5 min read · Last updated June 5, 2026

What size AC do I need in Citrus Park?

Citrus Park AC sizing should compare square feet, BTUs, tons, attic heat, ducts, insulation, sun exposure, ceiling height, occupants, and humidity before equipment is selected.

Reviewed for customer education by Air Strike Cooling, operating under Hales AC Florida HVAC License # CAC1822636.

Branded Air Strike Cooling service visual showing outdoor AC replacement work

Quick answer

Most Citrus Park homes should not choose AC size from square footage alone. A rough screen is 400 to 600 conditioned square feet per ton, and one ton equals 12,000 BTU per hour, so 1.5 ton equals 18,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 600 to 900 square feet; 2 ton equals 24,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 800 to 1,200 square feet; 2.5 ton equals 30,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,000 to 1,500 square feet; 3 ton equals 36,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,200 to 1,800 square feet; 3.5 ton equals 42,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,400 to 2,100 square feet; 4 ton equals 48,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,600 to 2,400 square feet; 5 ton equals 60,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 2,000 to 3,000 square feet. In Citrus Park, final size still depends on northwest Tampa homes often need airflow, humidity, and duct checks before assuming a larger AC is the fix. Use the calculator as a planning screen, then confirm with a field load review before approving equipment.

Local focus: homes near northwest Tampa with airflow and humidity needs. Example sizing inputs include 33625 and nearby Citrus Park ZIP codes, Carrollwood Meadows, Logan Gate, and homes near Citrus Park Town Center, access routes such as Gunn Highway, Veterans Expressway, Ehrlich Road, and the Citrus Park mall area, and home patterns like northwest Tampa homes with airflow, humidity, and attic-duct considerations.

Manual J-style sizing screen

What size AC does this home need?

Enter the home details you know. The tool estimates a cooling-load range, translates it into BTU and tonnage, and shows why the final answer still needs a field load calculation before equipment is selected.

4 ton screen48,000 BTU/h
1,850 sq ft
8 ft
3 people

Screening result

4 ton screen
Based on these inputs, this Citrus Park home screens near a 4-ton planning size, with a cooling-load estimate of 47,200 BTU/h. Treat that as a range until room load, duct capacity, airflow, humidity control, and Manual S equipment match are checked on site.
Humidity comfort review
Estimated load
47,200 BTU/h
BTU range
41,500 BTU/h to 52,800 BTU/h
Tonnage range
3.5 tons to 4.4 tons
Local note
northwest Tampa homes often need airflow, humidity, and duct checks before assuming a larger AC is the fix.

This is a Manual J-style planning estimator, not a certified ACCA Manual J load calculation, Manual S equipment selection, permit design, diagnosis, or Air Strike quote.

  • Humidity complaints need cycle-length, airflow, drain, thermostat, and fan-mode review; oversizing can make the home feel sticky.

Before selecting tonnage

Field sizing checks before final tonnage

Air Strike treats this calculator as a planning range. Final AC size should be backed by room load, duct delivery, airflow, humidity, and equipment-match checks so the home is not oversized for Tampa Bay moisture control or undersized for peak heat.

  1. Room-by-room load: additions, west glass, upstairs rooms, and isolated hot rooms can need different airflow than the whole-home average.
  2. Duct and return capacity: attic leakage, crushed flex, low return air, and high static pressure can make a right-sized system feel wrong.
  3. Manual S equipment match: the selected model should match sensible and latent capacity needs, not only the nominal ton label.
  4. Humidity, drain, and thermostat review: cycle length, fan mode, condensate drainage, and thermostat placement matter in Tampa Bay homes.

Why the answer moved

Load factors used in this screen

City profileCitrus Park
Conditioned area1,850 sq ft
Ceiling height8 ft1.00x factor
EnvelopeTypical Florida home1.00x factor
SunMixed sun1.00x factor
DuctsTypical attic ducts1.05x factor
LayoutStandard layout1.00x factor
Planning range3.5 tons to 4.4 tons

BTU chart

How much will each AC size cool?

SizeCapacityRough screen
1.5 ton18,000 BTU/h600 to 900 sq ft
2 ton24,000 BTU/h800 to 1,200 sq ft
2.5 ton30,000 BTU/h1,000 to 1,500 sq ft
3 ton36,000 BTU/h1,200 to 1,800 sq ft
3.5 ton42,000 BTU/h1,400 to 2,100 sq ft
4 ton48,000 BTU/h1,600 to 2,400 sq ft
5 ton60,000 BTU/h2,000 to 3,000 sq ft

The chart uses the common 400 to 600 square feet per ton screen. Tampa Bay homes can move outside that range because of ducts, sun, attic heat, air leakage, additions, occupants, and humidity goals.

Quick AC size chart for Citrus Park

For Citrus Park planning, 1.5 ton equals 18,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 600 to 900 square feet; 2 ton equals 24,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 800 to 1,200 square feet; 2.5 ton equals 30,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,000 to 1,500 square feet; 3 ton equals 36,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,200 to 1,800 square feet; 3.5 ton equals 42,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,400 to 2,100 square feet; 4 ton equals 48,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 1,600 to 2,400 square feet; 5 ton equals 60,000 BTU/h and roughly screens for 2,000 to 3,000 square feet. This is the common 400 to 600 square feet per ton screen. It is useful for understanding BTUs, but it is not a final size because northwest Tampa homes often need airflow, humidity, and duct checks before assuming a larger AC is the fix.

Manual J-style factors that change Citrus Park sizing

A Citrus Park sizing review should check conditioned square footage, ceiling height, window area and direction, insulation, air leakage, attic heat, duct location, return-air path, room additions, occupancy, appliance loads, thermostat placement, and humidity complaints. Citrus Park installation planning should confirm attic access, duct leakage, return sizing, condenser clearance, and whether hot rooms need balancing before or after the equipment change.

How much will each AC size cool in Citrus Park?

A 2 ton AC is 24,000 BTU/h and roughly screens near 800 to 1,200 square feet. A 3 ton AC is 36,000 BTU/h and roughly screens near 1,200 to 1,800 square feet. A 4 ton AC is 48,000 BTU/h and roughly screens near 1,600 to 2,400 square feet. A 5 ton AC is 60,000 BTU/h and roughly screens near 2,000 to 3,000 square feet. Citrus Park homes can fall outside those ranges when ducts, sun, attic heat, additions, or humidity load are unusual.

Why bigger AC can be wrong for Citrus Park humidity

Bigger equipment can cool the thermostat before the system runs long enough to remove moisture. That matters in Citrus Park because sticky rooms, short cycling, and uneven comfort can come from duct delivery, low return air, thermostat placement, fan settings, or an oversized system. Increasing tonnage without fixing airflow can leave the same comfort problem in place.

What the final sizing visit should verify in Citrus Park

Before final sizing, the visit should verify the old system size, indoor and outdoor equipment match, duct and return capacity, drain routing, electrical scope, filter location, thermostat placement, equipment access, and attic duct heat, return-air limitations, outdoor-unit placement, and room-by-room airflow complaints can shape replacement scope. Photos of the air handler, outdoor unit, filter rack, thermostat, hot rooms, and visible duct access can help the first conversation.

Use the calculator for Citrus Park replacement planning

The calculator on this page gives a load range and tonnage screen for a Citrus Park home. Treat the result as a question list: why the load moved, which rooms are driving it, whether ducts can deliver the air, and whether the current system short cycles, runs constantly, or leaves humidity behind. Final equipment should still follow field review and Manual J/Manual S guidance.

Helpful sources

Cost and HVAC references

Homeowner questions

FAQ

What size AC does a Citrus Park home need?

A Citrus Park home needs a size based on load, not square footage alone. A 400 to 600 square feet per ton screen can estimate BTUs, but Citrus Park homes still need review for insulation, windows, attic heat, ducts, ceiling height, additions, occupants, humidity, and room comfort before equipment is selected.

How many square feet will a 3 ton AC cool in Citrus Park?

A 3 ton AC is 36,000 BTU per hour and often screens around 1,200 to 1,800 conditioned square feet. In Citrus Park, that range can move when duct leakage, west-facing glass, high ceilings, older insulation, additions, or humidity complaints change the actual load.

Is a 4 ton AC too big for a Citrus Park home?

A 4 ton AC is 48,000 BTU per hour and often screens around 1,600 to 2,400 square feet, but it can be too big or too small depending on the home. Oversizing can hurt humidity control, while undersizing or poor airflow can leave the home hot. Use load review, not tonnage alone.

Should I replace my Citrus Park AC with the same size I have now?

Not automatically. The old size may be reasonable, but additions, window changes, insulation, duct leakage, thermostat placement, hot rooms, humidity complaints, and equipment mismatch can change the right answer. A Citrus Park replacement review should explain why the proposed size fits the home now.

Can the calculator replace a Manual J for Citrus Park AC replacement?

No. The calculator is a planning screen, not a certified Manual J load calculation or Manual S equipment selection. Use it to prepare better questions, then have the home reviewed for construction details, ducts, windows, humidity, airflow, access, and installed equipment before approving replacement size.

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