HomeMini splitsMini split repair
Ductless mini split repair · Nationwide routing

Mini split repair, routed to a licensed local contractor

Ductless mini split repair help is one call away, 24/7. The call routes to a licensed local contractor in your area. Most repairs run $150–$700, with a $75–$200 diagnostic fee that is usually credited toward the work.

SINGLE + MULTI-ZONE

Routed contractors service single and multi-zone ductless systems, DIY-installed or not.

EPA-CERTIFIED

Refrigerant and flare-fitting work is done by EPA-608 licensed technicians.

QUOTE BEFORE WORK

You approve the price before any board or compressor is replaced — no surprises.

  1. STEP 01

    Call, no cost

    One call routes to a licensed local contractor. Note the brand and any blink code before you call.

  2. STEP 02

    On-site diagnosis

    The tech reads the fault code, checks the flare fittings, refrigerant charge, condensate, and inverter board.

  3. STEP 03

    Upfront quote

    You approve the price before any part is replaced — the diagnostic fee is usually credited into the repair.

  4. STEP 04

    Repaired & tested

    The part is replaced, the head is run in both modes, and you settle with the contractor.

Coverage check

Head acting up? Start with your ZIP

Enter your ZIP and we'll route your call to a licensed local contractor offering the soonest available slot. Calling is free, 24/7.

In a hurry? Call (888) 810-2291 now.

Licensed contractors serve . One call routes you to one for .

Call (888) 810-2291

Availability is subject to provider participation, location, technician availability, and demand.

01 · What it runs

Mini split repair pricing, at a glance

Most ductless repairs land between $150 and $700 — a filter, condensate line, sensor, or refrigerant leak. The big-ticket exceptions are the inverter board and the compressor. The diagnostic fee is usually credited toward the repair.

$150–$700Typical repair
$220–$1,000Refrigerant / flare
$75–$200Diagnostic fee
10–30 yrSystem life
02 · What we route

The mini split problems we route every week

Ductless has its own failure set — water down the wall from a gravity drain, a blink-code shutdown, a flare-fitting leak, and the proprietary inverter board — alongside the compressor and refrigerant faults it shares with a central system.

$150–$700

Not blowing cold

The most common call: a clogged filter, low refrigerant from a flare-fitting leak, or a failing compressor. Ductless filters clog fast because they run constantly.

$100–$450

Water leaking from the head

Ductless-specific: the condensate line runs on a gravity slope. A clog, a sagging line, or a head mounted off-level drips water down the wall.

$150–$600

Blinking light / error code

The ductless self-diagnosis: the indoor head flashes a code before it shuts off. Write the code down before you reset — it tells the tech exactly what failed.

$200–$700

Not heating

On a heat-pump mini-split, no heat points to the reversing valve or a defrost fault — the same year-round parts a ducted heat pump uses.

$220–$1,000

Low refrigerant / flare leak

Ductless systems join at flare fittings, which loosen and weep over time. Weak output in both modes means a leak — sealing it is the fix, not a recharge.

$400–$1,200

Inverter / PCB board fault

The expensive ductless failure. The inverter board that varies compressor speed is proprietary and pricey — on an older head it can total the unit.

$600–$1,000+

Compressor

In the outdoor condenser. When it fails, the repair cost forces the replace question on multi-zone systems especially, where one condenser feeds several heads.

03 · The ductless difference

Two faults only ductless has

Two problems are specific to a mini split and confuse homeowners most: the condensate line that drains by gravity down the wall, and the indoor head that flashes a blink code before it shuts off.

1

Water down the wall

The indoor head has no pump by default — condensate drains by gravity through a line that must run downhill the whole way. A clog, a sag, or a head mounted a fraction off-level backs the water up and drips it down the wall. It's common, and it's one of the most fixable ductless calls.

2

Read the blink code first

Before you reset anything, count the flashes on the indoor head. Each brand — Mitsubishi, Daikin, Fujitsu — has its own legend, and that code tells the technician which component failed before they arrive. Resetting first erases the one clue the system gave you.

04 · Fix it free first

Four checks before you call

Before booking a visit, rule out the four things you can handle yourself: clogged filters, a sagging condensate line, an unread blink code, or an iced or blocked outdoor unit.

CHECK 01

Clean the filters

Pop open each indoor head and rinse the mesh filters. Ductless filters clog fast, and a clogged one is the number-one no-cold call.

CHECK 02

Check the drain slope

Look for a sagging or kinked condensate line under the head. A gravity drain only works if the line runs downhill the whole way.

CHECK 03

Note the blink code

Count the flashes on the indoor head before you reset it. Each brand's code tells the tech which part failed before they arrive.

CHECK 04

Clear the outdoor unit

Clear leaves, snow, and ice from the condenser. In winter, let a frozen coil thaw fully before judging it.

When to stop and call

Weak output in both modes, a flare-fitting leak, or an inverter-board code all need a licensed technician — refrigerant and flare work require EPA-608 certification. That's when to call. New to ductless? Start at what a mini split is.

05 · What it costs

What a mini split repair really costs

Typical repairs land between $150 and $700, with the inverter board and compressor as the big-ticket exceptions. The part that failed is what moves the bill — and on a multi-zone system, a compressor failure weighs heavily toward replacement.

A condensate clog, sensor, or blower sits at the low end; a flare leak, inverter PCB, or compressor sits at the top. Component repairs cost about the same on single- and multi-zone systems — the difference is the compressor, which on a multi-zone setup feeds several heads at once. Broader HVAC ranges are on the HVAC repair cost page.

RepairLower endHigher end
Condensate & drainage$100$450
Sensors or remote$150$400
Blower or fan motor$275$640
Refrigerant / flare leak$220$1,000
Inverter PCB board$400$1,200
Compressor (outdoor)$600$1,000+

Broader HVAC cost ranges are on HVAC repair cost, and the diagnostic fee is explained on service-call cost.

06 · Who fixes it

What a licensed ductless technician does

The difference between a fair repair and an expensive one hides in this checklist. A licensed technician does all six of the following; a parts-swapper resets the code and reaches for the board.

  • EPA-608 certified for refrigerant and flare-fitting work
  • Reads the brand blink code before condemning a part
  • Traces the flare-fitting leak — not just a recharge
  • Corrects head slope and clears the condensate line
  • Quotes the repair before replacing any board or compressor
  • Gives an honest repair-vs-replace number on older heads

Weighing a fix against a new head? Run the numbers on repair or replace, or price a new system on mini split installation.

07 · Coverage

Where we route calls

Calls route to licensed local contractors across the United States. Enter a ZIP in the coverage check above and we'll confirm the nearest routed pro; if your exact area isn't matched, the call still connects nationwide.

Need it running right?

One call routes you to a licensed local contractor offering the soonest available slot.

(888) 810-2291 ☏ Call now

Same-day and 24/7 emergency services are subject to provider participation, location, technician availability, and demand. Availability is not guaranteed and may vary by market and appointment capacity.

08 · Questions

Questions homeowners ask first

Are mini splits worth repairing?

Usually, yes — mini-splits last 10–30 years and most faults are a filter, condensate line, sensor, or refrigerant leak. The exception is an inverter board or compressor failure on an older head, where the repair cost can approach the price of a new unit.

How much does it cost to fix a leak in a mini split?

Refrigerant leak repair on a ductless system typically runs $220–$1,000, depending on whether it's a loose flare fitting or a line-set failure. A recharge alone without sealing the leak just pays for the same repair again next season.

Why is my mini split leaking water inside?

The indoor head drains condensate by gravity, so a clogged drain line, a sagging line, or a head mounted slightly off-level will drip water down the wall. It's one of the most common — and most fixable — ductless calls.

Does a single-zone or multi-zone cost more to repair?

Component repairs cost about the same per part. The difference is the compressor: on a multi-zone system, one outdoor condenser feeds several indoor heads, so a compressor failure affects every room and weighs more heavily toward replacement.

I installed a DIY mini split — can you still repair it?

Yes. DIY-friendly brands still need a licensed technician for refrigerant, flare, inverter-board, and electrical faults — those aren't DIY work, and refrigerant handling requires EPA-608 certification.

What does the blinking light on my indoor unit mean?

It's an error code. Each brand — Mitsubishi, Daikin, Fujitsu — uses its own legend, so note the pattern or code before resetting. That code tells the technician which component failed before they even arrive.

☏ Call a licensed local contractor — (888) 810-2291