It’s 38 degrees outside, your ceiling cassette is running flat out, and you haven’t thought about cleaning it since — well, ever. It’s up there in the ceiling, out of sight, quietly circulating air through the whole room. What could go wrong?
Quite a bit, actually.
Ceiling cassette units process air from all four sides at once — pulling in significantly more volume per cycle than a standard wall-mounted split system. That means more dust, more moisture, more biological material moving through the internal components every single hour it runs. And in Perth, where the cooling season stretches across months of unrelenting heat, that buildup doesn’t wait for you to notice it. It just grows.
Follow These 9 Steps to Clean Your Ceiling Cassette Aircon
Step 1 — Turn Off the Power
Before touching anything, switch off the unit using the remote controller. Then go to your main switchboard and turn off the dedicated circuit breaker for the aircon completely.
Not just the remote — the circuit breaker. Ceiling cassette units have electrical components close to where you’ll be working, and this step is non-negotiable. Never begin cleaning with power still connected to the unit.
Step 2 — Protect the Area Below
Place a waterproof tarp or old sheets directly underneath the cassette unit before opening anything. Dust, debris, water, and coil cleaner will fall during the process.
Cover any furniture, flooring, or electronics in the surrounding area. Getting this in place before you climb the ladder means you don’t have to come back down to deal with a mess later.
Step 3 — Gather Your Tools
Have everything ready before you start climbing. Going up and down the ladder to find tools slows the job and increases the chance of something going wrong.
You’ll need:
- Sturdy, stable ladder
- Screwdriver
- Bucket
- Mild detergent
- Soft-bristled brush
- Vacuum cleaner with soft brush attachment
- Soft cloths
Step 4 — Open the Grille and Remove Filters
Locate the two tabs on the return air grate or fascia panel. Press them in to release the clips, then carefully lower the grille down. Support it firmly as it opens — these panels are heavier than they look. Most models have a locking position that holds the grille open while you work.
If you need to fully remove the fascia cover rather than just lower it, carefully unhook the safety wires and disconnect the louvre motor and display plugs. Take a phone photo before disconnecting so you know which plug goes where.
Once the grille is open, slide the mesh filters out gently. Ceiling cassette filters sit around the inside perimeter of the grille or in pull-down panels. The mesh can bend or tear if forced — remove carefully.
Step 5 — Clean the Filters
Take the filters outside before doing anything else.
Vacuum the clean side first using a soft brush attachment to remove loose dust. Do this before washing — wetting the filter first turns accumulated dust into a paste that’s much harder to rinse out.
Wash under cold or lukewarm water with a small amount of mild detergent. Never use hot water — above 40°C warps the plastic filter frames, which means the filter won’t sit flat when reinstalled and unfiltered air bypasses around the edges.
Leave the filters to air dry completely in a shaded area before reinstalling. A damp filter going back into a warm unit is exactly the environment mould needs to establish itself.
While the filters dry, wipe down the plastic grille and louvre flaps with a damp cloth and mild detergent.
Step 6 — Clean the Drain Pan
The drain pan sits beneath the evaporator coil and collects condensation during cooling. In Perth’s summer, a ceiling cassette running hard for months produces significant condensate — and the drain pan is where biological growth establishes itself fastest.
Locate the drain pan plug and drain any standing condensate into your bucket. Wipe the inside of the pan clean with soapy water, removing any slime, discolouration, or debris.
Check the drain outlet is clear. A blocked drain pan in a ceiling cassette gives very little warning before water starts dripping through the ceiling.
For persistent biological buildup, place a condensate pan treatment tablet in the pan after cleaning. In Perth’s warm climate, biological growth in drain pans establishes itself faster than in cooler cities — this step is worth including in every thorough clean.
Step 7 — Clean the Evaporator Coils
The evaporator coil runs around the inner perimeter of the unit, wrapped in thin aluminium fins that are easy to damage if cleaned incorrectly.
For surface dust: use a soft brush moving vertically along the fin direction, never across it. Crossing the fins bends them permanently and reduces heat transfer in a way that cannot be reversed without specialist tools.
For deeper cleaning: spray a no-rinse indoor coil cleaner directly between the fan blades onto the coil surface. Work around the full 360 degrees of the coil. Leave it for five to ten minutes — the foam expands into the fin gaps, breaks down grime and biological buildup, and drains into the pan below.
In Perth’s hot roof spaces, apply the coil cleaner in the cooler morning hours. At 35–40°C in a ceiling space, foam dries before it can work properly. Cooler conditions give it time to penetrate and do the job.
In our service work across Perth, the coil is almost always where the real buildup lives — not on the filter. Homeowners who’ve been cleaning filters diligently for years are often surprised by what we find on the coil behind it. Regular filter cleaning slows the rate of coil contamination; it doesn’t stop it entirely.
Step 8 — Clean the Fan Blades and Housing
The blower fan sits centrally inside the unit — a cylindrical drum with blades that draws air from the perimeter and pushes conditioned air out through the louvres.
Use a soft cloth or soft brush to wipe each blade surface, working around the full drum. Clean both the front and back faces of each blade — uneven buildup across blade surfaces is what causes the low-frequency hum or vibration some ceiling cassette units develop over time.
Do not use water directly on or near the fan motor. Moisture on a motor causes real damage and is not something that resolves on its own.
Step 9 — Reassemble and Test the Unit
Once filters are fully dry, put them back into their slots in the correct orientation. Reconnect any wiring plugs you unhooked — display plug and louvre motor plug if disconnected. Lock the main grille back into place until the clips engage properly.
Return to the main switchboard and switch the circuit breaker back on.
Turn the unit on to fan-only mode first and let it run for ten to fifteen minutes. This clears any residual moisture from the cleaning process before cooling mode loads the evaporator coil again. Listen for any new rattling or vibration — if something wasn’t properly secured, this is when you’ll hear it.
Then switch to cooling mode and confirm:
- Airflow feels noticeably stronger than before the clean
- The unit reaches set temperature within a normal timeframe
- No water is dripping from the unit or the surrounding ceiling
If water appears after testing, the drain pan or drain line has an issue that needs further attention before the unit returns to normal use.
If the fan-only test produces an unusual noise or the unit doesn’t cool properly after a clean, we’d rather tell you that than have you run a unit that needs attention. A clean that reveals a problem is better than one that masks it.
How Often Should Ceiling Cassette Aircons Be Cleaned in Perth?
Filters: every four to six weeks during Perth’s summer operating season. In dusty eastern suburbs like Midland, Armadale, and Forrestfield — monthly cleaning during summer is appropriate.
Drain pan check: every two to three months during the cooling season.
Full coil clean: annually, before summer begins — August to September in Perth. Booking in November or December means competing with every other Perth household trying to get serviced before peak season.
Professional service: for units several years old, commercial spaces, or systems not professionally serviced recently — professional cleaning addresses what DIY can’t fully reach, including deeper components, refrigerant pressure, and significant mould growth.
Australian standard AS/NZS 3666 governs microbial control in air handling systems, which includes ceiling cassette units. Annual professional servicing — covering coil hygiene, condensate management, and biological contamination — keeps these units within the standard’s intent and protects indoor air quality through Perth’s long cooling season.
Conclusion
Ceiling cassette aircons are easier to overlook than wall-mounted units — and in Perth’s long summers, that oversight adds up. The buildup doesn’t announce itself until it’s affecting performance, causing a smell, or dripping through the ceiling.
Following these nine steps regularly — filters cleaned monthly during summer, drain pan kept clear, coil cleaned before each season, and a professional service once a year — keeps these units running efficiently for years beyond what neglect allows.