Boston averages 60 to 70 percent humidity during summer months. This forces your AC system to remove large volumes of moisture from indoor air every day. A three-ton AC unit running in a Boston home can produce 20 to 30 gallons of condensate water daily during peak humidity. Older homes in neighborhoods like Jamaica Plain and Roslindale often have galvanized steel drain pans that corrode after years of constant water exposure. When these pans develop pinhole leaks or cracks, you get water dripping from your AC unit onto ceilings and floors. The high humidity also promotes algae and mold growth inside drain lines, which clogs the line and causes backups into the drain pan.
Most Boston HVAC contractors understand the unique challenges of installing and maintaining air conditioning systems in homes built before central cooling became standard. We work with the Massachusetts State Building Code requirements for condensate drainage and know how to retrofit modern AC systems into historic homes without damaging original plaster or trim. Our technicians have cleared thousands of clogged drain lines, replaced corroded drain pans, and upgraded inadequate drainage systems in Boston homes. When you call us about an air conditioning leaking water problem, you get a team that knows Boston's housing stock and climate conditions inside and out.