RV AC Not Cooling in Fort Lauderdale, FL

Diagnose and fix your RV AC not cooling in Fort Lauderdale, FL. Learn common causes and effective solutions.

Emergency checklist

RV AC not cooling?

In extreme heat, loss of cooling can become a safety issue. Start with airflow and power before you dig into parts.

Check these three things immediately:

  1. Return air filter clean and snapped in place
  2. Thermostat in Cool with setpoint below room temperature
  3. AC branch breaker ON—reset once if tripped, then diagnose if it trips again

Fix in 60 seconds

Try this first—many issues resolve without tools.

  1. Turn the thermostat to Cool and drop the setpoint 5°F below room temp.
  2. Shut off cooling and run Fan only 5 minutes if you suspect ice—then recheck airflow.
  3. If on 30A shore power, turn off other high-draw loads (microwave, electric water heater) and retry.

Most common fix

Dirty return filter or frozen evaporator—both choke airflow and stop sensible cooling. Clean/replace the filter; if you see freeze symptoms, thaw before running Cool again.

Cost band
$0–$40 (filter) · $30–$120 (DIY capacitor if needed)
Difficulty
Easy for filter · Moderate for capacitor
Time
5–45 minutes

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Next steps

You've already done the safe checks.

If the next steps feel uncomfortable, stop here.

Once the issue moves into power, start components, or sealed-system territory, a pro is the safer next step.

In Florida heat and humidity, letting a small cooling issue drag on can turn it into a bigger bill—especially if the wrong part gets changed first.

Working on a system you do not fully understand can mean shock risk, lost warranty goodwill, or damage if the wrong part is swapped in first.

Problem overview

Fast read: Most no-cool calls start with airflow, power, or start-component issues. Work through the quick checks first. If the unit still will not cool after the simple steps, it is time to stop guessing.

Follow this sequence

Answer each question in order—your path should match the branch chart when it is visible.

  1. Is the AC unit running?
    • Yes: Proceed to check airflow.
    • No: Check power supply.
  2. Is the airflow strong?
    • Yes: Check temperature differential.
    • No: Inspect for blockages.
  3. Is the temperature differential good?
    • Yes: Check refrigerant level.
    • No: Inspect for coil freeze.

System behavior

Return air goes through the filter and blower, across the indoor coil, then through thin roof ducts. Fix return restrictions before you assume a refrigerant leak.

On a cool call, the indoor fan should run, then the roof pack should energize the compressor and outdoor fan together. Bad low-voltage signal, worn contactor points, or weak start support can look like a “dead compressor” without touching the sealed refrigerant circuit.

With normal airflow the coil should not ice up in typical weather. Long run times with little temperature change at the vents usually point to airflow or weak cooling effect—not an automatic need to add gas.

Decision path

The branch chart is not shown on this view so you can rely on the written steps without layout issues. Use the numbered list in Follow this sequence above—the same checks in order. You can print this page or take it to the roof on a phone or tablet.

Work in this order: thermostat and mode, then return airflow and filter, then rooftop power under load, then start parts such as capacitor and contactor, then sealed refrigerant only with a licensed tech.

Top causes

  1. Sagging voltage under load (high). Low voltage can cause the compressor to underperform, leading to inadequate cooling.
  2. Restricted airflow due to blockages (medium). Dirt or debris in the intake or ductwork can significantly reduce airflow, causing the system to struggle.
  3. Coil freeze due to high humidity (medium). Excess moisture can accumulate on the coils, leading to ice formation and reduced cooling capacity.
  4. Low refrigerant levels (low). Insufficient refrigerant can prevent the system from absorbing heat effectively, resulting in poor cooling.

Repair matrix

Fix pathWhat you doCost band
Check and restore power supply
  • Inspect the power source for voltage sag and ensure the unit is receiving adequate power.
low
Clear blockages in airflow
  • Remove any debris obstructing the intake or ductwork to improve airflow.
low
Defrost the system
  • If the coils are frozen, allow the system to defrost before further diagnosis.
low

Replace vs repair

Repair when the pack still makes sense for its age: one clear fault you can verify—airflow, contactor, start cap, shore-side sag, or a control issue—and the shell and coils are still trustworthy.

Replace when age and history argue back: repeat compressor or coil trouble, a major sealed leak, heavy corrosion, or a quote that lands in the same ballpark as a new rooftop with a fresh warranty.

Older units past about a decade of hard summers are a judgment call—if the repair ticket creeps toward half the cost of new equipment, most seasoned techs stop stacking band-aids and move you to a planned swap.

Bench procedure

How to use this section: Treat each repair-matrix row as its own mini job. Finish that row’s checks, then re-test at the vents before you start the next row.

Anything involving live line voltage you are not trained on, start capacitors you cannot verify as discharged, or sealed refrigerant work belongs with a licensed tech. Stop there, keep your notes, and use the handoff at the bottom of the page.

Fix pathWhat to doGoal
One row at a timeRun the checks in a single matrix row, then pause and re-test cooling.Prove the symptom shifted before you spend on the next hypothesis.
Power lockoutRemove shore power and verify discharge steps before touching caps or contactors.Reduce shock and fire risk while you isolate start parts.
HandoffPackage your pass/fail notes for a pro if you hit sealed-system or live-work limits.Faster diagnosis on the first visit—less repeated guesswork.
Field insight: Most no-cool stops trace to airflow, shore power, or start parts—not an automatic refrigerant story. Prove airflow and steady voltage before you order major parts. In Fort Lauderdale, FL, sticky heat and humidity make weak airflow or low incoming voltage look like a bigger AC failure. Check those first before you spend on sealed-system work. If you are still stuck, use the button below to hand the diagnosis off to a pro.

Preventative maintenance

Tools

ToolPurposeDifficulty
Multimeter
  • Check that the unit is getting AC power where it matters (post vs rooftop under load).
  • Helps separate a weak campground feed from a rooftop fault.
  • Best used only if you are comfortable around live circuits—or stop and hand off.
Easy–medium
Infrared thermometer
  • Prove the low-voltage “cool call” reaches the roof when the indoor fan runs but the pack never loads.
  • Separates stat and plug issues from line-side faults.
  • Follow OEM pinout; do not probe blindly.
Medium
Insulated screwdriver set
  • Open shrouds, return covers, and control boxes without stripping screws.
  • Gives a clear view of contactor faces and wiring strain.
  • Wrong bit size damages seals and slows every later check.
Easy
Vacuum pump
  • Write down time, load state, and thermostat setpoint with each reading.
  • Keeps the next step a clear decision instead of a memory puzzle.
Varies
Refrigerant gauge set
  • Only after airflow, power, and start paths make sense.
  • Shows refrigerant behavior at service valves with hoses and a recovery plan.
  • Licensed path—wrong readings here burn compressors.
Hard (licensed)
Clamp meter (AC amps)
  • See whether the compressor branch is actually drawing amps when the contactor is in.
  • Tell a “no start” story from a “weak shore power” story before you order a compressor.
  • Use only with the shroud positioned safely and training on live AC.
Medium

Tools are for measured checks only. Live AC and charged capacitors can shock or start a fire. If a step is outside your training, stop forcing progress and continue in When to stop DIY below.

When to stop DIY

Rooftop AC runs on line voltage. The wrong test order—or swapping the wrong part first—can shock you, damage the compressor, or turn a simple fault into a fire or arc event.

Rushed work can also void warranty goodwill when damage reads like DIY overreach. If the next step feels uncomfortable, this is the point to hand it off—pushing past your training can increase cost and damage.

Don't let the heat linger

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most likely cause based on this guide?

Airflow, power, or start-component path (high confidence). Most no-cool calls start with airflow, power, or start-component issues. Work through the quick checks first. If the unit still will not cool after the simple steps, it is time to stop guessing.

What is the best prevention habit?

Regularly clean or replace air filters to maintain airflow.

What should I check before calling a technician?

Schedule annual maintenance to check refrigerant levels and system performance.

RV AC troubleshooting guides

RV AC Not Cooling | RV AC Freezing Up | RV AC Low Voltage Problems | RV AC Capacitor Failure | RV AC Compressor Not Turning On | RV AC Fan Running But No Cold Air | RV AC Thermostat Problems | RV AC Short Cycling | RV Mini Split Air Conditioner | RV HVAC Hub

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DecisionGrid content is independently researched. We evaluate products using technical specifications, wattage math, and compatibility checks—not sponsor relationships. Affiliate links do not influence rankings. Our safety-first philosophy prioritizes voltage protection, load calculations, and real-world use cases. Content is reviewed quarterly; specs are verified and broken links fixed. We do not accept sponsored placements or paid rankings.

About the Author

Adam Hall — Founder, DecisionGrid

DecisionGrid's technical guides are written and reviewed using:

  • System-level electrical analysis
  • Real-world RV troubleshooting patterns
  • Manufacturer documentation review
  • Field-tested diagnostic workflows

Our goal: Clear, structured troubleshooting — not guesswork.

About DecisionGrid Our Methodology Editorial Standards

Updated March 2026 · Reviewed for technical accuracy

This guide is educational and not a substitute for licensed electrical inspection.

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Last updated: March 2026 · Reviewed for technical accuracy

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RV AC Not Working? Don't Let This Turn Into a $2,000 Repair

Many no-cool calls are airflow, voltage, or start support—not a sealed-system guess. Wrong moves can stress the compressor.

Emergency service routing available

Choose the closest match — this routes your request correctly.

No-cool usually splits demand, airflow, and compressor electrical. Use the quick tree before you assume refrigerant.

If you are unsure, pause—forced starts and wrong parts add cost fast.

A tech can match your branch notes to rooftop measurements on one visit.

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