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Why Your AC Smells Like Mildew When You First Turn It On in Summerdale

That mildewy smell from your Summerdale, AL AC at first spring startup — what causes it, when it resolves on its own, and when it means professional cleaning.

Reaves Nelson
By Reaves NelsonFounder & Owner
April 20, 2026 · 4 min read

You finally turn the AC on in your Summerdale home for the first time this season, and within five minutes the vents are blowing air that smells like a high-school locker room. Mildewy, slightly sour, definitely off. If this is the first time you've noticed it, here's what's actually happening and what to do about it.

What causes the mildew smell

The smell almost always traces to one of three sources, all involving moisture sitting in places it shouldn't.

1. Biological growth on the indoor evaporator coil. This is the most common cause in Summerdale homes. The indoor coil stays wet for months during cooling season because of our humid climate. When the system shuts down for the winter, that moisture doesn't evaporate cleanly — it stays in the coil fins, the drain pan, and the immediate ductwork. Mold spores colonize over the off-season. When you fire the system back up in spring, the first airflow blows that growth into your home.

2. Standing water in the drain pan. The condensate drain pan should be dry between cooling cycles. If your drain line has a slow clog or your float switch failed in the on position, water sits in the pan. Mosquito-breeding territory. Mold-growing territory. The first AC startup after a winter of standing water can smell genuinely bad.

3. Wet duct insulation. If a duct connection has been leaking warm humid air from the attic into your supply duct over the off-season, fiberglass insulation absorbs moisture and grows mold. Less common but harder to fix.

What's normal vs what isn't

Some level of "first cycle" smell is normal in Summerdale homes. Specifically:

  • Dust burning off the coils — slight burning smell, resolves in 10-15 minutes
  • Stagnant air being pushed out of dormant ducts — slight musty smell, resolves in 30-45 minutes
  • First-cycle mineral release from the dehumidification process — very mild metallic smell, resolves quickly

What's NOT normal:

  • Mildew/mold smell that persists past the first hour
  • Sour/rotten smell at any duration
  • Smell that returns every time the system cycles on
  • Smell that gets worse through the day rather than fading

If your smell is in the "not normal" category, you have biological growth that needs cleaning, not just a settling-in period.

The DIY first-pass

Try these in order before calling for professional cleaning:

1. Replace the air filter. Even if it looks OK. A loaded filter restricts airflow and lowers coil temperature, which encourages condensation that feeds the smell.

2. Pour 1 cup of distilled white vinegar through the indoor cleanout. Same procedure as routine drain-line maintenance. The vinegar kills biological growth in the pan and immediate downstream pipe.

3. Run the system continuously for 4-6 hours. Sometimes the smell resolves as the off-season biological film gets blown out and the coil dries between cycles.

4. Check the drain line is flowing. Walk outside, confirm water is dripping from the exterior drain end while the AC runs. If not, you have a clog.

If after these four steps the smell is still strong, you need professional cleaning.

What professional cleaning involves

A real coil cleaning in Summerdale runs varies depending on access and severity. The tech will:

  • Remove the access panel to the indoor coil
  • Vacuum loose debris from the coil fins and pan
  • Apply a foaming no-rinse coil cleaner specifically designed for biological growth
  • Let the cleaner work, then verify drainage flushes residue out
  • Inspect the drain pan for cracks or biological mat
  • Recommend UV light installation if the coil shows recurring growth

For Summerdale homes near agricultural areas, where outdoor air loads are high, recurring growth is more common. UV coil sterilization (install) prevents the recurrence by killing spores as they pass through the coil.

When the smell means more than dirty coils

Sometimes a "mildew" smell is actually:

  • Dead animal in ductwork — sharper, more rotten smell. Needs professional removal.
  • Sewer gas — completely different smell, unmistakable. Plumbing issue, not HVAC.
  • Burning insulation — different but related to electrical issue. Shut system off, call.
  • Stagnant water in a hidden secondary drain pan — usually only seen with attic-installed air handlers.

If DIY hasn't fixed the smell and the descriptions above don't fit, it's worth a professional diagnostic.

Prevention for next year

Three habits prevent the spring mildew smell from recurring:

  • Run the AC briefly during winter shutdown. Even one 30-minute cycle a month during off-season keeps the coil dry and prevents biological colonization.
  • Add a UV coil sterilizer if recurring growth is a known issue with your home (close to agricultural land, in a humid microclimate, or with previous mold history).
  • Schedule fall AND spring tune-ups. Cool Club includes both. Fall tune-up cleans before winter dormancy; spring tune-up addresses any growth that developed.

Ready to address Summerdale AC smells?

Air Solutions Heating & Cooling handles coil cleaning, drain pan service, and IAQ work across Summerdale and central Baldwin County. Same-day appointments usually available. Family-run, founded in Daphne, licensed AL#23194.

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