The Cary homeowner's heat pump maintenance checklist

Your heat pump works nearly every day of the year in this climate. Here's exactly what to do, monthly, seasonally and annually, split into what's safely DIY and what's worth a pro's gauges.

Heat pump maintenance isn't complicated, but it is unforgiving of neglect: a dirty filter quietly costs you efficiency every single day, and a clogged condensate drain picks the hottest week of July to shut your system down. This checklist is the routine we recommend to every customer.

Monthly: the 2-minute jobs

  • Check the air filter. Hold it up to a light, if you can't see light through it, replace it. In a typical Cary home (kids, pets, pollen season) that's every 1–3 months. This single habit is worth more than everything else on this list combined.
  • Glance at the outdoor unit. Leaves, grass clippings, a kid's soccer ball against the coil, clear anything blocking airflow.

Seasonally: the 20-minute jobs

Spring (March–April)

  • Gently rinse the outdoor coil with a garden hose (system off at the breaker first). Triangle pollen season coats coils in yellow film that measurably hurts efficiency.
  • Trim vegetation to keep 2 feet of clearance on all sides of the unit.
  • Pour a cup of distilled vinegar down the condensate drain line access to discourage the algae clogs that cause summer shutdowns.

Fall (October–November)

  • Test heat mode before you need it. Run heating on the first cool evening, not the first freezing one, if something's wrong, you'll beat the seasonal rush for repairs.
  • Clear fall leaves from around and inside the top grille of the outdoor unit.
  • Check thermostat batteries if yours takes them. (You'd be amazed how many "emergency no-heat calls" this one solves.)
A filter costs $15. The compressor it protects costs $2,500. That's the whole economics of maintenance.

Twice a year: the pro visit

Some things genuinely require gauges, meters and EPA certification, this is what your professional tune-up covers that DIY can't:

  • Refrigerant charge verification. Even 10% low cuts efficiency sharply and cooks the compressor over time. Checking it requires gauges and a license.
  • Electrical testing. Capacitors and contactors fail gradually, then suddenly. Measuring them annually catches the $30 part before it becomes the $400 emergency.
  • Defrost cycle & reversing valve testing. The components that make a heat pump a heat pump, and the ones DIYers can't safely exercise.
  • Aux heat staging. Misconfigured heat strips can silently double winter bills while the house feels perfectly fine.
  • Coil deep-cleaning, airflow measurement, temperature split, the performance numbers that prove your system is actually delivering what you pay Duke Energy for.
The lazy-but-smart option: our Comfort Club schedules both seasonal tune-ups automatically, jumps you to the front of the line in peak season, and discounts any repairs. Ask about it at (984) 348-9940.

What all this actually saves

The Department of Energy puts the efficiency penalty of a neglected heat pump at 10–25%. On a typical Cary electric bill, call it $150–$400 a year, before counting the repairs you avoided and the extra years of system life. Maintenance isn't a cost. It's the highest-yield investment in your house.

Book a tune-up, (984) 348-9940

Call (984) 348-9940