What the Filter Actually Does and Why Cleaning It Correctly Matters
What a working filter protects
The return air filter on a Mitsubishi split system sits in the direct path of every cubic metre of room air the system processes. Its job is to intercept airborne particles before they reach the evaporator coil. When it performs this function correctly, it keeps the coil fins clean, maintains the airflow volume the system needs for efficient heat exchange, and reduces the biological growth conditions that lead to musty odours and reduced output.
When the filter is blocked, every one of these functions degrades simultaneously. Airflow drops, heat exchange efficiency falls, and in severe cases the coil freezes entirely. The system runs but achieves progressively less. Because the degradation is gradual, most homeowners attribute it to the system ageing rather than to a filter that needs attention.
Why the cleaning method matters as much as the frequency
A filter cleaned incorrectly can be more damaging than one left in place. The two most common mistakes are reinserting a damp filter and using high-pressure water that pushes contamination deeper into the mesh. A damp filter placed back into the indoor unit creates a moisture-rich environment directly upstream of the evaporator coil. This accelerates the biological growth that produces musty odours and performance loss. The correct process takes longer precisely because the drying stage is not optional.
Where the filter sits on your Mitsubishi system
On Mitsubishi Electric split systems, the return air filter sits behind the front grille panel of the indoor unit. The grille panel opens upward on most models. On flat-panel design series units, the grille opens from the bottom edge — not the top. This distinction prevents accidental damage to the panel clips. The filter slides out horizontally once the grille is open. Some larger-capacity models carry a secondary electrostatic panel behind the main mesh filter. This panel requires its own separate cleaning method and must not be washed under water.
How to Clean a Mitsubishi Air Conditioner Filter Five Steps Done Correctly
Follow these five steps in sequence. Each step is explained with the reasoning behind it, not just the instruction, because understanding why each step matters is what prevents the shortcuts that turn a maintenance task into a maintenance problem.
Open the Grille and Remove the Filter Correctly
Opening the Grille Without Damage
Stand directly in front of the indoor unit. On standard wall-mount models, the front grille panel swings upward on a hinge at the top. Grip the bottom edge of the panel and pull it forward and upward until it locks in the open position. If the panel does not open freely, check for small release tabs on each side before applying additional force. Forcing a panel that has not been released will crack the clip points.
On flat-panel design series units only, the grille opens from the bottom edge. The panel is hinged at the top and swings downward. Attempting to open it from the top damages the clips and voids the casing in a way that is not covered under warranty.
Removing the Filter Panels
Once the grille is open, the main mesh filter is visible immediately behind the vane assembly. Grasp the bottom edge of the filter frame and slide it straight downward and out of its track. Most Mitsubishi filters remove in a single smooth movement once the grille is fully open.
After removing the main mesh filter, look for a secondary panel behind it. On larger-capacity models that include a secondary electrostatic panel, this panel sits in a separate track directly behind the mesh. Remove it and set it aside for the dry cleaning step in step two. It cannot be washed under running water.
Remove Loose Contamination Before Introducing Water
Why Dry Cleaning Comes Before Wet Washing
Introducing water to a heavily dust-loaded filter without first removing loose surface contamination turns the dust into a paste that bonds with the mesh fibres. This paste is considerably harder to rinse out than loose dust. If it sets during drying, the effective porosity of the filter reduces permanently. Removing loose dust first makes the washing step more effective and reduces the number of rinse cycles needed.
How to Dry Clean Effectively
Take the filter outdoors or over a bin to prevent redistributing dust inside. Hold the filter frame firmly at both ends and tap the narrow side against the edge of the bin to dislodge loose surface dust. Alternatively, use the soft brush attachment of a vacuum cleaner, moving in gentle strokes from one end of the filter to the other.
For the secondary electrostatic panel, use only a dry, soft cloth with light wiping pressure. No brush, no tapping, and no water contact at any stage. The electrostatic material is fragile and moisture or abrasive contact permanently alters the panel's performance characteristics.
Wash the Mesh Filter Under Running Water
The Correct Washing Approach
Hold the filter under a gentle flow of lukewarm running water. Water should enter from the clean side — the side that faces away from the evaporator coil during operation — and exit through the dirty side. This pushes contamination out in the direction it entered rather than compressing it further into the mesh structure.
Continue rinsing until the water exiting the filter runs clear with no visible discolouration. For filters with embedded staining from biological growth, a brief soak in clean lukewarm water before rinsing loosens the organic matter and reduces the rinsing time needed.
What the Washing Process Must Not Include
- Hot water — heat causes thermal expansion of the plastic frame that distorts its shape and prevents it seating correctly after cleaning
- Detergent or cleaning sprays — residue left in the mesh reduces airflow and can degrade the mesh coating over repeated applications
- A pressure hose or high-pressure tap setting — the force deforms the aluminium mesh frame and can separate the mesh from the frame at the edges
- Scrubbing with a brush or cloth during washing — wet mesh is considerably more fragile than dry mesh and will tear or stretch under scrubbing pressure
Allow the Filter to Dry Completely Before Reinserting
Why This Step Cannot Be Shortened
Reinserting a damp filter is the most consequential mistake in the entire cleaning process. A damp filter placed back into the indoor unit creates a continuous source of moisture directly upstream of the evaporator coil. Under operating conditions, this moisture transfers to the coil fins. It creates exactly the conditions that accelerate biological growth and produce the musty odour that filter cleaning is supposed to prevent.
A correctly washed but damp-reinserted filter can produce musty odours within a few operating cycles. Many homeowners do not connect this to the cleaning they performed days earlier, so the cause is often misdiagnosed as a deeper problem requiring a professional visit.
How to Dry It Correctly
Shake excess water from the filter frame after washing, then stand the filter upright in a well-ventilated area away from direct sunlight. The time required varies with Melbourne's weather conditions. The frame and mesh must feel completely dry to the touch across the entire surface — not just the edges — before reinsertion.
What to Avoid During Drying
- Do not dry in direct sun for extended periods — UV exposure progressively degrades the plastic frame material
- Do not use a hair dryer, heat gun, or any forced heat source — concentrated heat warps the frame
- Do not test for dryness by touch alone at the centre — check both sides of the mesh across the full surface area
Reinsert, Reset the Indicator, and Verify the Clean
Reinserting the Filter Correctly
Slide the clean, dry filter back into its track with the mesh face pointing toward the coil. Push upward firmly until the frame seats fully and evenly across its full width. A filter that sits even slightly crooked creates an uneven airflow distribution across the coil surface and can produce a vibration rattle during operation. On models with a secondary electrostatic panel, reinsert it first before replacing the main mesh filter, as the secondary panel track sits deeper in the unit.
Close the front grille firmly and verify each clip engages completely. Any section of the grille that is not fully clipped will vibrate during operation. Test each side by pressing gently after closing.
Resetting the Filter Indicator
After reinserting the filter, reset the filter run-hour counter using the method appropriate for your model. On most current models, this involves pressing and holding the Filter button on the remote control while pointing it at the indoor unit receiver. Your owner manual documents the correct reset method for your specific unit. The indicator light should extinguish when the reset is accepted.
Verifying the Clean Made a Difference
Switch the system on in cooling mode and run it briefly. If the filter was significantly blocked before cleaning, you should notice improved airflow from the vanes relatively quickly. Note the date of the clean and set a reminder for your next inspection based on your household's typical loading rate.
Need a professional Mitsubishi service beyond what filter cleaning can address?
Our Melbourne Mitsubishi specialists cover the coil, drain, refrigerant, and electrics on every visit.
What Cleaning Interval Actually Applies to Your Melbourne Home
The standard cleaning interval recommendation assumes an average household environment. Melbourne homes vary enormously in the rate at which filters load. Use the table below to identify the interval that reflects your specific situation.
| Household Situation | Recommended Interval | The Reason This Interval Applies |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Melbourne home, no pets, minimal dust sources | Every 4 to 6 weeks during heavy use | Typical airborne particulate at average Melbourne household density loads the filter at a moderate rate during active use. Inspect at the lower end of this range and clean if any surface coating is apparent. |
| Home with one or more indoor pets | Every 2 to 3 weeks during heavy use | Pet dander and hair are among the most effective filter-loading materials due to their combination of size, quantity, and static charge. Systems in pet households routinely reach significant blockage well before the standard interval during active use periods. |
| Home near active construction or high traffic roads | Every 2 to 3 weeks during heavy use | Construction and traffic particulate enters homes through ventilation gaps and infiltrates the filter at an accelerated rate. Fine concrete and silica dust blocks filter mesh more effectively than standard household dust at the same visual loading level. |
| System used only in the cooling season | Clean before the first use each season | A system that sits dormant through winter accumulates dust on the filter surface from normal room air movement without any operating airflow to concentrate it. Starting each season with a clean filter is more reliable than discovering blockage on the first hot day. |
| System used heavily across both heating and cooling seasons | Every 3 to 4 weeks year-round | Year-round operation in Melbourne means continuous filter loading without the seasonal break that gives single-season systems a natural reset point. The higher cumulative operating hours require a shorter interval to prevent blockage from accumulating between cleans. |
| Commercial or high-occupancy residential system | Every 2 to 3 weeks based on occupancy | Higher occupancy produces proportionally more airborne particulate per hour of operation. Commercial environments in healthcare, hospitality, or food service may have additional loading from their specific activities that further shortens the effective cleaning interval. |
When a Filter Clean Is Not the Right Tool for the Problem
What filter cleaning cannot reach
Filter cleaning is the most accessible and highest-impact maintenance action available to a Mitsubishi owner. It is not, however, a complete maintenance solution. Several conditions that develop inside a Mitsubishi system produce symptoms that a filter clean cannot address.
These symptoms require a professional service visit
Musty smell persists after operating with a freshly cleaned filter
If the musty odour returns quickly after operating the system with a freshly cleaned filter, the biological growth that produces the smell is on the evaporator coil surface, not the filter. No amount of filter cleaning reaches the coil. The treatment is a professional deep coil clean.
Water dripping from the indoor unit continues after cleaning
A frozen coil caused by a blocked filter sometimes produces a water leak that stops after the filter is cleaned and the coil defrosts. If water continues to drip after a clean filter restart, the condensate drain line has a blockage that requires professional flushing.
Cooling performance does not improve after cleaning a heavily blocked filter
If airflow improves after cleaning but the room still does not reach the set temperature in a reasonable time, the filter was not the sole cause of poor performance. The refrigerant circuit pressure, the coil surface condition, or the compressor capacity is also contributing.
Ice forms repeatedly on the pipes despite a consistently clean filter
A coil that freezes despite a clean filter is almost always experiencing a low refrigerant charge. Locating and repairing the refrigerant leak, then recharging to specification, is the correct treatment. Only a licensed refrigerant handler can perform this work legally in Australia.
Situations Where Your Mitsubishi Needs More Than a Filter Clean
Filter cleaning handles what the filter handles. The conditions listed below sit beyond what any homeowner cleaning task can reach. Call our Melbourne team if any of these apply after completing a thorough filter clean.
Call 03 4232 6971 if these apply after cleaning
- The musty smell returns within a few operating cycles of a clean filter reinstallation
- Water continues to drip from the indoor unit after the system restarts with a clean filter
- The system shuts itself off after a short period of operation and then restarts repeatedly
- Ice is visible on the copper pipes even after the filter has been thoroughly cleaned
- A fault code is showing on the display alongside the performance issue
- The filter indicator light reactivates within a few days of being reset after a clean
- Cooling performance shows no measurable improvement after cleaning a filter that was visibly heavily blocked
What Melbourne Homeowners Ask Most About Cleaning a Mitsubishi Filter
These are the questions that come up repeatedly when homeowners contact us about filter maintenance. Direct answers that help you make better decisions about your system between professional service visits.
The indicator measures hours, not condition
The filter indicator on Mitsubishi systems activates based on operating hours rather than actual filter condition. In a high-dust environment, the filter may need cleaning well before the indicator activates. In a low-dust environment, the indicator may activate when the filter is still relatively clean. Using the indicator as a prompt to inspect the filter — rather than a definitive cleaning instruction — gives you a more accurate maintenance response.
Physical signs to watch for between indicator activations
Three physical signs are worth watching for between indicator activations. The first is reduced airflow from the indoor unit vanes at a given fan speed setting. The second is a musty smell in the first few minutes of operation after a period of non-use. The third is the system running noticeably longer than usual to reach the set temperature on days when it previously achieved it quickly.
Fan-only mode is the safer option
Running without the filter for a brief period is far less damaging than reinserting a damp filter. If you need to use the system while the filter dries, run it in fan-only mode at low speed. Fan-only mode at low speed moves air through the system without the full heating or cooling cycle that would draw the maximum volume of unfiltered air across the coil.
Avoid cooling mode without the filter
Cooling mode draws the full rated airflow volume across the coil at high velocity. This deposits dust and particulate directly onto the coil fins at a rate that accelerates coil contamination significantly. Even a relatively short period of filterless cooling operation can introduce as much coil contamination as weeks of normal operation with a filter in place.
Visual inspection is not reliable for fine particulate
Visual inspection is not a reliable guide to filter condition. The particles that have the most impact on airflow and heat exchange are often too fine to see clearly. A filter that appears relatively clean may still carry a significant load of fine particulate embedded in the mesh structure that reduces effective porosity without producing a visibly grey or brown surface appearance.
The most reliable approach
Combining the operating-hour indicator with a rinse whenever you inspect the filter — regardless of visual appearance — maintains the filter at a consistently clean state. Waiting until visible blockage appears before cleaning means the filter has been affecting system performance for a period before the cleaning happens.
Mitsubishi mesh filters are designed for reuse
The standard mesh filter on Mitsubishi Electric split systems is engineered for cleaning and reuse across the system's full service life. Unlike ducted system filters that use disposable media, these mesh panels are designed to be washed repeatedly without degrading their performance when handled correctly.
When replacement is appropriate
Replacement is appropriate when the filter has developed a physical tear, warped under heat exposure, or shows signs of mesh separation from the frame. Call us with your model number and we can confirm the correct replacement part and its availability.
No — filter cleaning is a designated homeowner task
Cleaning the return air filter is a homeowner maintenance task that Mitsubishi Electric explicitly documents in every owner manual for every split system in its residential range. Performing this task does not affect your warranty entitlement in any way.
The warranty condition to be aware of
The warranty condition that homeowners need to be aware of is the requirement for annual professional servicing. This requirement relates to the professional service, not to the filter cleaning task. Regular filter cleaning contributes to maintaining the system in a condition consistent with the warranty maintenance requirements. However, it does not substitute for the annual professional service the warranty specifies.
Clean the Filter Correctly and Do It Every Time
The five steps in this guide take a short amount of time when the filter dries quickly, or longer when the full drying period is needed in cooler conditions. The difference in outcome between doing it correctly and taking shortcuts is significant enough to justify the full process every time. A filter correctly cleaned and fully dried before reinsertion protects the coil surface, maintains the airflow the system needs, and extends the interval between professional services.
When a symptom persists after a thorough filter clean, the cause sits in a part of the system that filter maintenance cannot reach. At that point, a professional service visit is the right next step. Our Melbourne team resolves most Mitsubishi faults in a single visit, with a written quote before any work begins and a verified operational test before leaving your home.