Want to save with Paschal? Don’t miss our current offers and specials
Want to save with Paschal? Don’t miss our current offers and specials
We'll keep your home cool and comfortable, so you can relax with confidence. Rated 4.8/5 by Malvern homeowners ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT 501-232-7317
Malvern summers run hot and wet. July highs average right around 92°F, humidity stays thick from May through September, and 166 days of rainfall a year means ductwork in older attics and crawl spaces is fighting moisture as hard as it’s fighting temperature. In a town where the median home was built in 1969, the AC systems still running are often working against ductwork that was sized for a smaller house, a smaller family, or a smaller cooling load than what homeowners actually need today. Paschal Air, Plumbing & Electric keeps Malvern homes cool through all of it with AC repair, full-system installation and replacement, ductless mini-split services, heat pump work, indoor air quality systems, and maintenance built for Arkansas summers.
Paschal has served Arkansas families since 1968, and the track record applies in every market the company serves. When you call, we book a same-day slot when one is open and confirms a firm arrival window. The technician shows up, finds the real failure rather than the symptom, and gives you a written price before touching a tool. No vague estimates that balloon at the end, no pressure on the doorstep, no surprises on the invoice.
Paschal proudly serves Malvern and the broader Hot Spring County area, including Hot Springs, Hot Springs Village, and Arkadelphia.
Every Paschal technician is drug-tested, background-checked, licensed, and insured. Stocked service vehicles carry the parts that fail most often on the older AC systems we see across Hot Spring County, which is why the first visit usually fixes it. Floor protection goes down before tools come out, and the work area gets cleaned before anyone leaves.
Paschal’s technicians service every major residential brand in the Malvern market: Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Rheem, Goodman, York, Bryant, American Standard, Mitsubishi, Daikin, Ruud, and Amana. If your outdoor unit has a different nameplate, it’s likely one we’ve repaired before too.
Before you call: if the system is fully out, flip the breaker off for a full minute, then back on. Replace the filter if it’s dirty. Give the thermostat 30 minutes to attempt a cycle. That sequence resolves a meaningful share of “my AC just died” calls without a service fee. If cool air still isn’t coming through, that’s when a certified technician needs to be in the driveway.
The cleanest way to decide between repair and replacement is the 50% rule. If the repair quote is 50% or more of what a comparable new system would cost, replacement is the smarter call. The other number that matters in Malvern is system age. With a median home build year of 1969, plenty of the AC systems we see are sitting on 15-to-25-year-old equipment that was already a replacement on an old house. At that point the math on a new SEER2-rated system catches up fast.
| Factor | Lean Toward Repair | Lean Toward Replacement |
|---|---|---|
| System Age | Under 10 years | Over 12 years |
| Repair Cost | Under 50% of replacement cost | Exceeds 50% of replacement cost |
| The $5,000 Rule | Age × Repair Cost < 5,000 | Age × Repair Cost > 5,000 |
| Refrigerant | Modern (R-454B, R-32, or R-410A) | Obsolete (R-22 or failing R-410A) |
| Energy Bills | Stable or seasonal predictability | Climbing year-over-year |
| Repair History | First or second service call | Recurring mechanical failures |
For a Malvern home with existing ductwork that’s still in usable shape, a properly sized central AC system paired with a gas furnace or a heat pump remains the most common right answer. Ductwork condition matters a lot here. If the home has original ducts that are leaking, undersized, or running through an unconditioned attic, the install conversation should include duct evaluation before a new system spec gets drawn up. A brand new SEER2 system fighting against bad ducts will not deliver the efficiency the nameplate promises.
Ductless mini-splits come up in Malvern more than in most Paschal markets, and the reason is the housing stock. When central ductwork is beyond repair, or when a 1960s home has an addition, a converted garage, or a bonus room that no duct was ever run to, a mini-split is often the cleanest solution. Heat pumps are worth the conversation for homeowners moving off aging electric resistance heat or looking for one system to handle both cooling and most of the winter load. Geothermal is the outlier option worth mentioning for homeowners with the acreage and a 20-plus-year horizon on the property.
Every Paschal installation starts with a load calculation. No shortcutting a size from the outgoing unit’s specs, because in a market with a lot of older homes, the old size is often wrong. Getting the tonnage right is what separates a system that runs long, even cycles and keeps humidity down from one that blasts cold for two minutes, shuts off, and leaves the house clammy.
Flexible financing is available for qualifying homeowners, so a new system doesn’t have to mean a lump sum out of pocket.
Most Malvern residential changeouts wrap the same day. The crew lays floor protection from the front door to the air handler location, which in most Malvern homes means either a closet off the utility room or an attic with stairs that have seen better decades. The old system comes out without leaving refrigerant or debris behind. Before the crew leaves, a technician walks you through the new thermostat, shows you where the filter lives, explains warranty coverage on parts and labor, and confirms the system is running within the manufacturer’s spec sheet.
Mini-splits are in heavy demand across Malvern and Hot Spring County, and the reason is structural. In a market where the median home was built in 1969, a lot of houses have duct systems that were never designed for the addition, the finished attic, the enclosed porch, or the bonus room that came later. Rather than retrofit ductwork through finished walls, a ductless mini-split puts dedicated cooling exactly where it’s needed with a refrigerant line set and a small wall-mounted head.
Paschal installs, repairs, maintains, and replaces ductless systems across Malvern. Installation involves a load calculation for the specific room or zone, a careful run of the lineset through the exterior wall, a vacuum and pressure test before charging, and a condensate drainage plan that actually works given Malvern’s humidity. Maintenance matters on mini-splits too. The indoor heads have washable filters that need rinsing every few months, and the coils benefit from a professional cleaning once a year to keep efficiency from dropping as microbial growth takes hold in a humid climate.
Efficiency varies by specific model and install quality, so the question isn’t whether a mini-split is “more efficient” than central air. The right question is whether the specific space needs dedicated cooling that ductwork can’t reasonably deliver. For a problem room, almost always yes. For whole-home cooling in a house with healthy ductwork, central air is usually still the better call.

Heat pumps make strong practical sense in Malvern’s climate. Winters are cold enough to warrant backup heat but mild enough that a properly sized heat pump carries most of the load without the strip heaters running constantly. Summers in the low 90s are well within a heat pump’s cooling range. Paschal handles heat pump repair, installation, replacement, and maintenance across Malvern. If your existing heat pump is over 10 years old and has needed two or more major repairs in recent seasons, it’s worth a conversation about replacement before the next compressor call in August.
Arkansas humidity and older housing stock make indoor air quality a real concern in Malvern, not a luxury upsell. Homes with original ductwork running through attics or crawl spaces pull unconditioned, unfiltered air through every seam. Bathroom exhaust fans often vent into the attic on older builds, adding moisture that never properly escapes. And 166 annual rainfall days keep outdoor humidity feeding whatever’s already happening indoors.
Paschal’s IAQ Indoor Air Quality work in Malvern covers whole-home humidifiers and dehumidifiers for year-round moisture balance, air purifiers and UV light systems installed in the ductwork to cut airborne particulates and microbial growth, smart thermostats, zone control for multi-story homes where upstairs and downstairs never feel the same, and professional air duct cleaning, sealing, and replacement for ducts that have aged out. Zone control deserves a specific call-out for Malvern: in a two-story home, a single thermostat can’t balance a first floor against a second floor picking up west-facing summer sun all afternoon. Dampers and multiple thermostats fix that without replacing the AC system itself.
Skipping spring maintenance is how most July breakdowns get made. A failing capacitor caught in April is a 20-minute fix. The same capacitor caught on a Saturday afternoon with the heat index at 105 is a same-day service call, a compressor that ran too hot for too long, and a house that takes hours to recover. Annual checks catch low refrigerant, restricted condenser coils, drain line blockages, and weak contactors before any of them turn into an outage.
Paschal’s Planned Protection Membership includes up to two professional system checks per year, priority scheduling when same-day slots fill up during a heat wave, and repair discounts. Members move to the front of the line, which is the part that matters when every HVAC company in Central Arkansas is slammed in late July.

Paschal also serves Malvern-area commercial properties: retail, office, and light commercial. Same reliability standards, same upfront pricing, scaled to rooftop units and larger equipment.
Schedule an appointment online or call (501) 232-7317.