How much does AC installation cost in Escondido?
A complete central AC system runs roughly $7,000 to $10,000 installed for a typical Escondido home. High-efficiency two-stage and variable-speed systems run $10,000 to $14,000. The in-home estimate is free, and you get a line-itemed quote covering equipment, labor, materials, and the permit before you decide anything.
How fast can you install a new AC in Escondido?
Most replacements are next-day installs once you approve the estimate. A standard central system swap is a one-day job. Jobs that need new ductwork, an electrical panel upgrade, or a zoned design take two to three days. We confirm the schedule before we book and call before we arrive.
What size AC do I need for my Escondido home?
It depends on the house, not a rule of thumb. Escondido's inland heat means the sizing has to carry the home through 95 to 105-degree afternoons. We run a Manual J load calculation that accounts for square footage, insulation, window type and orientation, and ceiling height. An undersized system fails in July, and an oversized one short-cycles. We size to the real load.
Why is sizing different by ZIP code in Escondido?
The same floor plan needs more tonnage in the hotter east-side ZIPs. A 1,800-square-foot home that takes 2.5 tons on the coast often needs 3 tons in central Escondido (92025) and 3.5 tons in 92027 or 92029. Hidden Meadows (92026) and the San Pasqual side can run 4 to 5 tons with zoning on larger or two-story homes. The Manual J accounts for it.
Does my attic insulation affect the new AC?
Yes, more in Escondido than on the coast. Thin attic insulation lets heat pour into the house all afternoon, which forces a larger system and drives up your summer bills. We check the insulation during the free estimate. If it is thin, we tell you, because it changes both the right system size and how the system performs.
Do I need a permit to replace my AC in Escondido?
Yes. The City of Escondido requires a mechanical permit for an AC system changeout. We pull that permit as part of the job, and the work is inspected and recorded. A permitted install protects you at resale and keeps your manufacturer warranty valid.
Should I install a heat pump instead of an AC in Escondido?
In 2026, usually yes. Modern variable-speed heat pumps handle Escondido's 95 to 105-degree summer load and its 30-something winter mornings on one outdoor unit. The SDG&E TECH Clean California rebate and the federal 25C tax credit close most of the upfront cost gap with a like-for-like AC. We run both numbers during the estimate so you can compare.
Are there rebates for a new AC or heat pump in Escondido?
Yes. SDG&E and TECH Clean California offer rebates, and they are largest for qualifying heat pump systems. The federal 25C tax credit can stack on top for up to $2,000. We handle the SDG&E paperwork and give you what you need for the tax credit. We tell you exactly what your home qualifies for, with no inflated numbers.
My older Old Escondido home has a small electrical panel. Is that a problem?
It can be. Many older homes in Old Escondido and the historic district have panels that were never sized for a modern condenser. We check the panel during the free estimate. If a circuit or panel upgrade is needed, it shows up as a line item in the quote, so there are no surprises.
Can you reuse my existing ductwork?
Often, yes, but we inspect it first. Many older Escondido homes had AC added years after they were built, sometimes with undersized or leaky ducts that lose cooling into a hot attic. We check the duct runs during the estimate. If the ducts are sound, we reuse them. If they are losing real airflow, we quote sealing or partial replacement so the new system can actually perform.
Do you charge extra to install in Hidden Meadows or San Pasqual Valley?
No. Pricing is flat across all of Escondido and San Diego County. There is no travel or mileage surcharge for any neighborhood. The free in-home estimate and the installed price are the same whether you are in Old Escondido, downtown, Hidden Meadows, the San Pasqual Valley, or anywhere else in the city.
How long does a new AC system last in Escondido?
Most central AC systems in Escondido last 12 to 18 years. Inland heat works a system harder than the coastal climate does, so the long summers tend to pull the lifespan toward the lower end of that range. An Escondido condenser typically logs 1,500 to 2,200 compressor hours a summer against 700 to 1,000 on the coast. Right-sizing, annual maintenance, and clean filters make the biggest difference in how long a new system lasts.