5 Mistakes When Choosing an Aircon for Your HDB
Most HDB aircon decisions start and end with the brand. But the brand matters far less than the sizing, the layout match, and the install scope. Getting those wrong costs more than the unit itself.
Why HDB Aircon Choices Go Wrong
HDB flats have standard layouts, standard ledge positions, and standard pipe runs. That predictability should make aircon selection straightforward. But it also creates a trap: because everything looks standard, homeowners assume any system will fit without checking the details.
The result is a gap between what gets installed and what the flat actually needs. Oversized units cycle too fast and wear out sooner. Undersized units run nonstop and struggle to cool. The wrong system type forces awkward pipe routing. These are not edge cases — they are the most common outcomes when the decision is made on brand alone.
1. Oversizing the System for the Space
Bigger is not better with aircon. An oversized unit cools the room too quickly, shuts off, then restarts when the temperature drifts — a pattern called short cycling. Each restart draws a surge of power and puts mechanical stress on the compressor. Over time, the unit wears out faster and the electricity bill runs higher than a correctly sized system.
In a typical HDB bedroom, the cooling load is modest. A unit rated for the right BTU range holds a steady temperature without constant on-off cycling. The fix is straightforward: match the BTU to the room size and heat load, not to whatever the contractor has in stock.
| Room type | Typical size | Suitable BTU range |
|---|---|---|
| HDB bedroom (standard) | 9-12 sqm | 9,000-12,000 BTU |
| HDB master bedroom | 12-16 sqm | 12,000-14,000 BTU |
| HDB living room (3-room) | 18-22 sqm | 18,000-22,000 BTU |
| HDB living room (4-room) | 22-28 sqm | 22,000-24,000 BTU |
| HDB living room (5-room) | 28-35 sqm | 24,000-28,000 BTU |
2. Ignoring the Pipe Run Length
Every aircon system has a maximum allowable pipe length between the indoor unit and the outdoor condenser. In HDB flats, the pipe run is usually short and direct — but not always. Corner units, high-floor flats with recessed ledges, and layouts where the condenser sits far from the bedrooms can push the pipe run close to or beyond the system limit.
When the pipe run is too long, refrigerant pressure drops and cooling performance suffers. The system works harder for the same result, which raises energy use and accelerates wear. Before selecting a system, measure or estimate the pipe path from each indoor head to the condenser. If the run is long, choose a system rated for extended piping or adjust the layout plan.
3. Picking the Cheapest Quote Without Comparing Scope
The cheapest install quote is rarely the cheapest job. A low total often means a narrow scope — shorter piping allowance, no trunking included, basic brackets, and no post-install checks. The extras surface on installation day as add-on charges, and by then you have limited leverage to negotiate.
A more useful comparison is scope for scope. Ask each contractor to list every task covered under their price: piping length, trunking, brackets, electrical connection, drain routing, and commissioning. When you compare on scope rather than total, the real cost difference between quotes becomes clear — and it is usually smaller than the sticker price suggests.
4. Choosing the Wrong System Type for the Layout
System 2, System 3, and System 4 configurations each carry different pipe routing requirements. A System 4 in a compact 3-room flat may force pipes through tight corridors or require trunking that eats into ceiling clearance. A System 2 in a 5-room flat may leave rooms without cooling or require a second condenser that the ledge cannot support.
The system type should follow the layout, not the other way around. Count the rooms that need cooling, check the condenser ledge capacity, and map the pipe paths before deciding on a configuration. If the layout does not support a particular system type cleanly, a different configuration will deliver better results with less compromise.
5. Skipping the Trunking Assessment
Trunking covers the pipe run between the indoor unit and the wall penetration. In older HDB flats or renovated units, the original trunking path may no longer fit the new system. New trunking may need to route around false ceilings, follow a different wall, or accommodate larger pipes for a higher-capacity unit.
When trunking is not assessed before the install, the contractor makes routing decisions on the day. That can mean visible trunking in places you did not expect, longer pipe runs that affect performance, or makeshift solutions that look untidy. A trunking walkthrough during the quote stage avoids surprises and gives you a say in where the pipes go.
What to Confirm Before You Commit
Before signing an install quote, confirm three things: the BTU sizing matches each room, the pipe run sits within the system rating, and the trunking path is mapped out. These three checks catch the majority of HDB aircon selection mistakes.
If the contractor cannot walk you through these details at the quoting stage, treat that as a signal. The planning that happens before the install matters more than the install itself. A well-planned job with a mid-range unit will outperform a rushed job with a premium brand.
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