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Spring Commercial HVAC Maintenance Checklist: What Facility Managers Should Do Before Cooling Season

Summer heat doesn’t give commercial buildings a warning before it arrives, but spring does. For facility managers responsible for keeping occupants comfortable and systems running efficiently, the weeks before cooling season are the most valuable window of the year. This commercial HVAC maintenance checklist gives you a clear, task-by-task framework to make sure your systems are ready before the first hot day catches you off guard.

Spring Commercial Hvac Maintenance Checklist What Facility Managers Should Do Before Cooling Season

Why Spring Is the Right Time to Schedule Commercial HVAC Maintenance

Spring HVAC maintenance isn’t just a good habit. It’s a strategic decision. Once summer arrives and temperatures climb, HVAC contractors are running at full capacity, response times slow down, and the cost of emergency repairs goes up. The problems that could have been caught and fixed in April become the breakdowns that leave your building without cooling in July.

Completing your commercial HVAC maintenance checklist in the spring also means you’re testing your systems under lower-demand conditions. If something isn’t working correctly, you have time to fix it properly rather than patching it under pressure. Scheduling your spring service early gives you access to better contractor availability, reasonable lead times on parts, and a much calmer path into the season.

Who Should Own This Checklist: The Facility Manager’s Role

Not every task on a commercial HVAC maintenance checklist requires a licensed technician, and knowing the difference is part of what makes a good facility manager. Some items, like swapping filters, clearing debris around equipment, and doing visual inspections, fall squarely within the scope of an in-house facilities team. Others, like checking refrigerant charge, calibrating controls, or testing electrical components, require a certified HVAC professional.

The most effective approach is a split ownership model. Your team handles the surface-level, accessibility-based tasks before the contractor arrives. Your technician then handles the mechanical, electrical, and refrigerant-side work. This division keeps costs controlled while ensuring the high-risk items are handled by someone qualified to address them safely.

Start with the Basics: Filters, Belts, and Visual Inspections

Before anything else, walk through the basics. These are the tasks that are easy to execute, hard to justify skipping, and often the first things that reveal a larger problem.

  • HVAC Filter Replacement: Dirty filters restrict airflow, force the system to work harder, and reduce indoor air quality. HVAC filter replacement should happen at the start of every season at minimum, and more frequently in high-traffic or dusty environments.
  • Belt and Bearing Inspection: Check belts for cracking, fraying, or glazing. Inspect bearings for wear and lubricate where the manufacturer recommends. A snapped belt mid-summer is a completely avoidable failure.
  • Visual Equipment Walk-Through: Look for signs of corrosion, physical damage, loose panels, standing water, or anything that looks out of place since the last inspection. Document what you find before your technician arrives.

Coil Cleaning: Evaporator and Condenser Maintenance

Coil cleaning is one of the highest-impact items on any commercial HVAC maintenance checklist, and one of the most commonly postponed. Dirty coils force your system to run longer cycles to achieve the same result, driving up energy consumption and accelerating wear on compressors and fans.

Evaporator coil maintenance involves cleaning the indoor coil where heat is absorbed from the building’s air. Over time, dust, mold, and debris build up on the coil surface and act as insulation, reducing the system’s ability to transfer heat efficiently.

On the condenser side, coils sit in the outdoor unit and reject heat to the outside air. They collect dirt, cottonwood, and environmental debris throughout the year. Both coils should be cleaned by a technician using the appropriate coil cleaner and rinse method for the specific equipment type.

 For facility managers who want every line of this checklist backed by professional hands-on service, Hartwig Mechanical’s commercial HVAC maintenance services cover the full scope of spring startup from filters to refrigerant charge.

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Refrigerant Charge: What to Check and What to Leave to the Pros

Checking refrigerant charge is not a task for the facilities team. Refrigerant handling requires EPA Section 608 certification, and improper handling is both a regulatory issue and a safety risk. What facility managers should know is what low refrigerant looks like in practice: a system that runs constantly but struggles to cool, ice forming on the evaporator coil, or unusually high energy bills during early spring tests.

If you notice any of these signs during your spring walkthrough, flag them for your HVAC technician before the cooling season starts. A proper refrigerant check involves more than reading a gauge. It includes leak detection, verifying charge against manufacturer specifications, and confirming the system is operating within design pressures. Catching a refrigerant issue in April is far less disruptive than discovering one on the hottest day in August.

Cooling Tower Inspection

Larger commercial facilities with central chilled water systems should include a thorough cooling tower inspection as a dedicated line item on their spring commercial HVAC maintenance checklist. This is one of the higher-stakes items in any pre-season review.

A proper cooling tower inspection covers:

  • Fill Media and Drift Eliminators: Check for damage, scaling, or biological growth that restricts airflow or reduces thermal performance.
  • Basin Cleaning: Drain and clean the cold water basin to remove sediment, debris, and biofilm accumulated over the off-season.
  • Water Treatment Startup: Engage your water treatment provider to establish a treatment program before the tower runs. This step is critical for Legionella prevention and regulatory compliance in many jurisdictions.
  • Fans and Motors: Inspect fan blades for damage or imbalance, check motor connections, and verify proper operation before full startup.

Skipping cooling tower maintenance is not just an efficiency issue. In many jurisdictions, it carries real compliance liability that facility managers cannot afford to overlook.

Controls, Thermostats, and BAS Verification

Once the mechanical side of your commercial HVAC maintenance checklist is addressed, shift your attention to controls. Thermostats that are out of calibration, schedules that haven’t been updated since last fall, or building automation system (BAS) setpoints that drifted over winter can all reduce system efficiency even when the equipment itself is in good shape.

Verify that cooling schedules are correctly programmed for your current occupancy patterns. Test thermostat setpoints and confirm the system responds as expected. If your building uses a BAS, have your controls technician review alarm logs, trend data, and any setpoints that need adjustment for the cooling season ahead.

Drain Pans and Condensate Lines: The Easy Thing People Skip

Drain pans and condensate lines don’t get much attention until they cause a problem. A clogged condensate line backs up into the drain pan, overflows, and can cause water damage to ceilings, walls, and nearby equipment. It also creates standing water conditions that encourage mold growth and contribute to indoor air quality issues.

This is one of the quickest items on your spring checklist. Flush condensate lines with a diluted cleaning solution, confirm proper drainage, and check that the float switch is functioning if one is present. It takes minutes to address and can prevent a remediation situation that takes weeks and significant cost to resolve.

When to Call a Commercial HVAC Contractor

Several of the items on this commercial HVAC maintenance checklist require a licensed technician. As a general rule, anything involving refrigerant, electrical connections, combustion components, or warranty-sensitive equipment should be handled by a professional.

When you schedule your spring service, ask your contractor specifically for:

  • A full refrigerant check and leak inspection
  • Coil cleaning on both evaporator and condenser units
  • Electrical connection inspection and tightening
  • Motor amp draw testing
  • Lubrication of all moving parts
  • A written report of findings and any recommended repairs

A reputable contractor should provide documentation of what was inspected and what was found, not just a sign-off that work was completed. If you’re not getting that level of detail, it may be time to re-evaluate who you’re calling.

Partner With Hartwig Mechanical Before Cooling Season Begins

A commercial HVAC maintenance checklist is only as useful as the team executing it. At Hartwig Mechanical, we work with facility managers to complete thorough spring tune-ups that go well beyond a surface-level inspection. Whether your building has rooftop units, a central chilled water plant, cooling towers, or a combination of systems, our technicians know what to look for and how to address it before summer demand puts your equipment to the test.

If you’re ready to get your facility prepared for the cooling season, contact Hartwig Mechanical to schedule your spring HVAC maintenance service today. Contractor schedules fill up quickly once temperatures rise, and working through your commercial HVAC maintenance checklist now is the best way to stay ahead of it.

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