15 pounds or more
Covered circuit records are created for circuits at or above the 15 lb full-charge threshold.
The 15 lb threshold is based on the circuit’s full charge, not the amount added during a service event. In Subpart, covered circuit records are created before technician service links are used.
HVACAudit by Subpart helps owners manage Subpart C refrigerant records for covered circuits. Subpart provides accounts, service links, reports, billing, and compliance history.
The 15 lb full-charge threshold is based on the circuit’s full charge, not the amount added during a service event.
Covered circuit records are created for circuits at or above the 15 lb full-charge threshold.
Keep the source for the circuit’s full-charge value clear.
Subpart is built for covered Subpart C circuit records. Circuits below 15 pounds full charge are outside Subpart’s covered-circuit record scope.
Charge size is not the only question. Refrigerant type, GWP, appliance category, and exclusions matter too.
Confirm whether the refrigerant falls within the rule’s scope.
Do not treat every HVAC service event as covered.
For equipment with multiple independent circuits, each independent circuit is considered a separate appliance for Subpart C leak-repair purposes.
Owners create sites, assets, and covered circuit records in Subpart, then create a 48-hour service link for the technician. The technician records refrigerant added, certification number, and service notes without an account. Subpart calculates the leak-rate result from the owner’s equipment history and adds the completed record to the owner’s compliance history.
Keep service work tied to the correct site, asset, and covered circuit.
Open the service link and record the refrigerant service details.
Short answers for coverage, service links, calculation, and account history.
No. It is based on full charge.
No. Residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump subsector appliances are excluded.
For equipment with multiple independent circuits, each independent circuit is considered a separate appliance for Subpart C leak-repair purposes.
Use current rule text and EPA materials for compliance decisions.
Questions about accounts, billing, service links, or calculator access?