Air Conditioner Frozen or Icing Up in Burleigh Heads
An air conditioner frozen or icing up in Burleigh Heads is usually airflow or refrigerant, not a broken unit. Air Conditioning Burleigh Heads finds the fault fast and gets you cool again, backed by 300+ five-star reviews.
Why Your Air Conditioner Is Icing Up
Ice on the coil or pipework means the system cannot warm up properly between cooling cycles, usually from restricted airflow or low refrigerant. ARC-certified diagnosis (ARC #L160535) finds the real cause behind the ice quickly, rather than leaving you to guess at home. Turning the unit off to thaw safely is the right first step.

Common Causes of an Aircon Freezing Up
A choked or dirty filter
Restricted airflow is the leading cause of ice buildup. A clogged filter starves the coil of warm air, so it drops below freezing and ice forms on the surface.
Dirty coils restricting airflow
Dust and grime on the indoor coil have the same effect as a blocked filter, cutting airflow enough that the coil freezes over during normal operation.
Low refrigerant or a slow leak
A system low on refrigerant runs at the wrong pressure and can ice up the coil even with clean filters. Handling gas is ARC-licensed work under ARC #L160535.
A failing fan or motor
If the indoor fan is not moving enough air across the coil, ice can form even with a clean filter, and this points to a fan or motor fault that needs proper attention.
Can I Fix This Myself?
Turn the unit off and let it thaw fully before doing anything else, then clean or replace the filter, this resolves a genuine share of icing complaints on its own. If the ice returns once it is running again, the cause is refrigerant or a mechanical fault and needs a technician.
- You can turn the unit off, let it thaw, and clean or replace the filter yourself
- Refrigerant, the sealed system, and the internal fan motor are ARC-licensed work, not DIY
- Never chip or scrape ice off the coil, let it thaw naturally with the unit off
- If ice returns after a clean filter and full thaw, it needs a proper diagnosis

What To Check Right Now
Run through these safe steps before you call, they help the unit thaw safely and rule out the easy cause:
- Turn the unit off completely and switch to fan-only mode to help it thaw.
- Do not chip, scrape, or force ice off the coil or pipework.
- Once thawed, clean or replace the filter before running it again.
- Check the outdoor unit fan is spinning freely and not blocked by debris.
- Call an ARC-certified technician (Lic #83326, ARC #L160535) if the ice returns.

When To Call an Aircon Technician for a Frozen Unit in Burleigh Heads
- Ice keeps returning after a full thaw and a clean filter
- The outdoor unit has a visible block of ice on it
- Water is pooling under the unit once the ice has melted
- The unit runs constantly but the room stays warm despite the ice
- The problem started suddenly after years of normal running
Any of these at your Burleigh Heads property is a job for an ARC-certified technician, not another home defrost. We respond same-day where availability allows, with clear pricing before we start and no surprises. See our air conditioning repairs and air conditioning cleaning.

How it works
How We Fix an Aircon Frozen or Icing Up in Burleigh Heads
Fault Finding
We check filter condition, coil cleanliness, airflow and refrigerant levels once the unit has fully thawed to find exactly why ice formed in the first place.
Upfront Quote
Once we know the cause, we explain it plainly and give you clear pricing before we start, so there are no surprises once work begins.
The Clean or Repair
Depending on the cause, we carry out an air conditioning clean to restore airflow, or find and fix a refrigerant leak and regas under our ARC licence.
Testing & Cooling Check
We run the system through a full cooling cycle and confirm no ice returns before we consider the job done.
Why This Is Common in Burleigh Heads Homes
Outdoor condensers on Esplanade and headland properties corrode faster in Burleigh's salt-laden sea air, and humid sub-tropical summers load filters and coils quickly, both of which set up the airflow faults behind icing on hard-working systems.

Frozen Aircon and Related Faults Across Burleigh Heads
A frozen air conditioner often shows up alongside a unit blowing warm air or one that is not cooling well. We fix all three across Burleigh Heads, Mermaid Beach, Palm Beach, and the wider Gold Coast, including split system installations.

Air Conditioner Frozen in Burleigh Heads? Book a Technician Today
Call (07) 5661 9543 for same-day and emergency service with clear pricing before we start. Backed by 300+ five-star reviews and our workmanship guarantee, we will find the fault and get you cool again, sorted properly.
See the full range of help available from your air conditioning team in Burleigh Heads, from quick fixes to new systems.
Common questions
Air Conditioner Frozen FAQs
Ice on an air conditioner alarms most homeowners, but the cause is usually straightforward. Here is what Burleigh Heads homeowners ask us most often.
Why is my air conditioner freezing up or covered in ice?
It is almost always restricted airflow from a choked filter or dirty coils, or low refrigerant, rather than the unit simply being faulty overall.
What causes ice to form on an air conditioner?
A blocked filter, dirty coils, a failing fan, or low refrigerant all stop the coil from warming up properly between cycles, which lets ice build up.
Can I fix a frozen air conditioner myself?
You can turn it off, switch to fan mode to help it thaw, and clean the filter. Refrigerant and the sealed system are ARC-licensed work only.
Do I need a technician if my aircon is iced up?
Yes, once it has thawed. Ice is a symptom of an underlying airflow or refrigerant fault that needs a proper diagnosis, not just a defrost.
How much does it cost to fix a frozen air conditioner?
It depends on the cause, from a filter and coil clean through to a refrigerant repair. We give clear pricing before we start, never a guess over the phone.
Does salt air make outdoor units freeze or fail faster near Burleigh Beach?
Yes. Salt-laden sea air corrodes outdoor condensers on Esplanade and headland properties faster than inland homes, which can contribute to airflow and refrigerant faults.