Quick Answer

Ducted evaporative cooling installation in Melbourne costs $3,500–$8,500, including the rooftop unit, ductwork, ceiling vents, and wall controller. A single-room portable evaporative cooler costs $400–$1,200 and requires no installation. Ducted evaporative cooling is significantly cheaper to run than refrigerated air conditioning — $0.05–$0.15/hour vs $0.40–$1.00/hour.

Evaporative cooling is Melbourne’s most cost-effective summer cooling technology for the SE suburbs, where summer temperatures regularly hit 35–42°C and dry northerly winds are common. Unlike refrigerated air conditioning, evaporative cooling works best when you leave windows slightly open — the opposite of what most people expect. This guide covers installation costs, running costs, maintenance, and whether evaporative cooling suits your home in 2026.

A ducted evaporative cooler unit installed on a tiled roof in SE Melbourne — the unit draws outside air through wet cellulose pads, cooling it by 8–12
A ducted evaporative cooler unit installed on a tiled roof in SE Melbourne — the unit draws outside air through wet cellulose pads, cooling it by 8–12°C before distributing it via ducts to the home.

Complete Evaporative Cooling Cost Breakdown

System Costs by Type

System Type Unit Cost Installed Total Best For
Single-zone ducted (small, up to 20 squares) $1,800–$3,000 $3,500–$5,500 3-bed homes, single level
Single-zone ducted (large, 20–30 squares) $2,500–$4,500 $5,000–$8,500 4-5 bed homes, open-plan
Twin-motor ducted (large or 2-storey) $4,000–$7,000 $7,500–$12,000 Large homes or 2-storey properties
Portable evaporative (single room) $400–$1,200 No installation required Renters, supplementary cooling
Add zone to existing system $500–$1,500 $800–$2,000 Expanding existing ducted system
Pro tip: The most popular brands in SE Melbourne are Breezair (premium), Braemar, Coolair, and Seeley Bonaire. Breezair and Braemar are Australian-made and have a strong reputation for durability in Melbourne’s hard water areas around Cranbourne and Pakenham.

Installation Cost Breakdown

Component Cost Notes
Rooftop unit and crane/lift $1,000–$2,500 Larger units (20+ squares) may require crane
Main duct from unit to ceiling $300–$800 Depends on roof pitch and ceiling cavity access
Ceiling vent registers (per vent) $80–$180 Most homes need 4–8 vents for even distribution
Flexible ductwork (per run) $100–$300 Connects main duct to each ceiling register
Wall controller + wiring $200–$500 Digital controllers add $100–$200 vs basic switches
Electrical connection $200–$400 Licensed electrician required for power connection
Running flexible ductwork through the ceiling cavity — even duct distribution is critical for good airflow; an unbalanced duct system results in hot s
Running flexible ductwork through the ceiling cavity — even duct distribution is critical for good airflow; an unbalanced duct system results in hot spots and poor cooling even when the unit is working correctly.

Running Cost Comparison

Cooling System Running Cost/Hour Annual Summer Cost* Energy Rating
Ducted evaporative cooler $0.05–$0.15 $60–$180 Very low — water and fan motor only
Split system reverse-cycle (6kW) $0.25–$0.50 $300–$600 Moderate
Ducted refrigerated AC (14kW) $0.80–$1.50 $960–$1,800 High
Portable refrigerated AC (2.5kW) $0.40–$0.70 $480–$840 Moderate-high

*Based on 4 hours/day, 3 days/week, November–March Melbourne summer.

Pro tip: Evaporative cooling electricity costs include running the pump (to wet the pads) and the fan motor only — no compressor. This is why running costs are 5–10x lower than refrigerated AC. Water usage is 5–25 litres per hour depending on unit size and temperature.

Limitations of Evaporative Cooling in Melbourne

Evaporative cooling works by evaporating water to cool air — which means it works best in dry conditions. Melbourne’s climate is well-suited, with summer relative humidity typically below 40% during hot northerlies. However, there are limitations:

  • Humid days: On days above 30% relative humidity (common during summer storms), evaporative cooling effectiveness drops significantly. A split system backup for the bedroom is a common solution.
  • Fully sealed homes: Evaporative cooling requires air to escape — leave windows open 5–10cm on the leeward side. Homes sealed for noise or allergen control don’t suit evaporative cooling.
  • Ash Wednesday-type fire days: On days with CFA fire restrictions, you may need to close windows — negating evaporative cooling’s ability to function.

Maintenance Costs

Maintenance Task Frequency Cost Notes
Cooling pad replacement Every 2–5 years $200–$600 fitted Cellulose pads degrade with hard water deposits
Annual service (clean, oil, inspect) Every year $150–$300 Before summer — clean sump, check pump, oil bearings
Water distribution spider replacement Every 3–5 years $50–$150 DIY Plastic water distribution arms can split or block
Sump drain and clean Every month in use DIY — 30 minutes Prevents algae, mineral build-up, mosquito breeding
Fan belt replacement Every 5–8 years $80–$200 fitted On belt-driven units — direct-drive units don’t have belts
Replacing evaporative cooling pads — cellulose pads should be replaced every 2–5 years in Melbourne's hard water areas. Old pads restrict airflow and
Replacing evaporative cooling pads — cellulose pads should be replaced every 2–5 years in Melbourne’s hard water areas. Old pads restrict airflow and reduce cooling efficiency by 30–50%.

Ducted Evaporative vs Ducted Refrigerated: Which Suits Melbourne?

Factor Evaporative Refrigerated
Installation cost $3,500–$8,500 $8,000–$20,000+
Running cost (summer) $60–$180/year $900–$2,000+/year
Works on humid days No — effectiveness drops Yes — humidity doesn’t affect performance
Works with windows open Required Works better sealed
Can also heat in winter No — cooling only Yes — reverse-cycle heating included
Maintenance complexity Low — DIY-friendly Medium — refrigerant requires licensed tech
Best climate Hot dry summers — perfect for Melbourne north/NW winds All climates
Adjusting a ceiling vent louvre — correct positioning of ceiling vents, combined with slightly open windows on the leeward side of the house, is the k
Adjusting a ceiling vent louvre — correct positioning of ceiling vents, combined with slightly open windows on the leeward side of the house, is the key to even cooling throughout the home.

Top 10 Tips and Gotchas

  1. Book in winter or spring — installation demand peaks in October–November. Booking in winter (now) gets you earlier installation and sometimes better pricing from installers filling quiet periods.
  2. Leave windows slightly open — 5–10cm on the opposite side of the house from the airflow direction. Fully sealed homes get no benefit from evaporative cooling.
  3. Service before summer — pads that dried out over winter can have mineral deposits that restrict water flow. A pre-summer service ensures full efficiency from day one of hot weather.
  4. Water quality matters — in hard water areas of Cranbourne, Officer, and Pakenham, mineral scale builds up on pads and in the sump more quickly. Monthly sump draining is essential.
  5. Pad direction — CELdek pads are more efficient than older Chiller pads but cost more. Worth specifying when the system is installed or pads are replaced.
  6. Fan speed vs pad control — on hot dry days, run the pad pump AND fan on high. On milder days, fan-only mode (no water pump) works as a whole-house fan for much less electricity.
  7. Duct sealing matters — poorly sealed duct joins lose cooling before it reaches the vents. Insist on all duct joins being taped during installation.
  8. 2-storey homes need twin motors — a single motor rarely has the pressure to cool both floors effectively. A twin-motor system or separate unit per floor is recommended.
  9. Check the roof structure — evaporative cooler units weigh 60–180kg. Your roofing contractor or builder can confirm whether your roof structure can carry the load without reinforcement.
  10. Consider a split system backup — for Melbourne’s humid storm days (and for sleeping comfort), a bedroom split system alongside the ducted evaporative covers the cases when evaporative cooling underperforms.
Safety warning: Always use a licensed electrician for the power connection to the evaporative cooler unit. The unit sits in a wet environment on the roof — waterproofing of the electrical connection and use of weatherproof fittings are non-negotiable safety requirements.
Rooftop safety equipment including harness anchor points is essential during evaporative cooler installation and servicing — a tiled roof at any pitch
Rooftop safety equipment including harness anchor points is essential during evaporative cooler installation and servicing — a tiled roof at any pitch is a serious fall hazard. Confirm your installer uses proper fall arrest systems.

Local Melbourne Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does evaporative cooler installation take?

A single-zone ducted system takes 4–8 hours for a standard single-storey home. Larger homes or 2-storey properties take 1–2 days. No internal walls need to be opened — all ductwork runs through the roof cavity.

How often should I replace evaporative cooling pads?

Every 2–5 years in Melbourne, depending on water hardness and usage hours. In hard water areas (Cranbourne, Pakenham), expect replacement every 2–3 years. Blocked or crumbling pads can reduce cooling by 30–50% and increase energy use. Annual servicing should include pad inspection.

Can I run my evaporative cooler in winter?

No — evaporative coolers are cooling-only systems. For winter heating, you need a separate system (ducted gas, split system, wood heater). Some Melbourne homeowners run the evaporative cooler in fan-only mode (no water) in early autumn for low-cost whole-house ventilation.

Does evaporative cooling work with double-glazed windows or sealed homes?

Poorly. Evaporative cooling requires fresh air to exit the home through windows or vents. Fully sealed, double-glazed homes designed to hold conditioned air don’t suit evaporative cooling — refrigerated reverse-cycle is better suited to modern, highly insulated homes.

What is the lifespan of a ducted evaporative cooler?

Quality brands like Breezair and Braemar last 15–25 years with annual servicing. The motor is typically the first major failure, usually at 12–18 years. Replacement motors cost $400–$900 fitted — often cheaper than a new unit if the rest of the system is in good condition.

Final Thoughts

For SE Melbourne homeowners in areas like Berwick, Narre Warren, Pakenham, and Officer, ducted evaporative cooling remains the most cost-effective whole-house cooling solution in 2026 — provided your home is suitable (cross-ventilation possible, single storey or two-motor system on two-storey). The gap in running costs versus refrigerated AC is significant over 10+ years of ownership.

  • Book installation in winter or spring — summer demand creates delays and price pressure
  • Choose CELdek pads and digital controls for best performance
  • Service annually before summer — it’s cheap insurance against a failure on a 42°C day
  • Consider a bedroom split system as backup for humid summer storm days