Your AC stopped working. It’s June in East Texas. The house is already 80 degrees and climbing, and you’re on the phone trying to figure out whether you’re looking at a repair bill or a full system replacement.
This is one of the most stressful calls a homeowner makes and one of the most common ones Evans Air Conditioning has fielded since 1978. The pressure to decide fast is real. So is the pressure not to throw good money after bad. This guide walks you through exactly how to think through that decision, so you’re not making a major financial choice in a panic.
The First Thing to Know: There’s No Universal Answer
Repair or replace isn’t a one-size answer. It depends on your system’s age, the nature of the failure, your energy bills, and what a replacement would actually cost you after financing. Any technician who tells you to replace without walking you through the math isn’t giving you advice, they’re giving you a sales pitch. And any technician who patches every broken system without flagging when it’s past its useful life isn’t doing you any favors either.
Here’s a framework that cuts through the noise.
The Age-Times-Cost Rule
The most practical starting point for this decision is a simple calculation: multiply the repair cost by the system’s age in years. If that number exceeds $5,000, replacement is almost always the smarter financial move.
Example: Your system is 12 years old and the repair quote is $600. 12 × $600 = $7,200. That math says replace.
Flip it: Your system is 4 years old and the quote is $400. 4 × $400 = $1,600. That math says repair.
This isn’t a law, it’s a filter. It helps you stop weighing a repair quote against a replacement quote on gut feeling alone. Pair it with the factors below and you’ll have a much clearer picture.
When the Repair Is Almost Always Worth It
Not every breakdown is a death sentence for your system. There are situations where paying for the repair is the obvious call.
The system is less than 8 years old. A properly maintained AC system should run 15–20 years. If yours is mid-life and the failure isn’t catastrophic, repair is usually the right move. You’re not near the end of its useful life, you just hit a bump.
The failure is mechanical and isolated. Capacitors, contactors, fan motors, and drain lines all fail at some point. These are routine repairs. They don’t signal the rest of the system is about to collapse. If a technician identifies a single failed component with no other underlying issues, a repair buys you real time.
You recently made a major upgrade. If you replaced a coil, upgraded a refrigerant system, or installed a new air handler in the last two to three years, you have equity in that equipment. Abandoning it prematurely rarely makes financial sense.
When Replacement Is the Smarter Move
There are specific situations where repair is actually the expensive option even when the quote looks smaller up front.
Your System Is 10 Years Old or More
The average central AC system in East Texas runs hard. Humidity, heat load, and long cooling seasons all shorten equipment life. Once you’re past the 10-year mark, every repair you make is buying time on borrowed equipment. The $600 fix this summer might be followed by a $900 fix next summer and a compressor failure the year after that.
A new, properly sized system also delivers meaningfully better efficiency. Today’s higher-SEER equipment can reduce energy consumption by 20–40% compared to older units and in a Tyler summer, that shows up on your electric bill every single month.
You’re Dealing with a Refrigerant Issue
If your system runs on R-22 refrigerant common in units installed before 2010 you’re in a difficult position. R-22 has been phased out under federal EPA regulations and is no longer manufactured in the U.S. What remains in the supply chain is expensive. Recharging an aging R-22 system can cost significantly more than it once did, and it doesn’t fix the underlying leak. You’re paying to delay the inevitable.
Systems running R-410A are a different conversation. If one of those is leaking, you’re looking at a repair discussion — not an automatic replacement.
You’ve Had Multiple Repairs in the Last Two Years
A system that has required two or more service calls for different issues in a 24-month window is telling you something. It’s not bad luck — it’s wear. When multiple components start failing in sequence, the compressor is usually next. A compressor replacement on an older system often costs more than a new system financed over several years.
Your Energy Bills Keep Climbing Without Explanation
If your electric bill has crept up year over year — and your usage habits haven’t changed — your system is losing efficiency. It’s working harder to deliver the same cooling. A new system pays for itself faster than most homeowners expect when the efficiency gap is wide enough.
What Replacement Actually Costs — and Why Financing Changes the Calculation
Sticker shock is the main reason homeowners talk themselves into one more repair. When the repair quote is a few hundred dollars and the replacement quote is several thousand, the repair looks like the obvious choice. But that framing ignores one important variable: financing.
Most central AC replacements in the East Texas market fall somewhere between $6,000 and $14,000, depending on system size, efficiency rating, the brand of equipment, and whether any ductwork modifications are involved. That range is wide on purpose — a straightforward swap in a smaller home looks very different from a full system upgrade in a larger one.
Evans Air Conditioning currently offers $0 down, 0% financing for up to 72 months through Service Finance Company and Wells Fargo. When you spread a replacement across a low-interest payment plan, the monthly cost is often partially offset by the energy savings a newer, more efficient system delivers. A repair that buys 12 more months on a failing system may end up costing more in the long run than a manageable monthly payment on equipment that will run reliably for the next 15 to 20 years.
Run both numbers before you commit either direction. You can review current financing options and any active promotions on the Evans Specials page before your technician arrives.
The Honest Conversation Evans Has Been Having Since 1978
Evans Air Conditioning has served Tyler and East Texas for over 45 years. In that time, we’ve seen what happens when homeowners patch systems well past their useful life — and what happens when a household replaces equipment five years too early.
Our recommendation is never based on what generates the larger ticket. It’s based on what makes sense for your home, your budget, and how long you plan to stay in the house. A homeowner selling in 18 months has different math than a family planning to be there for the next 15 years.
When an Evans technician arrives, they’ll give you a straight breakdown: what failed, what’s at risk of failing next, what a repair costs, and what a comparable replacement system costs on a monthly payment. Then it’s your decision — made with full information, not pressure.
With more than 2,500 five-star reviews from Tyler and East Texas homeowners, that approach has served our customers well for decades.
What to Do Right Now
If your AC has stopped working or isn’t cooling the way it should, don’t wait it out. July and August in Tyler are unforgiving, and systems that are struggling in June tend to fail completely when the temperature peaks.
Call 903-993-4779 — Evans serves Tyler, Longview, and the surrounding East Texas area and can typically dispatch a technician same day or next day during peak season.
Not sure if you’re at failure yet? An HVAC Tune-Up and Safety Check is a low-cost way to get a full picture of your system’s health before anything fails completely — including an honest read on how much useful life your equipment has left.
Either way, you’ll leave the conversation knowing exactly where you stand.

