Most FSM software just tracks invoices. FieldCerts is the industry's first Compliance Brain — automating EPA Section 608 leak rates, A2L safety limits, and AIM Act Subpart C reporting so you're always 100% audit-ready.
Free to start. Prevents fines from day one.
$59,114
Per-day EPA fine
$0
With FieldCerts
Jan 2026
AIM Act effective date
Team Status
Action Required
3 certifications expire within 30 days
The 2026 AIM Act added 3 invisible compliance traps. Generic software misses all of them.
The leak repair threshold dropped from 50 lbs to 15 lbs. Suddenly 79% of your commercial rooftop and split systems are under strict EPA oversight. We automatically flag every regulated asset and trigger mandatory 30-day repair clocks.
Generic software adds the last 365 days of refrigerant blindly — falsely flagging repaired units as chronic violations. Our Math Reset Engine truncates the rolling average the moment a follow-up verification test passes.
R-454B and R-32 are mildly flammable. Installing a standard charge in a small mechanical room is a major code violation. Our built-in A2L Safety Calculator physically blocks technicians from logging an install if the charge exceeds the room's safe dispersion volume.
Purpose-built for HVAC companies that need to move fast and stay audit-ready.
Surface gaps before they become violations. Every cert, every tech, every regulation — tracked automatically against current AIM Act rules.
Compliance Overview
Professional-grade HVAC calculators, available to everyone. No sign-up required.
Calculate annual leak rates per EPA Section 608 and determine required compliance actions
FreeVerify room volume meets ASHRAE 15/34 concentration limits for A2L refrigerants
FreeCompare gauge readings against saturation tables to detect refrigerant mismatches
Administrative staff spend up to 73% of their time chasing missing refrigerant logs and certifications. There's a better way.
Join HVAC companies who rely on FieldCerts to keep their teams compliant. We built the only software that knows the difference between a legal refrigerant log and one that triggers a $59,114 fine.