. Take a photo of it so you have it saved.

B

Indoor Air Handler (the unit inside your home)

This unit, typically in a closet, attic, or utility room, also has a nameplate sticker, usually on the side or inside the access panel. If your system has two separate components (a split system), each one may have its own warranty and its own registration requirement.

C

Your Installation Paperwork

If you installed the system yourself or had it installed when you bought or built your home, dig out the original paperwork. The model and serial numbers should be listed there, along with the installation date, which is critical for calculating warranty coverage.

⚠ Tip: Take a photo of the nameplate stickers on both your indoor and outdoor units right now and save them in your phone. It takes 30 seconds and saves a lot of headache when you need this information urgently.

Step 2: Determine Your AC Brand and Look Up the Warranty

Once you have your model and serial number, head to your manufacturer's website and look for a warranty registration or warranty lookup tool. Most major brands have one. Here's a quick reference for the most common AC brands found in South Florida homes:

Brand Standard Parts Warranty Extended (if registered) Warranty Lookup
Carrier 5 years parts 10 years parts carrier.com/residential/en/us/support/warranty-lookup/
Trane 5 years parts 10 years parts trane.com/residential/en/resources/warranty/
Lennox 5 years parts 10 years parts lennox.com/lennox-home/support/warranty-registration
Rheem / Ruud 5 years parts 10 years parts rheem.com/warranty-information/
York 5 years parts 10 years parts york.com/support/warranty-information/
Goodman / Amana 5–10 years parts Lifetime compressor (select models) goodmanmfg.com/resources/warranty.html
Daikin 5 years parts 12 years (registered) daikincomfort.com/resources/warranty/
American Standard 5 years parts 10 years parts americanstandardair.com/support/warranty/

Most of these sites have a serial number lookup tool where you enter your number and it tells you the manufacture date and warranty status. If the online tool doesn't work or gives you unclear results, call the manufacturer's customer service line directly, they can look it up by serial number in under a minute.

Step 3: Check If Your Warranty Was Registered

This is where many homeowners get an unwelcome surprise. Almost every major AC manufacturer offers two levels of warranty: a baseline 5-year warranty that applies automatically, and an extended 10-year warranty, but only if the unit was registered with the manufacturer within 60 to 90 days of installation.

If you bought or built a home with an AC already installed, there's a real chance the previous owner never registered it, which means you might only have a 5-year warranty instead of 10, or you might find that the baseline warranty has already expired.

✓ Just installed a new system? Register it immediately. Go directly to the manufacturer's website and register using your unit's model and serial numbers, your installation date, and your contact information. It takes about 5 minutes and can mean the difference between a covered repair and a $1,500+ bill years down the road.

If you're not sure whether a unit was registered, call the manufacturer with the serial number. They can tell you whether registration is on file for that unit and when it was done.

Step 4: Understand What Your Warranty Actually Covers

A warranty isn't a blank check. Most AC warranties are parts-only warranties — meaning the manufacturer covers the cost of replacement components, but not the labor cost to install them. That labor cost comes out of your pocket unless you also have a separate labor warranty from the installing contractor.

What a standard manufacturer warranty typically covers:

  • Compressor (usually the longest coverage — often 5–10 years)
  • Evaporator and condenser coils
  • Heat exchanger (on heat pump systems)
  • Fan motors
  • Other factory-specified parts that fail due to manufacturing defects

What's typically NOT covered by a manufacturer warranty:

  • Labor costs to install the replacement part
  • Refrigerant (the cost to refill it)
  • Filters, belts, and other consumable parts
  • Damage caused by improper installation
  • Damage from power surges, floods, storms, or accidents
  • Damage caused by neglect or lack of maintenance
  • Cosmetic damage that doesn't affect function
⚠ Don't forget labor costs. Even if your part is covered under warranty, you'll typically still pay a technician $100–$300 or more in labor to diagnose and replace it. Ask your contractor upfront what the labor cost will be for a warranty repair, this is completely normal and expected.

Step 5: Know What Can Void Your Warranty

Warranty coverage isn't guaranteed just because your unit is within the coverage period. Manufacturers reserve the right to deny claims if certain conditions weren't met. These are the most common ways homeowners unknowingly void their warranty:

  • Improper installation: If your unit was installed by an unlicensed contractor, many manufacturers will refuse a warranty claim. Always use a licensed HVAC contractor. In Florida, look for a CAC license (Certified Air Conditioning Contractor).
  • Lack of maintenance: If a part failure can be traced back to neglected maintenance, like a compressor that failed because of dirty coils that were never cleaned, the manufacturer may deny coverage.
  • Unauthorized modifications: Any changes to the unit that weren't approved by the manufacturer can void coverage.
  • Wrong refrigerant type: Using a refrigerant not specified for your unit is a fast way to void the warranty and damage the system.
  • Missing registration: For extended warranties, failure to register within the specified window drops you back to the shorter baseline coverage.
  • Non-approved parts: Having repairs done with parts not approved by the manufacturer can void coverage going forward.
City ACS tip: Keep a maintenance log for your AC system. Every time you have the unit serviced, even for routine maintenance, get a receipt or service record and file it away. If you ever need to make a warranty claim, documentation of consistent professional maintenance strengthens your case considerably.

What About Contractor Labor Warranties?

Beyond the manufacturer warranty on the equipment itself, the contractor who installed your system may have offered a separate labor warranty. This is distinct from the parts warranty, it covers the technician's workmanship for a period of time after installation, typically 1 year.

If your AC is having issues within the first year of installation and you believe it's related to how the system was set up, refrigerant charge, electrical connections, ductwork, you may have a claim under the labor warranty rather than (or in addition to) the manufacturer parts warranty.

Dig out your original installation contract or invoice. Any labor warranty that was offered should be documented there.

Bought a Home with an Existing AC? Here's What to Do

This situation is extremely common in South Florida. You buy a home, there's already an AC unit running, and you have no idea how old it is, who installed it, or whether any warranty is still in effect.

Here's your action plan:

1

Find the Serial Number and Decode the Manufacture Date

The serial number often encodes the year and week of manufacture. The exact format varies by brand, but most manufacturer websites have a guide for reading the date of manufacture from the serial number. This tells you how old the unit actually is, which is more important than how long you've owned the house.

2

Call the Manufacturer with the Serial Number

Tell them you recently purchased a home with one of their units and you'd like to know the warranty status. They'll look it up in their system and tell you what coverage, if any, is still active, and whether it's transferable to you as the new owner.

3

Check if the Warranty Is Transferable

Some manufacturers allow warranty transfers to new homeowners, sometimes requiring a small fee and a transfer form submitted within a certain time frame after the home sale. Others do not allow transfers at all. Brands like Lennox, Carrier, and Trane each have different policies, worth checking directly with the manufacturer.

4

Schedule a Professional Inspection Regardless

Whether the unit is under warranty or not, having a licensed HVAC technician inspect a system you've just inherited is smart. They'll assess the unit's actual condition, identify anything that might cause problems soon, and give you a clear picture of what you're working with before you need emergency service.

How to File an AC Warranty Claim

If your unit is under warranty and something has failed, here's the process to get that coverage applied correctly:

  1. Call a licensed HVAC contractor (like City ACS) to diagnose the issue and identify the specific part that has failed.
  2. Get the part number and confirm it falls under warranty coverage, your technician can help with this.
  3. Contact the manufacturer with your unit's serial number, installation date, and a description of the failure. They will either authorize the warranty claim directly or walk you through the process.
  4. Have your maintenance records ready if asked, documenting that the unit has been properly maintained helps prevent the claim from being denied.
  5. Your contractor completes the repair using the warranty-covered part. You'll still be responsible for the labor cost in most cases.
✓ Work with a licensed contractor who knows warranties. At City ACS, we handle warranty claims regularly. We know how to document failures, communicate with manufacturers, and make sure you get coverage you're entitled to. You shouldn't have to navigate that process alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find out if my AC is still under warranty?
Find the model and serial number on your AC unit, on a sticker on the outdoor condenser or indoor air handler. Then visit the manufacturer's website and use their warranty lookup tool, or call their customer service line with the serial number. They can tell you the manufacture date and current warranty status in minutes.
How long is a typical AC warranty?
The standard baseline parts warranty from most major AC brands is 5 years. Most brands extend this to 10 years (and sometimes longer for compressors) if the unit was registered with the manufacturer within 60–90 days of installation. Labor warranties from the installing contractor are typically 1 year.
Does an AC warranty transfer to a new owner?
It depends on the brand. Some manufacturers allow warranty transfers to new homeowners, sometimes for a small fee and within a specific time window after the property sale. Others don't allow transfers at all. Contact the manufacturer directly with the serial number to find out their policy for that specific unit.
What voids an AC warranty?
The most common warranty-voiding issues are: installation by an unlicensed contractor, lack of regular professional maintenance, unauthorized modifications, using the wrong refrigerant type, using non-approved replacement parts, and failing to register the unit within the manufacturer's required time window.
Does lack of maintenance void my AC warranty?
Yes, it can. If a manufacturer can show that a failed part was damaged or worn out due to neglected maintenance rather than a manufacturing defect, they may deny the warranty claim. This is why keeping service records is so important. Document every filter change, cleaning, and maintenance visit.
How do I make a warranty claim on my AC?
Have a licensed HVAC contractor diagnose the failure and identify the specific part number. Then contact the manufacturer with your serial number, installation date, and details of the failure. They will authorize the claim, and your contractor will do the repair. You'll typically still owe the labor cost even on a covered parts claim.
What is the difference between a parts warranty and a labor warranty?
A parts warranty comes from the manufacturer and covers the cost of replacement components. A labor warranty comes from the contractor who installed the system and covers the cost of the technician's time. These are separate coverages, having one doesn't automatically mean you have the other. Most manufacturer warranties are parts-only.

Not Sure What Your AC Warranty Covers?

Our team has handled hundreds of warranty repairs across Fort Lauderdale and Broward County. We'll diagnose your system, identify what's covered, and handle the manufacturer communication, so you're not paying for things you shouldn't have to.

Book a Diagnostic Appointment 📞 Call 561-592-5540

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