A VRF system that is not cooling is most often caused by one of six issues: a dirty condenser coil, a refrigerant leak, a compressor failure, a failed electronic expansion valve, blocked indoor unit airflow, or a communication bus error. Identifying which one starts with checking the controller for an error code and noting whether the issue affects all zones or just one.
VRF cooling failures follow the same diagnostic playbook as any other commercial heat pump in cooling mode, since VRF runs the heat pump cycle in reverse to remove heat from the building.
VRF Not Cooling: Quick Cause Reference
| Symptom | Most Likely Cause | Severity | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outdoor unit running, all zones warm | Dirty condenser coil or refrigerant leak | High | Call for service. Check coil and pressures. |
| System runs constantly, cannot hold setpoint | Refrigerant leak (slow loss) | Medium-High | Call for leak detection. Do not just recharge. |
| Compressor not running at all | Inverter board, thermal trip, or compressor failure | High | Call immediately. Check error code first. |
| Compressor short-cycling, loud outdoor unit | High pressure trip, dirty coil, or failing compressor | High | Shut down and call. Continued operation can damage compressor. |
| Only one zone is warm, others cool normally | EEV stuck closed or local controller fault | Medium | Single-zone fault. Service within 24-48 hrs. |
| Indoor coil iced over | Blocked airflow (clogged filter, bad blower) | Medium | Replace filter, restore airflow, call if persists. |
| Multiple zones warm at the same time | Communication bus or branch controller fault | High | Bus or PCB fault. Call for service. |
Common Causes in Detail
Dirty Condenser Coil
Manhattan rooftop VRF condensers accumulate debris, urban particulate, and even pigeon nesting material. A dirty condenser coil cannot reject heat efficiently, causing high head pressure, reduced cooling output, and eventually a high-pressure safety trip. This is the most common and most preventable cause of VRF cooling failure.
Refrigerant Leak
A system that was cooling fine last summer but is now struggling likely has a refrigerant leak. Leaks develop over the off-season at brazed joints, flare connections, and Schrader valves. The system may still run but cooling capacity is noticeably reduced, and some zones may blow warm air while others work normally.
Compressor Failure
If the compressor is not starting or is tripping on overload, the system cannot cool. Aging VRF compressors (10-plus years) are increasingly susceptible to bearing wear, winding insulation breakdown, and inverter board failure. Check for error codes indicating compressor faults.
Failed Expansion Valve (Individual Zone)
If one zone has lost cooling while others still work, the electronic expansion valve (EEV) for that indoor unit may be stuck closed or has lost calibration. The indoor coil will be warm to the touch and the zone controller will likely display a local error.
Blocked Airflow (Indoor Unit)
Severely clogged filters, blocked return grilles, or a failed indoor fan motor can all prevent an indoor unit from cooling effectively. The coil may ice up due to reduced airflow, further restricting capacity. This is often a maintenance issue rather than a system failure.
Control or Communication Error
VRF systems coordinate cooling across all zones through a communication bus. A bus error, address conflict, or failed communication board can disconnect indoor units from the outdoor controller. The system appears to run but zones do not receive cooling commands.
Brand-Specific Codes That Indicate Cooling Failure
| Brand | Most Common Cooling-Related Codes | What They Indicate |
|---|---|---|
| Daikin VRV | E7, L4, L5, U1 | Compressor, low-pressure, or high-pressure faults |
| Mitsubishi City Multi | E6, U1, P6, F6 | Compressor, pressure, or heat-exchanger faults |
| LG Multi V | CH 21, CH 22, CH 26, CH 27 | Compressor or discharge-temp faults |
| Fujitsu Airstage | U:01, U:11, U:30 | Compressor, discharge, or high-pressure faults |
| Samsung DVM | E416, E440, E461 | Discharge temp or compressor protection |
Full breakdowns at our VRF error codes guide.
How to Check Your VRF Before Calling for Service
- Verify the controller is set to cooling mode with the setpoint below current room temperature.
- Read any error code on the wired remote controller or outdoor unit display. Note the full code and which units reported it.
- Check and replace indoor unit filters if visibly clogged. Restricted airflow is the most common easy fix.
- Inspect the outdoor unit on the roof. Is the condenser coil visibly dirty, clogged with debris, or blocked by stored equipment? Is the fan running?
- Determine zone scope of the issue. Single-zone problems point to indoor unit faults. Multi-zone problems point to outdoor unit, refrigerant, or communication issues.
- Do not rinse a dirty condenser coil with a garden hose from the wrong direction. You will push debris further into the coil. Professional cleaning requires chemical treatment and proper rinsing direction.
- Do not power-cycle repeatedly. Power cycling clears the displayed code but does not fix the underlying fault.
If none of the above resolves the issue, or if you see any error code, call Mountain Mechanical.
Building Not Cooling?
Manhattan summer VRF emergencies are our specialty. Factory-certified technicians dispatched same day.
Call 833-504-HVAC | Request a Quote
Related VRF Services
- VRF Not Heating: common causes and next steps when heat is out
- VRF Diagnostics: pinpoint the real cause before repair
- VRF Error Codes Guide: brand-by-brand fault code reference
- VRF Repair Manhattan: certified VRF repair for commercial buildings
- VRF Emergency Service: same-day dispatch when systems go down

