Serving the Phoenix Metro Area

Mobile Home AC Repair in Phoenix

Mobile home AC repair in Phoenix cannot wait when it is 110 out — vetted, licensed, insured HVAC pros for package units blowing warm air, bad capacitors, frozen coils, and low refrigerant.

Tell us what your unit is doing and get matched with a background-checked Phoenix pro who can come fast.

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ShowUp Guarantee — no-show means no pay.

Mobile Home AC Repair in Phoenix — an HVAC technician repairing an air conditioning unit at a Phoenix, Arizona manufactured home.
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Mobile Home AC Repair in Phoenix Done Right

When the AC quits in a Phoenix mobile home, it is not a comfort problem — it is a heat emergency. Indoor temperatures in a manufactured home climb fast at 110 and up, and a warm-air package unit at the peak of summer needs a fast, correct fix, not a guess.

The trouble is that mobile-home cooling is easy to misdiagnose. Warm air gets blamed on refrigerant when it is really a dead capacitor; a unit that ices over gets a refrigerant top-off when the real issue is airflow. Cold-calling a handyman means hoping they actually work on manufactured-home package units and carry the right parts.

ShowUp Promise replaces that guesswork: describe what your unit is doing and we match you with a vetted, licensed, insured, background-checked HVAC pro near you. You get a real diagnosis, an upfront price, and a pro who shows up — and if they do not, the ShowUp Guarantee means you do not pay.

The Mobile Home AC Problems Phoenix Pros Fix Most

Most calls come down to a handful of failures. The pros in our network diagnose the real cause on your package unit instead of swapping parts and hoping:

  • Warm air from a failed run capacitor or a burned contactor keeping the compressor from starting
  • A frozen evaporator coil from a clogged filter, dirty coil, or low refrigerant
  • Low refrigerant and slow leaks that drop cooling capacity in the heat
  • A failed or weak blower motor moving little air through the belly ducts
  • A worn or seized compressor on an older package unit
  • Thermostat faults and wiring issues that leave the unit short-cycling or dead

Why Mobile Home AC Is Different in Phoenix

Most manufactured homes here run a self-contained package unit — condenser, coil, and blower all in one cabinet on the ground beside the home or up on the roof — instead of the split system a site-built house uses. That single-cabinet design changes how a pro diagnoses and repairs it.

Mobile homes also use belly or underfloor duct systems, smaller return-air openings, and mobile-home-approved equipment rated for those specific ducts and clearances. A standard residential condenser is not a safe or legal swap for a package unit feeding a belly duct, and tight sizing means a marginal charge or a partly clogged filter shows up as warm air fast.

A pro who services Phoenix package units every week knows to check the capacitor, contactor, coil, and blower in that one cabinet first — not the generic split-system causes a manual assumes. That local read is what turns a vague "no cold air" complaint into a specific, one-visit fix.

A self-contained package air conditioning unit mounted beside a Phoenix, Arizona manufactured home, the kind of rooftop or ground-mount system an HVAC tech services when a mobile home stops cooling.

How ShowUp Promise Connects You With an HVAC Pro

Getting matched takes a couple of minutes. Tell us what is wrong — warm air from the vents, a unit that will not start, ice on the lines, or a package unit that keeps tripping — and how urgent it is. We connect you with an available, vetted HVAC pro from our network of trusted contractors in Phoenix.

You see and approve an upfront price before any work begins, pay securely in-app, and can track your pro's arrival. Because every pro is licensed, insured, and background-checked before they join, you skip the part where you wonder whether the person you called actually works on manufactured-home package units.

No app to download and no obligation to book the first quote — just a faster, safer path to a cool mobile home in the middle of a Phoenix summer.

The ShowUp Guarantee

Every HVAC pro in the ShowUp Promise network is vetted, licensed, insured, and background-checked before they ever reach your door. You approve the price before work starts, and if a pro does not show, you do not pay — the system automatically works to reassign your job to the next available verified pro so you are never left without cooling in a Phoenix heat wave.

What Mobile Home AC Repair Costs in Phoenix

A typical Phoenix mobile-home AC repair runs $150 to $650, with a $75 to $150 diagnostic and labor around $90 to $150 an hour. A run capacitor is about $150 to $400, a contactor $150 to $350, a blower motor $300 to $700, and a refrigerant recharge $200 to $600. A compressor or full package-unit replacement runs roughly $1,500 to $4,500 installed.

The final number tracks which part failed and how old the unit is — a capacitor or contactor is quick, while a compressor or a leak repair takes longer. Because Phoenix heat pushes package units to the edge of their rating, a small fix caught early usually beats waiting until the compressor gives out in August.

With ShowUp Promise you see an all-in price and approve it before any work begins, so there are no surprise add-ons after the job. Ask for the diagnosis and any workmanship warranty in writing so you know exactly what you are paying for.

Fix It Now, Cut Your Summer Bill Later

The best time to get your package unit back to full strength is before the peak of summer. Common fixes and tune-ups that pay for themselves in Phoenix heat:

  • A fresh run capacitor and clean contactor for a compressor that starts every time
  • A correct refrigerant charge so the coil cools instead of freezing or starving
  • A coil and blower cleaning to restore full airflow through the belly ducts
  • A new or upgraded filter sized for the smaller mobile-home return
  • Sealed belly and underfloor ducts so cold air reaches the rooms instead of the crawlspace
  • A thermostat check and Phoenix-heat programming so the unit is not overworking
An HVAC technician checking refrigerant pressure with gauges on a mobile-home air conditioning system in Phoenix, Arizona, diagnosing why the unit is blowing warm air.

Finding the Real Reason It Stopped Cooling

Two package units with the same "blowing warm air" symptom can have completely different causes — one has a dead capacitor the compressor cannot start on, the other has a frozen coil from a clogged filter or a low charge. Guessing wastes money on parts the unit did not need.

A good repair starts with diagnosis, not parts. The pro checks the capacitor and contactor, reads refrigerant pressures on the gauges, inspects the coil and blower, tests the thermostat, and confirms airflow through the belly ducts before quoting anything.

Whether it is a five-minute capacitor swap, a leak repair and recharge, or a full package-unit replacement, ShowUp Promise matches you with a vetted pro who finds the real problem and quotes it upfront — no upsell on a new system you do not need yet.

Serving Phoenix and the Whole Valley

ShowUp Promise matches mobile and manufactured home owners with HVAC pros across Phoenix and the wider Valley, including Mesa, Scottsdale, Chandler, Tempe, Gilbert, Glendale, Peoria, Surprise, and Goodyear. Wherever your home is, there is likely a vetted pro nearby who works package units every day.

Dealing with more than just the AC? The same network covers other home-systems jobs Phoenix homeowners need, like heat exchanger repair in Phoenix, water softener repair in Phoenix, and emergency electrician in Phoenix. You can also browse all of our trusted contractors in Phoenix in one place.

Mobile Home AC Repair Phoenix FAQ

How Much Does Mobile Home AC Repair Cost in Phoenix?

Most Phoenix mobile-home owners spend roughly $150 to $650 for a typical AC repair, with a $75 to $150 diagnostic or service call and labor around $90 to $150 an hour. Individual parts drive the rest: a run capacitor is usually $150 to $400 installed, a contactor about $150 to $350, a blower motor $300 to $700, and a low-refrigerant recharge $200 to $600 depending on how much is needed and whether there is a leak to fix. A compressor or a full package-unit replacement is a different number — often $1,500 to $4,500 for a mobile-home-approved unit. With ShowUp Promise you approve an upfront, all-in price before any work begins, so a simple capacitor swap never turns into a surprise bill.

Why Is My Mobile Home AC Blowing Warm Air?

Warm air from a mobile-home AC usually traces to one of a few things: a failed run capacitor or contactor keeping the compressor from starting, a frozen evaporator coil from a dirty filter or low refrigerant, a refrigerant leak that dropped the charge, or a bad blower motor moving little to no air. Because most Phoenix mobile homes run a self-contained package unit, the whole system sits in one cabinet on the ground or roof, so a tech can check the compressor, capacitor, coil, and blower in one place. The fix depends on the actual failure — which is why a real diagnosis beats guessing and throwing parts at it in 110-degree heat.

How Is AC in a Mobile Home Different From a Regular House?

Most manufactured and mobile homes use a self-contained package unit — condenser, coil, and blower all in one cabinet sitting on the ground beside the home or on the roof — instead of the split system a site-built house uses, where the condenser is outside and the furnace-and-coil are inside. Mobile homes also use belly or underfloor duct systems, smaller return-air openings, and mobile-home-approved equipment that is rated for those specific ducts and clearances. That matters for repair: a tech has to match parts and airflow to the manufactured-home setup, and a standard residential unit is not a legal or safe swap for a package unit that feeds a belly duct.

What Are the Most Common Mobile Home AC Failures in Phoenix?

The calls we see most are a bad run capacitor (the number-one summer failure, cheap and quick to swap), a burned or pitted contactor, a frozen evaporator coil, low refrigerant from a slow leak, a failed blower motor, and a worn or seized compressor. Thermostat faults and clogged filters starving the smaller mobile-home returns round out the list. Phoenix heat pushes every one of these harder — a package unit baking on a rooftop or ground pad at 115 degrees runs at the edge of its rating all summer, so a marginal capacitor or a low charge that would limp along in a mild climate fails outright here.

Is a Broken AC in a Phoenix Mobile Home a Safety Issue?

Yes — in a Phoenix summer, losing cooling is a life-safety problem, not just a comfort one. Indoor temperatures in a manufactured home can climb dangerously fast when the AC quits during a heat wave, and heat illness is a real risk for older adults, young children, and pets. That is why we treat mobile-home AC repair as urgent and match you with a pro who can come fast. If your home is already very hot and someone feels dizzy, nauseous, or confused, get to a cooler place and call for help — do not wait it out.

Should I Repair or Replace My Mobile Home AC Unit?

It comes down to the unit’s age, the failed part, and how many things are wrong. A capacitor, contactor, thermostat, or blower motor on a package unit under about 10 years old is almost always worth repairing. Once a unit is past 12 to 15 years, the compressor has failed, or it needs a compressor and a coil at the same time, replacement often costs about the same as stacking repairs and gets you a far more efficient, mobile-home-approved system that costs less to run. A ShowUp Promise pro gives you the honest math on both paths and an upfront price, so you are not pushed into a new unit you did not need.

How Can I Cut My Mobile Home Cooling Costs, and Are There Rebates?

A tuned, correctly charged AC is the biggest lever — a frozen coil, a low charge, or a dirty filter can quietly double your summer bill in a mobile home. Beyond the repair, a tech can right-size the charge, clean the coil, seal leaky belly ducts, and confirm the thermostat is programmed for Phoenix heat. Utility rebates can offset a new high-efficiency package unit, so it is worth checking the current residential programs at Arizona Public Service (APS) before you replace. Small efficiency fixes on a manufactured home usually pay for themselves within a summer or two.

Why Does My Mobile Home AC Keep Freezing Up?

A frozen evaporator coil — ice on the lines or the cabinet, weak airflow, warm air at the vents — comes from restricted airflow or low refrigerant. In a mobile home the usual culprits are a clogged filter starving the smaller return, a dirty coil, a failing blower motor, or a slow refrigerant leak that dropped the charge below spec. The unit ices over, then thaws and blows warm, and the cycle repeats. A pro thaws the coil, finds why it froze, and fixes the actual cause — replacing the filter and airflow path or locating and repairing the leak — instead of just adding refrigerant to a system that will freeze up again next week.

How Do I Know the Repair Tech Is Licensed, Insured, and Qualified?

Ask whether they carry liability insurance, work on manufactured-home package units specifically, and guarantee the repair — mobile-home HVAC ties into gas, electrical, and refrigerant work, so it should be done by someone who knows those systems and the manufactured-home code. Insurance matters because a refrigerant or electrical mistake can be costly or dangerous. With ShowUp Promise, every Phoenix HVAC pro is already vetted, licensed, insured, and background-checked before they reach you, so you skip the gamble of picking a name off a list and hoping they show up and actually know package units.

Get Your Phoenix Mobile Home Cooling Again

Match with a vetted, licensed, insured Phoenix HVAC pro who diagnoses the real problem on your package unit, fixes it clean, and shows up when they say they will.