In most of the country, the heat shuts off in spring and the AC rests by October. A Tampa air conditioner gets no such sabbatical — it runs essentially year-round, which means your home's air is filtered, cooled, and recirculated thousands of times more than a northern home's. The system that never sleeps needs cleaning attention to match.
Filters: monthly, not "eventually"
The standard advice says change filters every 90 days. With Florida runtime, pets, or allergies, make it every 30–45 days. A loaded filter chokes airflow (raising your power bill), lets dust blow past, and strains the blower motor. Use the size printed on the old filter and a mid-range MERV 8–11 — ultra-high MERV filters can restrict airflow on systems not designed for them.
Vents and returns
- Supply vents (the ones that blow): vacuum with the brush attachment monthly, and wipe the louvers with a damp microfiber cloth when you see dust streaks forming.
- Return grilles (the big ones that suck): these are the dustiest objects in most Florida homes — they're literally the system's intake. Vacuum monthly; a few times a year, remove the grille and wash it in the tub.
- Streak check: dark streaks on the ceiling around a supply vent usually mean dust and condensation mixing — clean them with mild soapy water and improve the filter schedule. Black speckling inside the duct opening deserves a professional look.
The condensate drain line — Florida's sneakiest leak
Your AC pulls gallons of water out of Tampa's air every day, and it all leaves through one little PVC drain line that loves to clog with algae. A clogged line backs up into the drain pan and onto your ceiling or floor. Prevention takes two minutes: locate the line's access tee (usually near the air handler) and pour in a cup of distilled white vinegar every month or two. If your air handler is in the attic, this habit is cheap insurance against a four-figure ceiling repair.