McKinney homeowners get about a three-month window between the last frost and the first 100-degree day to get their houses dialed in. Miss that window and you’re scrambling in June when every HVAC company has a two-week wait list and pool techs are booked solid through Labor Day.
Here’s the timeline experienced McKinney residents follow to stay ahead of summer.
February: The Early Wins
Schedule your HVAC tune-up now. This is the single highest-impact move you can make. McKinney sits on Blackland Prairie clay — the same Vertisol soil that causes foundation headaches — and the extreme temperature swings stress ductwork and outdoor units hard. A spring tune-up catches refrigerant leaks, worn capacitors, and clogged condensate lines before they become a $3,000 emergency call in July. Expect to pay $80–$150 for a standard tune-up — money that pays for itself in efficiency savings.
If you live near any of McKinney’s active development zones (which, given the city’s 19% population growth since 2020, is most people), your outdoor condenser coils get coated with fine construction dust that chokes efficiency. Spray them down with a garden hose monthly from March through October.
Check attic insulation. If your home was built before 2012, there’s a decent chance your insulation has settled below recommended R-38 levels. In McKinney, where attic temperatures can exceed 150°F in summer, every inch of insulation directly impacts your comfort and electric bill. Blown-in insulation upgrades typically run $1,500–$3,000 for a standard home and can cut cooling costs by 15–20%.
Inspect your roof. North Texas gets its share of hail events between March and May. Do a visual inspection now to establish a baseline. If you’re in Stonebridge Ranch or Eldorado — neighborhoods with mature tree coverage — check for branch damage and debris accumulation in valleys. Newer communities like Aster Park and Heatherwood tend to have less tree cover but more exposure to wind damage.
March: Foundation & Exterior
Foundation awareness — this is McKinney-critical. McKinney’s Blackland Prairie clay is among the most expansive in the DFW metroplex. It swells when wet and shrinks when dry, and this constant movement cracks slabs and shifts foundations. Walk your home’s perimeter looking for new cracks. Inside, check for doors that suddenly don’t latch, diagonal cracks above door frames, gaps between walls and trim, and uneven floors. Foundation repair companies recommend installing French drains and using root barriers near large trees to maintain soil stability. For cracks smaller than a quarter inch, seal them with epoxy before spring rains make them worse.
If your home is in Craig Ranch or the older sections of Stonebridge Ranch, you’re on particularly active soil. Maintain consistent moisture around your foundation with soaker hoses during dry spells — the shrink-swell cycle is what causes the real damage.
Clean gutters. Spring storms are coming, and clogged gutters channel water directly against your foundation — exactly where McKinney’s clay soil turns it into a weapon. This is a $100–$200 job that prevents $10,000 foundation issues.
Test your sprinkler system. Run every zone and walk the yard checking for broken heads, misaligned spray patterns, and dry spots. McKinney’s outdoor watering restrictions kick in April 1st: no watering between 10 AM and 6 PM through October, and you can only water on your trash day and three days after. The city asks residents to reduce watering by 2 minutes per zone. Violations get penalized directly on your water bill — and unpaid penalties can result in shutoff. If you’re installing new landscaping, apply online for the 30-day watering exemption before you plant anything.
Power wash hardscapes. Winter leaves a film of dirt, pollen, and mildew on driveways, patios, and siding. A power wash before outdoor entertaining season makes a visible difference, especially on north-facing surfaces.
April: Pool Season Prep
Open your pool. If you winterized, April is the sweet spot — warm enough for equipment to function properly, early enough to avoid algae blooms. Start the pump, clean the filter, balance the chemistry, and inspect the deck for cracks. Pool opening services typically run $150–$350 in the McKinney area.
Inspect pool equipment. Pumps, heaters, and salt cells have finite lifespans. April gives you time to order replacement parts before the summer rush when everything is backordered. Check for leaks around equipment pads and listen for unusual pump noises.
Check your outdoor living space. If you have a covered patio, pergola, or outdoor kitchen, inspect for winter damage. Tighten loose hardware, check gas lines to outdoor grills, clean ceiling fan blades, and test outdoor electrical outlets. McKinney’s building boom means lots of outdoor living additions in neighborhoods like Craig Ranch and Aster Park that may not have weathered their first full winter.
May: The Final Push
Seal windows and doors. Run your hand along window frames and exterior door thresholds. If you feel air movement, replace the weatherstripping. In newer McKinney homes (Heatherwood, Aster Park, newer sections of Craig Ranch), the windows are usually fine, but entry doors and garage-to-house doors are common leak points.
Ceiling fan direction. Counterclockwise for summer (pushing air down). This simple switch lets you raise your thermostat 3–4 degrees without noticing a comfort difference — that’s real money over a McKinney summer.
Replace HVAC filters. Switch to a clean filter and commit to changing it monthly through October. McKinney’s construction dust and spring pollen load clogs filters faster than you’d expect. A restricted filter makes your system work harder and die sooner.
Check your water heater. Flush the tank to remove sediment buildup. McKinney gets its water from the city’s municipal supply, and like most of Collin County, it’s hard water. The mineral content shortens the life of water-using appliances if you’re not proactive about maintenance. Check the anode rod — if it’s more than 3 years old, it probably needs replacing. A maintained water heater lasts 12–15 years; a neglected one might give you 8.
Test smoke and CO detectors. Replace batteries, test every unit, check expiration dates. Replace the units themselves every 10 years.
What It Costs
Most McKinney homeowners spend between $600 and $1,500 on spring-to-summer prep depending on home age and size. Here’s the rough breakdown:
HVAC tune-up: $80–$150. Pool opening: $150–$350. Gutter cleaning: $100–$200. Power washing: $150–$400. Sprinkler system check: $75–$150. Miscellaneous supplies (filters, weatherstripping, batteries): $50–$100.
The alternative — an emergency AC replacement in July — runs $10,000 to $30,000 and comes with a two-week wait. The math is straightforward.
McKinney-Specific Things to Remember
The Blackland Prairie clay is not optional maintenance. If you ignore foundation moisture management, the repair bill finds you eventually — and pier systems for McKinney homes run into the thousands. Soaker hoses during dry spells are the cheapest insurance you’ll ever buy.
Collin County property taxes are among the higher rates in DFW since Texas has no state income tax. Budget accordingly — especially if you’re new to the area and coming from a state with lower property tax but income tax.
McKinney ISD earned a B rating (score of 88) in the latest accountability cycle, up from 84 the previous year. If you moved here for the schools, the district is trending the right direction — Glen Oaks and Wolford Elementary both cracked the state’s top 300.
Your electric provider matters. Texas electricity is deregulated, so you choose your plan. Lock in a fixed rate for 12 months — free nights and weekends plans sound great but often have higher daytime rates that eat into summer savings when your AC runs 18 hours a day. Compare at powertochoose.org.
And if you haven’t explored Bonnie Wenk Park (216 acres, fishing lake, dog park, amphitheater) or the Wilson Creek Trail system (10 miles connecting multiple parks — nationally designated in 2023), those early morning weekend walks before the heat hits are one of the genuine perks of living here.
Got a summer prep tip specific to McKinney? Send it our way and we’ll add it to future updates.