The owner of a four-bedroom rental home in Rosemary Beach reached out at the end of last summer with a familiar story. Two short-notice service calls during peak rental weeks. One filter that no one had changed for nine months because the previous management company didn't include it. A condenser that nobody had inspected since the home was bought four years ago. The owner wanted out of the reactive cycle and onto a plan.
We walked both systems — a larger main-house unit and a smaller carriage-house split — documented their condition, age, and serial-number history, and proposed a semi-annual maintenance agreement with a spring tune-up before the rental season and a fall checkup before the lighter shoulder months. Filter changes are quarterly and bundled in. Coil cleanings are annual. Refrigerant pressure, capacitor health, electrical connections, and condensate drainage all get checked twice a year, before issues become 90°F afternoon emergencies.
The first spring visit caught a contactor on the main-house condenser that was within a few weeks of failing — replaced under the plan at zero additional cost. The same visit found a partially-blocked condensate line that would have eventually overflowed the secondary pan. Neither of those would have triggered a service call yet. Both would have become problems during a rental window.
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Maintenance plans pay for themselves in luxury-home rental contexts faster than almost anywhere else — the cost of a single bad guest review during peak season easily exceeds a multi-year plan. Our HVAC maintenance plans service is built around two visits a year, full filter and consumables coverage, and priority scheduling when something does come up between visits. The right time to start is before the first peak-season heatwave, not after.