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Heat Pump Switching to Emergency Heat

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Air Repair Al Servicing Cental Alabama And Upstate South Carolina

Why Does My Heat Pump Keep Switching to Emergency Heat?

When your heating system suddenly flips over to Emergency Heat, it’s completely normal to panic a little. Most homeowners see that alert on their thermostat and think something serious is wrong. Sometimes it is but often, your system is just responding to weather, airflow, or a simple issue that can be fixed quickly.

If you live in Greenville, SC or Birmingham, AL, you’re in an area where heat pumps are extremely common. You also live in a climate where humidity, winter temperature swings, and storms can trigger emergency heat more often than you’d expect.

This guide walks you through why it happens, how to troubleshoot it, and when you should call for help.

What “Emergency Heat” Actually Means

Emergency heat (sometimes called “Aux Heat”) is your backup heating source. It activates when your heat pump can’t keep up or can’t operate safely.

When emergency heat comes on, you may notice:

Emergency heat isn’t meant to run all day. It’s a temporary solution while your system figures out what’s going on.

1. Sudden Cold Weather Can Force Your System Into Emergency Heat

Heat pumps work well in mild climates but struggle when temperatures drop into the 20s or high teens. In the Southeast, we get these cold snaps a few times each winter. Often overnight or early in the morning.

Your thermostat notices your heat pump falling behind and switches to emergency heat to keep your home comfortable.

This is normal when:

But if your system stays in emergency heat once temperatures rise again, that’s a red flag.

2. Ice or Frost on the Outdoor Unit Can Trigger Emergency Heat

Thanks to winter humidity in both the Upstate South Carolina and Central Alabama areas, frost buildup is common. When the outdoor unit freezes, your system automatically:

  1. Pauses the heat pump

  2. Switches to emergency heat

  3. Activates the defrost cycle

If frost melts and everything returns to normal, you’re fine. If the unit stays frozen, you may have:

These require a technician to diagnose.

3. A Dirty Air Filter Can Force Emergency Heat to Turn On

This one surprises homeowners because it’s so simple.

A clogged filter restricts airflow. When your heat pump can’t breathe, it overheats and switches to emergency heat to protect itself.

If you haven’t changed your filter in the last 30–60 days, start here. This is one of the easiest (and cheapest) fixes.

4. Your Outdoor Unit Isn’t Running — But the Indoor Unit Is

If your heat pump’s indoor unit is working but the outdoor unit is:

…your system will jump straight to emergency heat.

Common causes include:

This is where emergency heat is saving your comfort but your electric bill won’t love it.

5. Your Thermostat Is Sending the Wrong Signals

Older or incorrectly configured thermostats can misread temperatures and activate emergency heat without reason.

This is especially common after:

If your heat pump worked fine until a thermostat change, start your troubleshooting here.

6. Low Refrigerant Makes Your Heat Pump Struggle

Heat pumps don’t “use up” refrigerant. So if the level is low, that means you likely have a leak.

Signs this may be the issue:

When the heat pump can’t pull enough heat from outside, the thermostat flips to emergency heat to help.

7. Your System May Be Undersized for Your Home

If your heat pump isn’t sized correctly for your home’s square footage, layout, or insulation, it’s going to struggle in extreme weather.

This happens often in:

When a system runs constantly but can’t catch up, emergency heat kicks in more frequently.

8. Leaky Ductwork Can Make Your Heat Pump Give Up

Both of these regions have plenty of older homes with aging ductwork.
If warm air escapes into the attic, crawl space, or basement, the heat pump has to work twice as hard.

Common signs of duct leakage:

Your heat pump switches to emergency heat when duct losses make it impossible to reach the set temperature.

Should You Call for Service?

You should schedule service if:

Emergency heat is a backup, not a long-term heating plan.

Quick Things You Can Check Before Calling

Homeowners can safely check these items:

If nothing changes after these steps, the issue is likely mechanical.

Emergency Heat Isn’t Always an Emergency

Your heat pump switching to emergency heat doesn’t always mean something is broken. Sometimes it’s doing exactly what it was designed to do.

But if it’s happening repeatedly or during mild weather, that’s your system telling you it needs attention.

Call Air Repair AL if you are experiencing this near you or contact us online with any questions.

Upstate South Carolina – 864-777-1111

Central Alabama – 659-777-1111

Related Information

5 Myths Greenville Homeowners Believe About AC vs. Heat Pump

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