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Pembroke Park, FL · AC Replacement

AC Installation in Pembroke Park, Florida — Manufactured Homes, Single-Family, Licensed Replacement

Pembroke Park AC replacement from a DBPR-licensed crew. Manufactured and mobile-home AC expertise — MH-listed equipment, dedicated duct systems, smaller tonnage — alongside standard single-family replacement. Town of Pembroke Park permit handling. Six written guarantees.

At a Glance

  • Online assessment — no salesperson in your home
  • Manufactured and mobile-home AC expertise — MH-listed equipment specified
  • Standard single-family replacement also served
  • Town of Pembroke Park permit handling as standard scope
  • Inland location — no coastal equipment premium
  • DBPR-licensed contractor: CAC1822797, CFC050548

NewHVACDeals replaces air conditioning systems in Pembroke Park, Florida. Pembroke Park is a small south Broward town situated between Hollywood to the east and West Park to the west, with a land area just under two square miles that encompasses a mix of light industrial and commercial uses alongside established residential communities. The residential character of Pembroke Park includes both standard single-family homes and manufactured or mobile-home communities — the latter requiring a distinct set of AC specifications that differ meaningfully from conventional residential equipment. Manufactured and mobile-home AC replacement involves HUD-code MH-listed equipment, dedicated smaller duct systems, and manufacturer specifications that govern the installation. The intake captures your property type clearly at the outset so the equipment path is appropriate from the start. No sales visit. Six written guarantees.

How much does AC installation cost in Pembroke Park?

AC installation cost in Pembroke Park depends critically on your property type. Manufactured and mobile homes require entirely different AC equipment than conventional single-family construction — MH-listed (HUD-code approved) air handlers and condensers, specific duct system sizing matched to the home's narrower interior dimensions, and in some cases dedicated equipment configurations for a single-wide versus a double-wide floor plan. Pricing for a manufactured-home installation is not interchangeable with pricing for a site-built home of similar square footage.

Pembroke Park's standard single-family homes — older modest construction from the 1960s and 1970s that characterizes much of south Broward — follow the conventional replacement path: Manual J sizing, duct and electrical assessment for infrastructure from this construction era, and a permitted installation through the Town of Pembroke Park.

Pembroke Park is entirely inland, several miles from the Atlantic coast and the Intracoastal Waterway. There is no salt-spray exposure and no coastal equipment premium in either property type. The cost variables are property type, home size, and the age and condition of the existing mechanical infrastructure.

No figure appears before the intake establishes your property type and reviews your home's actual conditions.

Manufactured and mobile-home AC in Pembroke Park: what makes it different

Manufactured homes — including HUD-code mobile homes and double-wide and single-wide manufactured housing — require AC equipment that is specifically listed and approved for installation in manufactured structures. Conventional residential air handlers and condensers installed in a manufactured home may void the home's warranty, fail to meet the Town of Pembroke Park's permit requirements, and in some cases create safety conditions related to electrical load or duct pressure that are outside the design parameters of the home's structure.

MH-listed equipment is designed to meet the Department of Housing and Urban Development's Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards (HUD Code), which govern electrical, mechanical, and structural requirements differently than the Florida Building Code's standard residential provisions. MH-listed air handlers are typically designed for the narrower interior dimensions and lower ceiling heights of manufactured homes, and they operate within the duct configurations — often dedicated ductwork running beneath the floor or through interior wall cavities — that are standard in manufactured construction.

In a Pembroke Park manufactured-home community, a licensed AC contractor must specify MH-listed equipment by manufacturer and model number and confirm that the installation complies with the home's data plate specifications and the HUD Code. The intake captures your manufactured home's year, make (if known), and configuration — single-wide or double-wide — so the equipment path begins with the correct product specifications.

Duct systems in manufactured homes: a different starting point

The duct systems in manufactured and mobile homes differ fundamentally from those in site-built construction, and this affects how AC replacement is scoped. Manufactured homes typically use dedicated supply and return duct systems that run through the belly of the home — below the floor — or through purpose-built interior wall and ceiling cavities that are sized during factory construction for specific equipment airflow parameters.

Unlike site-built homes where ductwork can be added, rerouted, or modified during renovation, the duct system in a manufactured home is largely fixed by the home's original construction. Replacement equipment must be matched to the existing duct configuration rather than the other way around. Undersized supply runs cannot easily be replaced without significant interior disruption; instead, the equipment is selected to work within the existing duct system's capacity.

Some older mobile homes — particularly those from the 1970s and early 1980s — have duct systems that have developed leakage at belly pan penetrations, damaged flex duct within the floor cavity, or deteriorated vapor barrier components that affect both mechanical performance and moisture management. The intake captures your home's age and any known duct or comfort problems so the scope accounts for these conditions before equipment selection is finalized.

Standard single-family replacement in Pembroke Park

Pembroke Park's non-manufactured residential stock is predominantly older single-family homes from the 1960s and 1970s, with the same infrastructure considerations that characterize south Broward's established neighborhoods. Original ductwork from this era is commonly undersized by current ACCA Manual D standards, return air systems are frequently limited to a single central grille rather than distributed room returns, and electrical panels may need evaluation before a modern high-efficiency system can be installed correctly and permitted.

For these standard site-built homes, the replacement scope follows the same pattern as neighboring West Park and the residential sections of Pembroke Pines: Manual J load calculation to size the system, duct and return air configuration review, electrical panel assessment from the photos and home age captured during intake, and a permitted installation through the Town of Pembroke Park Building Division.

The Town of Pembroke Park is a small municipality with its own building department. Permit jurisdiction is confirmed from your address during the intake. Permit application, fee payment, inspection scheduling, and closeout documentation are standard scope.

Pembroke Park permit requirements, FPL utility, and Town jurisdiction

The Town of Pembroke Park Building Division issues mechanical permits for AC replacement — both manufactured-home and standard single-family installations. For manufactured homes, the permit process requires documentation that the equipment installed is MH-listed and appropriate for the home's specifications. A licensed contractor handles the permit path including any manufactured-home-specific documentation requirements.

A post-installation mechanical inspection is required for all property types. Permit application, fee payment, inspection scheduling, and final closeout documentation are all standard scope.

Pembroke Park is served by Florida Power & Light (FPL). FPL efficiency incentive programs for qualifying SEER2 equipment replacements are available periodically; eligibility and availability are confirmed during the intake. Manufactured-home equipment may have different eligibility parameters than standard residential equipment for utility rebate programs — the intake captures your property type so eligibility is assessed correctly. The federal 25C tax credit for residential HVAC equipment expired at the end of 2025 and is not currently in effect.

Questions

Common questions about AC replacement in Pembroke Park.

What is MH-listed AC equipment and why does a manufactured home require it?

MH-listed equipment is air conditioning equipment that has been tested and approved for installation in manufactured homes under the HUD Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards. Manufactured homes have specific duct configurations, electrical systems, and structural parameters that differ from site-built construction. Installing non-MH-listed equipment in a manufactured home can void the home's warranty, fail permit inspection, and create conditions outside the equipment manufacturer's installation specifications. The intake captures your property type so the correct equipment category is specified from the start.

Does NewHVACDeals replace AC systems in Pembroke Park mobile-home communities?

Yes. Manufactured and mobile-home AC replacement — including single-wide and double-wide configurations — is within our Pembroke Park service area. MH-listed equipment specification, duct system compatibility review, and Town of Pembroke Park permit handling are all standard scope. The intake captures your home's year, configuration, and any known duct or comfort issues.

Can the duct system in my Pembroke Park manufactured home be modified?

Duct modification in manufactured homes is more constrained than in site-built construction because the duct runs through the belly pan or purpose-built cavities sized during factory construction. Replacement equipment is typically selected to match the existing duct system's capacity rather than modifying the ducts to match the equipment. The intake captures your home's duct configuration and any known airflow concerns so the equipment path accounts for these constraints rather than treating them as surprises.

Does the Town of Pembroke Park require a permit for AC replacement?

Yes. The Town of Pembroke Park Building Division requires a mechanical permit for AC replacement, including a post-installation inspection. For manufactured homes, the permit process includes documentation that the installed equipment is appropriately MH-listed. Permit application, fee payment, inspection scheduling, and closeout documentation are all standard scope.

How do I start AC replacement in Pembroke Park?

Start at newhvacdeals.com/assessment-v2/start, enter your ZIP, and complete the intake. Select your property type — manufactured or mobile home, or standard single-family — in the property notes and include your home's age. The process takes 10–15 minutes. No commitment until you review the equipment path and scope.

Replace your AC in Pembroke Park — manufactured home or single-family, correct equipment specified upfront, no sales visit.