Sydney’s climate shapes everything about home heating and cooling. Warm, humid summers mean refrigerated air conditioning — split systems and ducted reverse cycle — does the heavy lifting, because it removes heat and humidity together. Mild winters mean modest heating needs, usually met by the same reverse-cycle units rather than the gas ducted heating common in colder cities. And the humidity makes air quality, ventilation and mould genuine local concerns. These guides are written specifically for Sydney homes, conditions and NSW rules.
Why Sydney Is Different
Advice written for cooler southern cities doesn’t always fit Sydney. Evaporative cooling, which works well in dry climates, struggles in Sydney’s humidity. Gas ducted heating, a staple in Melbourne, is far less common here because winters are mild. And humidity makes mould and indoor air quality a bigger issue than in drier places. So the right choices for a Sydney home — which system to buy, how to size it, how to run it cheaply, and how to keep the air healthy — follow from the local climate, not generic advice.
This Sydney library covers exactly those local questions: choosing and sizing air conditioning for Sydney’s heat and humidity, ducted versus split, running costs on NSW tariffs, why evaporative underperforms here, mould and humidity control, apartment and coastal considerations, NSW rebates, and meeting BASIX in new homes. FreshDuct services air conditioning across Sydney, and these guides reflect what local homes actually need.
Browse the Sydney Guides
Choose a topic below — each is written for Sydney’s climate, homes and rules.