AC replacement for Paradise homes that run longer and age faster
Paradise wraps the Las Vegas Strip on the valley floor near 2000 feet, sitting at the peak of the urban heat island where concrete, asphalt, and commercial density push afternoon temperatures above the outlying suburbs. An air conditioner here logs more running hours per cooling season than the same unit would in an elevated or master-planned community, so original equipment in these neighborhoods reaches the replace decision earlier than the nameplate years suggest. The Cooling Company replaces systems across Paradise with free in-home quotes, Manual J sizing, EPA-certified recovery of the old refrigerant, and clean one-day installs. Call (702) 567-0707 to schedule.
Short answer: The right time to replace an AC in Paradise depends on your block's build era. The 1960s to 1980s East Tropicana and UNLV homes often still run R-22 condensers on original ductwork, where a major repair tilts toward replacement, while the better-insulated 1980s to 2000s Eastern Avenue and Sunset sections can be worth one more fix. We size the new system with a Manual J load calculation against the real heat-island runtime, haul away and EPA-dispose the old unit, and lay out NV Energy PowerShift rebates and financing before you decide. For the full process and tiers, see our AC replacement guide.
How Paradise build era drives the repair-versus-replace call
A blanket repair-or-replace rule misses what actually matters here, which is the refrigerant and the age of the original system on your street. In the established 1960s to 1980s residential pockets around East Tropicana and the UNLV area, many homes still cool on R-22 systems. R-22 has been phased out and climbs in price every year as supply shrinks, so a charge-related or compressor repair on one of these units quietly costs far more than the part itself. Add the heat-island load that keeps Paradise compressors working longer each summer, and a 1970s-era R-22 system facing a compressor or evaporator-coil failure almost always pencils out better as a replacement than as one more rescue.
The South Maryland Parkway corridor, built across the 1970s to 1990s, runs a wide spread of 10 to 12 SEER systems that are now 15 to 30-plus years old, so the decision genuinely varies block to block. The newer 1980s to 2000s Eastern Avenue and Sunset sections are a different conversation: their 13 to 14 SEER systems sit on tighter, better-insulated envelopes, and a single mid-life repair there can be entirely reasonable. We bring you both numbers, the honest cost to repair and the long-run cost to replace, and let you make the call.
Right-sizing the new system to the real heat-island load
Because Paradise homes absorb heat that surrounding neighborhoods do not, sizing by the old tonnage on the nameplate is frequently wrong for the actual load. We run a Manual J calculation that accounts for your square footage, insulation, window exposure, orientation, and the genuine cooling demand of a home sitting at the hottest point of the valley. An oversized unit short-cycles, never pulls humidity or grit out of the air properly, and wears its compressor early. An undersized one runs flat out through the afternoon and never catches the peak. In an area where the system already runs more hours than the suburbs, either error costs you twice over the life of the equipment.
SEER2 efficiency payback when the unit runs this much
Higher-efficiency equipment earns its premium fastest exactly where Paradise sits, because payback scales with runtime and these homes run long. A modern 14.3 SEER2 baseline already beats the 10 to 12 SEER systems still common in the Maryland Parkway corridor by a wide margin on a peak-summer bill. Stepping up to a 15.2 SEER2 or higher condenser unlocks NV Energy PowerShift rebates and shortens the payback further given how many cooling hours these neighborhoods log. We model the efficiency tiers against your real usage rather than selling the biggest number, and we confirm airflow and filtration on the new install because the desert moves enough dust to choke an otherwise efficient system.
Old ductwork, removal, and equipment placement near the Strip
In the 1960s to 1980s East Tropicana and UNLV homes, the condenser may already have been swapped once, but the ducts are usually as old as the house. Bolting a high-efficiency system onto leaky, undersized original ductwork throws away the efficiency you paid for, so we inspect and seal the duct path as part of the replacement rather than treating it as someone else's problem. Where additions or renovations have outgrown the original layout, we evaluate the whole floor plan to reach rooms the existing ducts no longer serve.
Every replacement includes recovering the old refrigerant to EPA standards, removing the retired condenser and air handler, and disposing of them properly rather than leaving them in your side yard. Paradise also carries a high share of rental and investment properties, condos, and shared-wall layouts near the Convention Center District and the Strip, so equipment placement and access planning matter: where a condenser can legally sit, how we route to it, and any building or HOA rules on outdoor units and noise. We confirm all of that during the in-home quote, and we offer quieter equipment options for dense and shared-wall settings.
Rebates and financing for a Paradise replacement
NV Energy PowerShift rebates apply to qualifying high-efficiency central AC and heat pump replacements, with the amount tied to the SEER2 tier you install, and income-qualified households can qualify for larger amounts. We confirm current eligibility and handle the paperwork as part of the job. We also offer flexible financing, including same-as-cash options, so the upfront cost of replacing an aging R-22 or low-SEER system does not force you to limp through another Paradise summer on equipment that is already past its useful life.
Where we serve in Paradise
We replace AC systems throughout Paradise, including the UNLV area, the McCarran and Harry Reid Airport corridor, Paradise Palms, the Eastside, the Convention Center District, and surrounding communities.
My Paradise home still uses R-22. Should I replace now?
If your system runs on R-22, which is common in the older East Tropicana, UNLV, and Maryland Parkway sections, any refrigerant-related repair gets more expensive every year as supply shrinks. For a system that is also past 15 years and running heat-island hours, replacement usually delivers better long-term value than another R-22 charge or compressor fix. We present both options with clear pricing so the choice is yours.
Does the urban heat island change how you size my new AC in Paradise?
Yes. Paradise sits at the peak of the valley's urban heat island, so your home absorbs heat that surrounding areas do not and your AC runs more hours per day. We size the replacement with a Manual J load calculation against that real demand rather than copying the tonnage off the old unit, which is often wrong for the actual load.
Will my older Paradise ductwork work with a new high-efficiency system?
Not always as-is. Homes from the 1960s through 1980s around East Tropicana and UNLV often have original ducts that are leaky or undersized for a modern unit. We inspect and seal the duct system during the replacement so the new equipment can deliver its rated SEER2 efficiency instead of losing it in a 50-year-old air path.
What happens to my old AC unit?
We recover the old refrigerant to EPA standards, remove the retired condenser and air handler, and dispose of them properly as part of the install. You are not left with old equipment to deal with, and the replacement is finished and verified before we leave.
Compare your options with AC repair before deciding, or call (702) 567-0707 to schedule your free in-home quote.
More Ways We Help
We also provide AC maintenance, AC installation, and indoor air quality services in Paradise. Read our guides on AC replacement costs in Las Vegas and understanding SEER ratings.
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