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★ 5.0 · 256 Google Reviews

Cooling Services

AC Recharge

Low refrigerant means a leak — refrigerant doesn't get used up. We'll find the leak first, then set the charge by measurement. Handling refrigerant legally requires EPA 608 certification: exactly the credential our technicians carry.

Prefer to talk now? Call (773) 754-5773 — a real person answers, 24/7.

  • ★ 5.0 · 256 Google Reviews
  • Google Verified
  • EPA 608 Certified
  • Family-Owned
American Standard air conditioning condenser installed by Pro Comfort Solutions outside a Chicagoland home

What you'll get

Straight talk

A recharge with no leak check is the oldest trick in HVAC — the cold comes back for a season, leaks away again, and you pay twice. Refrigerant lives in a sealed circuit: if it's low, something is open. We'll find the something. If the leak is in the coil of an aging system, we'll tell you before the recharge, not after.

How it'll go

  1. Book in 3 steps

    Tell us the problem, where you are, and how to reach you. Under a minute.

  2. We diagnose

    A certified technician finds the real fault and shows you the evidence.

  3. You approve

    Exact quote before work starts. The price you approve is the price you pay.

  4. We verify

    Full-system test before we leave — and we answer the phone after.

256 Google reviews
5.0★
jobs completed since 2023
900+
emergency response
24/7
EPA 608 certified technicians
5

Book ac recharge

Three quick steps — a real person will follow up fast, any hour.

What do you need help with?
Where and when?
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Straight answers

How do I know if my AC needs a recharge?

The symptoms — weak cooling, ice on the refrigerant line or coil, a unit that runs nonstop — overlap heavily with plain airflow problems. So gauges decide, not guesswork. If the pressure readings confirm low charge, the next question is where it went, because refrigerant only drops when there's a leak.

Why won't you just top it off?

Because it comes back. A sealed system that's low has a leak, and repeat top-offs are a bad deal — worse when the refrigerant type is being phased out. We'll run the leak check first; sometimes the fix is a valve core or a fitting, which is cheap, quick, and permanent.

Can anyone legally add refrigerant?

No — the EPA requires Section 608 certification to handle refrigerants, and it's the credential every one of our technicians carries. If someone offers a recharge without it, that's your sign to pass. Certification also means recovery and disposal get done properly instead of vented to the sky.

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256 Google reviews, 5.0★ average, Google Verified — book online or call and a real person will answer.

★ 5.0 across 256 Google reviews · Google Verified · Family-owned

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