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HVAC control modules are the electronic brains behind your climate system — they translate inputs from your temperature dials, touchscreen, or push buttons into commands for the blower motor, blend doors, compressor clutch, and zone controls. This category covers three distinct part types: the main HVAC control module (the head unit interface), blower motor control modules (which regulate fan speed via pulse-width modulation), and A/C power modules. These components fail from heat cycling, voltage spikes, moisture intrusion, or simply age. Common failure modes include total loss of climate control, fans stuck at one speed, or zones that won't respond. When buying, verify your vehicle's control type — manual, semi-automatic, or fully automatic dual-zone systems use different modules and are rarely interchangeable. OEM units guarantee plug-and-play fitment and calibration, while quality aftermarket options from brands like Dorman can offer significant savings on older vehicles where dealer pricing is steep.
Signs you need replacement
- Blower motor stuck at one speed or won't turn off — the blower motor control module (sometimes called a blower resistor module) has failed and is no longer modulating fan speed. On vehicles with solid-state PWM controllers, this often presents as fan locked at high speed.
- Climate controls are completely unresponsive — buttons, knobs, or touchscreen inputs produce no change in temperature, fan speed, or mode. This points to a dead main HVAC control module rather than a wiring or actuator issue.
- A/C compressor won't engage despite correct refrigerant charge — a failed A/C power module can interrupt the signal to the compressor clutch relay, causing no cooling even when pressures test normal at the service ports.
- Inconsistent behavior — controls work intermittently or reset randomly — intermittent operation, especially right after startup or during hot weather, is a classic sign of a heat-stressed control module with failing solder joints or a degrading internal processor.
- Error codes related to HVAC bus communication (e.g., B-codes on scan tool) — codes like B1249, B1250, or manufacturer-specific HVAC fault codes logged in the BCM or HVAC module point directly to control module failure rather than actuator or sensor faults.
Frequently asked questions
- Do HVAC control modules need to be programmed after replacement? It depends on the vehicle. Many late-model vehicles with automatic climate control require the new module to be initialized or VIN-programmed via a scan tool — common on GM, Ford, and Chrysler platforms from 2010 onward. Basic manual-control modules on older vehicles typically plug in and work without programming. Check your service manual or confirm with your dealer before ordering.
- Is OEM worth the premium over aftermarket for HVAC control modules? For vehicles still under warranty or with complex dual-zone automatic systems, OEM is the safer call — fitment and calibration are guaranteed. On vehicles over 8–10 years old, reputable aftermarket units from Dorman or Standard Motor Products are solid alternatives at 40–60% less than dealer pricing. Avoid no-name units with no return policy; fitment errors on these are common.
- How much does HVAC control module replacement cost, and is it DIY-friendly? Parts range from roughly $45–$90 for blower motor control modules to $150–$400+ for main HVAC control modules on automatic-climate vehicles. DIY difficulty is low-to-moderate — most modules are dash-mounted with a wiring harness clip and a few screws. The catch is programming: if your vehicle requires it, factor in a dealer or shop visit, which can add $75–$150 in labor.



















