A professional technician performing a home sitting empty duct inspection at a clean modern Phoenix home before the summer season

Leaving Your Phoenix Home Empty for the Summer? Here’s What to Do With Your Air System First

I’m Eddie, and I’ve been crawling through ductwork in the Phoenix heat since before most people had a smart thermostat. Every May I get the same call from homeowners near Arcadia, McCormick Ranch, and the Camelback corridor: “We’re heading out for the summer — do we just crank up the thermostat and lock the door?” Short answer: not quite. A home sitting empty duct inspection before you leave is one of the smartest things you can do for your home — and for your wallet when you come back. Let me walk you through it, no fluff.

Why an Empty Home Is Harder on Your HVAC Than a Full One

Here’s the part most people don’t think about. When a Phoenix home sits empty in July and August, the AC still runs — sometimes cycling dozens of times a day just to keep the house from turning into a kiln. If your ducts are already carrying a load of dust, debris, or a slow leak up in the attic, that system works even harder with nobody home to notice the warning signs. You come back in September to a sky-high APS bill and air that smells like a storage unit.

We wrote more about how to tell if your attic ducts are leaking without going up there yourself — worth a read before you leave town. And if your system already smells a little off when it first kicks on, don’t ignore that: here’s when that smell is actually worth worrying about.

What to Handle Before You Leave — A Practical Checklist

A professional technician performing a home sitting empty duct inspection at a clean modern Phoenix home before the summer season
  • Book a professional duct inspection. Not a $49 coupon-crew drive-by. A real inspection where someone actually looks inside your system and tells you what’s there.
  • Change your air filter — but go thicker. A MERV 8 or higher will catch more particulate while you’re gone. Don’t go so high that you choke the airflow.
  • Set your thermostat to 85°F, not off. Cutting power entirely invites humidity intrusion and mold — especially in homes near the canals in Tempe or older builds around central Phoenix.
  • Clean or clear your dryer vent. A clogged vent is a fire hazard whether the house is empty or full. Check out our page on dryer vent cleaning if you’re not sure when it was last done.
  • Close all supply vents in unused rooms. Don’t close more than 20% — your system needs airflow — but consolidating air to a few key zones helps efficiency.
  • Seal any obvious air gaps. Around doors, attic hatches, garage entries. Especially relevant in homes with ductwork running through the garage — that’s a problem most homeowners don’t think about until it bites them.

“An empty house doesn’t mean a resting HVAC. In a Phoenix summer, that system is working overtime — and dirty ducts make every degree cost you more.”

— Eddie, Pure Air Service

The Inspection Itself: What We Actually Look At

A professional technician performing a home sitting empty duct inspection at a clean modern Phoenix home before the summer season

When we do a home sitting empty duct inspection at a home in Phoenix, AZ, here’s what we’re checking — not what we’re guessing at from the hallway:

What We InspectWhy It Matters Before You Leave
Duct interior conditionDust and debris left all summer breeds worse air quality on return
Supply and return connectionsLoose joints waste conditioned air and spike your bill
Air handler cabinetOften skipped — collects mold and debris behind the scenes
Dryer vent path and terminationLint buildup is a fire hazard, full stop
Filter housing and sealsA gap here bypasses your filter entirely

We document what we find, show you photos, and explain what’s urgent and what can wait. No pressure, no upsells. That’s not how we do business — and if you want to understand the difference between a company like ours and a franchise crew, this post lays it out plainly.

We serve homeowners all across Maricopa County — from Paradise Valley and Scottsdale down through Chandler and Gilbert — and we keep a service-area map anchored here:

Come Home to Clean Air, Not a Surprise

The homeowners who call us in a panic every October — sneezing, staring at energy bills, smelling something musty from the vents — are almost always the ones who skipped this step in May. The ones who called us before they left? They walk back into a house that feels clean and cool, and their first APS bill after returning is rarely a shock.

If your home in Phoenix, AZ has been sitting on your to-do list, this is the moment. Summer in Phoenix is unforgiving, and your air system deserves a proper send-off before you head out. Call Pure Air Service at (623) 552-3176 and we’ll take care of it — the right way, the first time.

Some content on this site is AI-assisted and may not reflect exact current details — please verify with Pure Air Service at (623) 552-3176. Learn more.