Condensate Pump Cost Estimator
A condensate pump moves the water that drips off an air conditioner's evaporator coil (or off a condensing appliance) to an approved drain when gravity can't do the job — for example an air handler in an interior closet, a garage, or an attic with nowhere downhill to drain. In Florida this matters a lot: AC runs nearly year-round in high humidity, so the unit produces condensate every single day. When a pump fails, the water has nowhere to go and quickly overflows — one of the most common sources of ceiling and drywall damage in FL homes. A float safety switch that shuts the AC off before it overflows is the single best add-on for protection.
Air conditioning pulls moisture out of the air; that moisture condenses on the cold evaporator coil and drips into a pan. Normally a sloped drain line carries it away by gravity. A condensate pump is a small reservoir with a float and a motor that automatically pumps the collected water up and out when there is no downhill path.
Why Florida Specifically
FL humidity is high and AC runs most of the year, so condensate volume is large and continuous — gallons per day in peak season. Many FL air handlers sit in interior closets, garages, or attics where the drain cannot fall to a suitable termination, so a pump is the practical solution.
Where You'll See One
Closet and garage air handlers, attic units, high-efficiency condensing furnaces and tankless heaters (which also make condensate), and mini-split systems that can't gravity-drain.
If you can drain by gravity, that is the simplest, most reliable option — no moving parts, no power. A pump is what you use when gravity isn't available.
Gravity Drain
A sloped condensate line (often tied to an indirect/approved termination with a proper trap and cleanout) runs to where the water can safely discharge. Reliable but only works when there is a downhill path and an approved endpoint.
Condensate Pump
Adds the ability to lift water up and over to a drain, but introduces a motor, a float, and a power connection — all things that can eventually fail. That is why a pump installation should pair with a float safety switch so a stuck pump shuts the system down instead of flooding.
This is a separate device from the condensate drain line itself; many FL systems use both a primary gravity line and a pump, or a pump plus a secondary safety pan.
Watch For
(1) Water pooling around the air handler or under the unit; (2) the pump running constantly or short-cycling; (3) loud buzzing or rattling; (4) the AC shutting off on its own (a safety switch doing its job); (5) a musty smell near the unit; (6) staining on the ceiling below an attic air handler.
Don't Ignore It
Because FL condensate is continuous, a failing pump can go from a drip to an overflow within hours. Catching the warning signs early is the difference between a quick pump swap and a drywall-and-paint repair.
An overflow is not clean once it sits — it collects in pans, soaks insulation, and finds drywall.
The Damage Path
An attic or closet unit that overflows drips onto the ceiling below, swelling drywall and feeding mold in FL's warm, humid conditions. Repairs often include drywall, paint, insulation, and remediation — far more than the cost of the pump.
Insurance & Prevention
Sudden water damage may be covered while gradual, long-term seepage often is not, so prevention pays. The standard protections are a float safety switch (cuts the AC before overflow), a secondary drain pan under attic units, and an overflow alarm. These small additions routinely prevent four-figure repairs.
Three things matter when picking a pump: how high it must lift the water, how much water it must move, and what safety features it has.
Lift / Head
An attic unit pumping up and across needs more head (lift capacity) than a closet unit pushing a few feet. Undersizing for the lift means the pump runs hot and fails early.
Capacity
Match the pump's gallons-per-hour to the equipment's peak FL condensate output, with margin. Condensing appliances also need an acid-neutralizing setup because their condensate is mildly acidic.
Safety Features
Choose a pump with (or add) a float safety switch. Mid-grade units often build the switch in; otherwise it is an inexpensive, high-value add-on.
Typical Install
1. Mount the pump level near the air handler or appliance. 2. Route the drain from the equipment pan into the pump reservoir with a proper trap where required. 3. Run the discharge tubing up and over to an approved termination. 4. Provide a switched/GFCI power source. 5. Wire the float safety switch to interrupt the equipment. 6. Test by filling the reservoir and confirming the pump and the safety switch both work.
Where It Can Discharge
Condensate must go to an approved point and must not be dumped where it causes damage. Tying into the sanitary system requires an indirect connection with an air gap — you cannot hard-connect it. Local rules vary, so confirm the termination with your AHJ.
FL Gotchas
No safety switch, discharge spilling at the foundation, an un-level pump, a missing trap causing air problems, or no secondary pan under an attic unit.
A condensate pump is an affordable device; most of the variance is access and what protections you add. These are planning estimates for the pump plus professional labor in the FL market.
The Pump Itself
A basic builder-grade pump is inexpensive; mid-grade units with a built-in safety switch cost a bit more; high-capacity/high-head pumps for attic lifts or heavy loads cost the most.
Access & Context
A straight swap with power already present is cheapest. A new install (running tubing and adding a GFCI outlet) or relocating the pump adds labor. Attic work adds access and FL heat.
Worth-It Add-Ons
A float safety switch, a secondary drain pan, or an overflow alarm each add a little but routinely prevent expensive water damage. Use the calculator to combine equipment, grade, context, and add-ons.
Routine Maintenance
Have the reservoir cleaned during AC service — FL condensate grows algae/slime that clogs the float and the line. Pour-through cleaning tablets and an annual check keep the float moving and the discharge clear.
Pump Runs Constantly
(1) Discharge line clogged or kinked; (2) check valve failed so water drains back; (3) too much inflow for the pump; (4) float stuck. Clear the line and inspect the float and check valve.
Pump Won't Run / Water Backing Up
(1) No power or tripped GFCI; (2) seized motor; (3) float jammed by debris. If the safety switch shut the AC off, that is the system protecting you — clear the cause before resetting.
Recurring Overflows
Often an undersized pump for the FL load or lift, a missing safety switch, or a clogged primary drain. The durable fix is the right-sized pump plus a float switch and a clean discharge path.
FL Permit Requirements
- Swapping a failed condensate pump one-for-one with power already present
- Replacing the pump as routine AC / appliance maintenance
- Adding a float safety switch to existing equipment
- New condensate disposal where none existed, or re-routing the discharge
- Adding a new electrical outlet / circuit for the pump (electrical permit)
- Condensate work tied to a new AC, air-handler, or water-heater install (part of that permit)
- Any connection of condensate to the sanitary system (requires a proper air gap / indirect waste)
FL County Permit Fee Reference
Pump swaps are usually minor maintenance; new condensate disposal, new power, or equipment changeouts are typically permitted as part of the larger job. Fees and timelines are approximate — verify with your local building department / AHJ before starting work.
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FL Code References
Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?
A one-for-one pump swap is often routine maintenance, but condensate disposal sits at the overlap of mechanical, plumbing, and electrical work and is regulated when you change it. New condensate routing or a secondary drain arrangement falls under the FL Building Code (Mechanical); tying condensate to the sanitary system requires an approved indirect connection with an air gap under the FL Plumbing Code; and a new pump circuit is electrical work. Per FL Statute 489.105, regulated mechanical, plumbing, and electrical work is performed by the appropriate licensed contractor.
Verify any contractor's license at myfloridalicense.com and confirm condensate termination and any permit requirements with your local building department before work begins.
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Licensed FL Contractor - AC & Appliance Condensate Removal
We install, replace, and upgrade condensate pumps for closet, garage, and attic air handlers, mini-splits, and condensing appliances — with float safety switches to protect your ceilings.