Canadian Smart Savings

Last reviewed: 2026-05-08

Spring HVAC maintenance checklist for Ontario homeowners

Outdoor coil cleaning

Shut power, straighten fins carefully, and rinse debris from the coil. Avoid high-pressure tips that fold fins closed.

Refrigerant lines and insulation

Suction line insulation prevents sweating and energy loss. Damaged insulation should be replaced before summer peak loads.

Condensate drains

Flush primary and secondary drains where present. Algae tablets help in humid summers—follow label guidance.

Blower compartment

Dust on the blower wheel reduces airflow and can smell when heat returns in fall. This is often a technician task due to wiring proximity.

Capacitors and contactors

Intermittent cooling on the first hot day often traces to weak capacitors or pitted contactors—common spring tune-up finds.

Ontario climate context

GTA winters combine damp lake-effect days with dry Arctic highs. Your HVAC system should handle both without constant thermostat battles. Seasonal maintenance catches small issues—dirty flame sensors, weak capacitors, drifting charge—before they become no-heat calls on the coldest night. Canadian Smart Savings focuses on honest recommendations: sometimes a repair is right; sometimes replacement is safer or more economical over five years of ownership.

Working with a licensed contractor

Refrigerant handling, gas piping, venting, and electrical work are regulated for good reasons. Always verify licensing and insurance, and keep permits and inspection paperwork for resale. If something in this article conflicts with your equipment manual, follow the manual and ask your technician.

Ontario climate context

GTA winters combine damp lake-effect days with dry Arctic highs. Your HVAC system should handle both without constant thermostat battles. Seasonal maintenance catches small issues—dirty flame sensors, weak capacitors, drifting charge—before they become no-heat calls on the coldest night. Canadian Smart Savings focuses on honest recommendations: sometimes a repair is right; sometimes replacement is safer or more economical over five years of ownership.

Working with a licensed contractor

Refrigerant handling, gas piping, venting, and electrical work are regulated for good reasons. Always verify licensing and insurance, and keep permits and inspection paperwork for resale. If something in this article conflicts with your equipment manual, follow the manual and ask your technician.

Ontario climate context

GTA winters combine damp lake-effect days with dry Arctic highs. Your HVAC system should handle both without constant thermostat battles. Seasonal maintenance catches small issues—dirty flame sensors, weak capacitors, drifting charge—before they become no-heat calls on the coldest night. Canadian Smart Savings focuses on honest recommendations: sometimes a repair is right; sometimes replacement is safer or more economical over five years of ownership.

Working with a licensed contractor

Refrigerant handling, gas piping, venting, and electrical work are regulated for good reasons. Always verify licensing and insurance, and keep permits and inspection paperwork for resale. If something in this article conflicts with your equipment manual, follow the manual and ask your technician.

Ontario climate context

GTA winters combine damp lake-effect days with dry Arctic highs. Your HVAC system should handle both without constant thermostat battles. Seasonal maintenance catches small issues—dirty flame sensors, weak capacitors, drifting charge—before they become no-heat calls on the coldest night. Canadian Smart Savings focuses on honest recommendations: sometimes a repair is right; sometimes replacement is safer or more economical over five years of ownership.

Working with a licensed contractor

Refrigerant handling, gas piping, venting, and electrical work are regulated for good reasons. Always verify licensing and insurance, and keep permits and inspection paperwork for resale. If something in this article conflicts with your equipment manual, follow the manual and ask your technician. This article is general information only and is not a substitute for an on-site assessment by a qualified HVAC technician for your specific home, equipment sizing, combustion safety, or refrigerant work.

For maintenance, upgrades, or diagnostics in the GTA and surrounding areas, contact Canadian Smart Savings.

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