When the Cold Air Quits in Kissimmee, Start Here.
Kissimmee AC Repair helps homeowners in Kissimmee, St. Cloud, Poinciana, Buenaventura Lakes, and nearby Osceola County neighborhoods when an air conditioner stops cooling, leaks water, ices over, or just can't keep up with a Florida summer. If something seems off, call or send the short AC form — describe what you're noticing in plain language, and the callback can sort out what needs to be checked. You don't need to diagnose anything first.

Sound Familiar?
Most AC problems announce themselves the same few ways. Find yours below — each one links to a page that explains what's likely going on and what to do next.
Warm vents while the unit runs. Usually airflow, refrigerant, or a part giving out.
💧Water around the indoor unitIn Central Florida, it's a clogged condensate drain line until proven otherwise.
🔁Turns on and off constantlyShort cycling wears parts fast — worth a call before something fails outright.
🧊Ice on the copper linesShut the system off and call. Running it frozen risks the compressor.
📈Electric bill climbingA struggling system can pay for its own tune-up in a single summer.
🏚️System is 12+ years oldRepair can still make sense — see the honest breakdown before deciding.
What We Repair

AC Not Cooling
The system hums along while the house sits at 82. In Osceola homes the usual suspects are matted coils, weakening capacitors, low refrigerant, or an attic air handler starving for airflow behind a clogged filter. The diagnosis starts with the symptom you describe and works backward to the cause — not the other way around.
Read about not-cooling repairs →
Drain Line Clogs & Water Leaks
Algae grows in condensate lines all summer here. The line clogs, the pan overflows, and the water ends up on a closet floor — or through a ceiling, if the air handler lives in the attic. It's the most common warm-weather AC call in Central Florida, and one of the most fixable when it's caught early.
Read about drain line repairs →
Repair vs. Replacement for Older Systems
Kissimmee and St. Cloud have a deep stock of 1980s–2000s homes running original or once-replaced systems. When a 12-to-18-year-old unit fails, repair can still make sense — or it can be money into equipment on its way out. You'll get both numbers laid out honestly, not a push toward the bigger ticket.
Read the honest breakdown →Also on the list: maintenance & tune-ups for systems that should survive next summer instead of starring in it.
What Happens After You Reach Out
"The bedrooms won't cool," "there's water by the closet unit," "it freezes up every afternoon." Plain language is enough — describe it the way you'd describe it to a neighbor.
Which rooms are affected, when it started, roughly how old the system is if you happen to know. No model numbers, no photos, no diagnosis on your end.
What likely needs checking, how scheduling works, and what affects the cost — before anyone commits to anything.
Request AC Repair Help
Five fields. Describe the problem the way you'd say it out loud — that's all the form needs.
Cost, Honestly
AC repair pricing in Kissimmee follows the diagnosis, not the other way around. The failed part sets most of the range — a capacitor and a compressor are very different repairs. Attic air handlers under shingle roofs add labor in the months when attics hit 130 degrees. And older systems running R-22 refrigerant cost more to recharge, which changes the repair-versus-replace math. The cost factors page walks through each of these, so the final repair number makes sense instead of feeling like it came from nowhere.
FAQ
Can I ask for help if I don't know what's wrong?
Yes. Most people calling about an AC problem don't know the cause — that's the point of calling. Describe the symptom in plain language, and the callback questions narrow it down. You don't need to inspect, research, or prepare anything first.
Why is there water around my indoor unit every summer?
Almost always a clogged condensate drain line. Osceola humidity grows algae in the line all season, it backs up, and the drain pan overflows. Caught early it's a quick fix; ignored, it stains ceilings and trips the float switch that shuts the system down on the hottest day of the year.
There's ice on the copper line — should I keep running it?
No. Turn the system off and call. Running a frozen system can damage the compressor, which turns a modest repair into the most expensive one there is. Ice usually points to an airflow problem or low refrigerant, and both are findable.
My system is 15 years old. Is repairing it a waste of money?
Not automatically. It depends on what failed, the system's overall condition, and the refrigerant it uses. A solid older unit with a failed capacitor is a sensible repair; an R-22 system with a leaking coil is a different conversation. You'll see both options with real numbers before deciding.
What happens after I send the form?
Someone calls you back, asks a few plain-language questions about what the system is doing, and explains the likely next step and how scheduling works. No obligation, and nothing to prepare on your end.
Cool the House Back Down
One call or one short form — describe the problem, and it gets taken from there.
Call (321) 449-2999 Send System Details