Skip to main content

New Construction, Winter Haven

HVAC Service in Peach Crossings, Winter Haven

Integrity Refrigeration & A/C services Peach Crossings, one of Winter Haven's newest communities, with maintenance plans, warranty-aware repairs, indoor air quality upgrades, and honest advice for builder-grade systems. We will tell you plainly: most Peach Crossings homes do NOT need a new system, they need their existing one maintained so the manufacturer's parts warranty stays intact. Family-owned, 4.9 stars across 100+ Google reviews, license CAC1821179.

  • 4.9-star rated on Google (100+ reviews)
  • Licensed CAC1821179 & insured
  • Family-owned since 2015
  • Open 8 AM to 8 PM daily

What should Peach Crossings owners know about their builder-grade HVAC?

Peach Crossings is new-construction Winter Haven, built primarily by LGI Homes with standardized single-story floor plans in the 1,500-square-foot range on slab-on-grade foundations. The equipment that comes with these homes is builder-grade: typically single-stage systems sized to the plan, not the family living in it. That is not a defect, but it does mean the system starts life with no maintenance history and a manufacturer parts warranty that quietly depends on documented service.

Modern subdivision design also puts homes close together with tight side setbacks. Condensers end up a few feet from a neighbor's bedroom window, so when replacement day eventually comes, sound ratings and placement matter more here than in older neighborhoods with wide lots. Until then, the highest-value work in Peach Crossings is unglamorous: coil care, condensate line flushing (slab homes drain lines clog and back up into the house), filter discipline, and registering the warranty properly.

What breaks first in Peach Crossings, and how we prevent it

Warranty-dependent parts coverage

Manufacturer parts warranties commonly expect registration and evidence of maintenance. Skipping both is how a $40 capacitor visit becomes a $1,400 out-of-pocket coil replacement in year seven. Our maintenance plan builds that paper trail automatically.

Condensate backups in slab homes

With no crawlspace, a clogged condensate line shows up as water in the hallway. Florida's algae growth clogs new lines faster than owners expect. Annual line flushing and a float-switch check are cheap compared to flooring repairs.

Builder-grade filtration and IAQ

Standard 1-inch filters in a tightly built new home do little for allergens and construction dust that keeps shedding for the first years. Media filters and UV options bolt onto existing air handlers without replacing the system.

Which HVAC rebates actually exist here in July 2026?

Check the name on your electric bill first: this corridor is split between Duke Energy Florida and Tampa Electric (TECO), and the rebate math is completely different. Verified July 2026: Duke's Home Energy Improvement schedule pays up to $1,000 when a higher-efficiency heat pump replaces electric strip heat, $600 at the standard strip-heat tier, $500 when you replace an existing heat pump, and $300 for a qualifying straight-cool AC. Duke requires a free Home Energy Check BEFORE the work begins (or within the prior 24 months), an all-electric home, and a licensed, insured contractor with the condenser and air handler replaced together.

Verified July 2026 at tampaelectric.com: TECO's Heating & Cooling program pays $40 on systems at the 15.2 SEER2 minimum and $550 when the new system reaches 16.2 SEER2. The application must go in within 90 days of installation and the participating contractor deducts the rebate straight off your invoice, so equipment selection decides whether you leave $510 on the table.

Also verified July 2026: the federal 25C tax credit is dead for equipment placed in service after December 31, 2025, and Florida returned its federal HEAR/HOMES rebate allocation, so there is no state program. Utility rebates are the only rebate money in Polk County right now, and we build the qualifying tiers and paperwork into every quote.

See current rebates & savings

Peach Crossings questions we hear most

My Peach Crossings home is nearly new. Why would I need an HVAC company at all?

Because the parts warranty on your builder-grade system depends on registration and maintenance records, and Florida runs equipment ten-plus months a year. Catching a weak capacitor or clogging condensate line early is dramatically cheaper than the failure it becomes.

Will you try to sell me a new system?

No. Peach Crossings systems are young; replacement pitches here are a red flag. Our work in this neighborhood is maintenance, warranty repairs, drainage protection, and air quality upgrades. Replacement conversations belong a decade out.

Why is there water on the floor by my air handler?

Almost always a clogged condensate drain. Slab-on-grade homes have no forgiving crawlspace, so algae buildup backs water into the house. We clear and treat the line and add or test a float switch that shuts the system down before the next overflow.

The house is dusty even though it is brand new. Is that normal?

Common, yes. New construction sheds drywall and construction dust for a couple of years, and builder-standard 1-inch filters catch little of it. A media filter upgrade on your existing air handler makes a visible difference.

Which rebates apply if I eventually upgrade?

Check your electric bill: Duke Energy and Tampa Electric split this corridor. Verified July 2026, TECO pays up to $550 at 16.2 SEER2 and Duke's schedule reaches $1,000 in the strip-heat-to-heat-pump scenario, with a free Home Energy Check required before work begins. The federal 25C credit ended for installs after 12/31/2025.

Need HVAC or pool heater help in Peach Crossings?

Talk to a local team that knows Peach Crossings's homes street by street. Free estimates, honest options, and a free second opinion on any replacement quote you already have.