Thinking about becoming a air-conditioning and refrigeration mechanic? It is a solid trade path in Australia, with steady demand and a nationally recognised qualification. Here is the plain-English version for 2026.
What the job involves
A air-conditioning and refrigeration mechanic does hands-on, practical work on site or in a workshop. It is physical and varied, and you finish with a qualification that is in demand.
The apprenticeship pathway
The main route is a air-conditioning and refrigeration mechanic apprenticeship — employed and paid while you train toward the nationally recognised qualification (Certificate III in Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration; confirm the current code on training.gov.au) at TAFE or an RTO. Most take around 3 to 4 years, with pay rising each year as a percentage of the qualified rate.
How to get started
- Find an employer to take you on.
- Get a White Card for construction sites.
- Sign up through an Apprenticeship Support Network provider to unlock your payments.
Licensing and registration
This trade has extra licensing: to handle refrigerant gases you generally need a Refrigerant Handling Licence from the Australian Refrigeration Council (ARC), and electrical work needs the relevant electrical licence. Confirm current requirements before you work unsupervised. Rules differ by state, so confirm with your state regulator before relying on anything.
Pay and the money side
As an apprentice you earn a rising percentage of the qualified rate, and may be eligible for the interest-free Australian Apprenticeship Support Loan, incentive payments, Fee-Free TAFE and the Living Away From Home Allowance if you move for the job.
Where to confirm everything
- Payments: apprenticeships.gov.au
- Qualification: training.gov.au
- Pay rates: fairwork.gov.au
General information only — not financial, legal or career advice. Check the official source and your state authority before acting.