A real duct cleaning runs $350 to $700 for most Escondido homes, not the $99 on a postcard. We use the NADCA negative-pressure method, clean every supply and return, and show you before and after photos so you see what came out.
Duct cleaning in Escondido costs $350 to $700 for a typical single-family home. The price moves with home size, the number of HVAC systems, and whether you add duct sealing. We quote the job free, in writing, before anyone runs a hose into your ceiling.
Most of the duct cleaning advertised in inland North County is a marketing trick. A $99 special buys ten minutes with a shop vac and a hard upsell on a new system. That is not duct cleaning. The real version uses a negative-pressure vacuum, agitation brushes through every branch, and a camera so you can see the before and after. That is the work we do, and our price is honest about what it takes.
We clean ducts across every part of Escondido. That includes the 1910s through 1930s craftsman and bungalow homes in Old Escondido near Grand Avenue, the 1950s and 1960s tract homes spread across the valley floor, the larger rural and hillside homes in Hidden Meadows and out toward the San Pasqual Valley, and the newer subdivisions on the east side. Same flat pricing everywhere in the city, with no surcharge for the rural addresses or the older neighborhoods with tight attic access.
What's included in an Escondido duct cleaning
A full duct cleaning is a system job, not a register job. Here is what our crew does on a standard Escondido home, start to finish.
Negative-pressure HEPA vacuum on the whole duct system, not a shop vac at one vent
Agitation brush and compressed-air whip run through every supply and return branch
Supply plenum and return plenum cleaning, where most of the heavy debris collects
Blower wheel and blower compartment cleaning, often the dirtiest part of the system
Evaporator coil surface cleaning when access allows
Every supply register and return grille pulled, washed, and reset
Source removal of construction dust, drywall debris, and settled attic dust
Sanitizing fog through the system when there is mold or odor, on request
A leak and sealing inspection of accessible duct joints in the attic
A before and after photo report so you see the actual result, not a promise
Duct cleaning cost in Escondido
Every duct cleaning is quoted flat and in writing before we start. These are the typical 2026 ranges Escondido homeowners see. The exact number depends on home size, system count, and any sealing you add.
Repair
Typical range
Notes
Free in-home estimate
$0
We inspect the system and quote the job before any work
Condo or small home, one system
$300 - $400
Under about 1,200 square feet, single HVAC system
Standard single-family home
$350 - $550
The typical Old Escondido or valley-floor 3-bed
Large home, one system
$550 - $700
Over about 2,500 square feet, long duct runs
Second HVAC system
+$250 - $400
Larger Hidden Meadows homes often have two systems
Blower wheel deep clean
+$80 - $150
Heavy buildup pulled and brushed off the wheel
Evaporator coil cleaning
+$120 - $250
When the coil is fouled enough to choke airflow
Sanitizing fog treatment
+$75 - $150
For mold odor or after pest activity
Accessible duct sealing add-on
+$200 - $600
Mastic on reachable attic joints, higher value than cleaning alone
Dryer vent cleaning add-on
+$129
Worth bundling while the crew is already on site
Pricing is the same across Escondido and all of San Diego County. There is no travel surcharge for Hidden Meadows, the San Pasqual Valley, or the rural addresses on the edge of town. If we inspect your system and you do not actually need a cleaning, we tell you that and you owe nothing for the visit.
Do you actually need duct cleaning?
Duct cleaning is worth the money when there is a real reason for it. It is a waste of money when there is not. We would rather tell you the truth on the phone than sell you a job you do not need. Here is the honest version.
When duct cleaning genuinely helps
Clean the ducts when there is visible mold inside the ducts or on the coil, when rodents or insects have been in the attic ductwork, when the home was recently remodeled and drywall dust got into the system, or when you just bought the house and have no idea how long it has been since the last cleaning. Heavy visible dust at the registers and a dusty smell when the system starts are also fair reasons.
When it does not help
If your ducts are sealed, your filter is decent, and nobody in the home has unexplained allergy symptoms, an annual duct cleaning is usually a salesman talking, not a need. The EPA does not recommend routine cleaning on a fixed schedule. Most Escondido homes do well with a cleaning every five to seven years, not every year.
Duct sealing is often the better spend
Here is the part most companies will not say. A typical Escondido home loses 20 to 30 percent of its conditioned air through duct leaks. That is air you paid SDG&E to cool, leaking into a 130-degree attic instead of your living room. Sealing those leaks with mastic lowers your bill and improves comfort in a way cleaning alone never will.
When we are already inside the ducts for a cleaning, sealing the accessible joints is a high-value add-on. If your real complaint is high bills or rooms that never cool, we will tell you sealing matters more than cleaning. The choice stays yours, but you will get the honest read first.
Local angle
Duct cleaning built for Escondido homes
Why Escondido ductwork gets dirty
Escondido sits in the inland North County heat belt, in a valley ringed by hills that traps hot, dry air. Summer afternoons cross 100 degrees through July, August, and September, and there is very little marine layer to take the edge off. Systems run long, hard cycles all summer, and that moving air carries fine dust into the duct runs where it settles year after year.
Most Escondido homes route ductwork through a vented attic, and that attic pushes past 130 degrees on a hot day. The dry valley air also blows in fine grit on a Santa Ana wind, and the surrounding groves and open hillside add their own pollen and dust. Decades of that settled material sits in the runs until the system stirs it back into the living space.
The housing stock we work on
Old Escondido, around Grand Avenue and the historic district, is full of 1910s through 1930s craftsman and bungalow homes. Many were retrofitted with central air long after they were built, often with flex duct snaked through a cramped attic. Those runs collect dust and sag at the joints, so we see both cleaning needs and sealing needs there.
The valley floor is largely 1950s and 1960s tract homes. The original ductwork is long past its design life, and a lot of it has never been cleaned once. The rural and hillside homes in Hidden Meadows and out toward the San Pasqual Valley tend to have longer duct runs and sometimes two HVAC systems. Homes near the groves and open land also pull more dust and pollen into the system than valley-floor homes do.
Permits and what to expect
Duct cleaning does not require a permit in the City of Escondido. It is maintenance, not construction. If your inspection turns up ductwork that is collapsed, disconnected, or beyond sealing, that is a duct replacement, and a duct replacement does need a mechanical permit. We tell you which category your system is in before any work starts.
A standard Escondido duct cleaning takes three to five hours. We protect floors and furniture, run the equipment from a parked truck or a portable unit, and leave you with photos of the result. No mess left behind, no surprise charge at the end.
How fast we reach you
Duct cleaning is scheduled work, not an emergency, so we usually book it within a few days across Escondido. We give you a firm arrival window and call before the crew heads out. The free estimate can often happen the same week you call.
Escondido duct cleaning questions
How much does duct cleaning cost in Escondido?
Duct cleaning in Escondido runs $350 to $700 for most single-family homes. A condo or small home is closer to $300 to $400. Add $250 to $400 for a second HVAC system, and add duct sealing if your home needs it. We quote the job free and in writing before any work begins.
Is duct cleaning worth it for my Escondido home?
It is worth it when there is a real reason: visible mold, rodents in the attic ducts, recent drywall dust from a remodel, or heavy dust at the registers. It is not worth it as a yearly routine. Most Escondido homes need a cleaning every five to seven years, not every year.
Why is there so much dust in my valley-floor Escondido home?
Those 1950s and 1960s tract homes route ductwork through a vented attic that breathes outside air all year. The dry valley air, Santa Ana grit, and pollen from the surrounding groves all settle into the runs. If the ducts have never been cleaned, that buildup ends up back in your living space every time the system runs.
My craftsman home in Old Escondido has retrofitted ducts. Are those harder to clean?
Not harder, but they need a closer look. A lot of Old Escondido craftsman and bungalow homes had central air added decades after they were built, with flex duct snaked through a cramped attic. We clean those runs the same way and inspect the joints, since older flex duct often sags and needs sealing too.
Should I seal my ducts instead of cleaning them?
Often, yes. A typical Escondido home loses 20 to 30 percent of its conditioned air through duct leaks. Sealing those leaks with mastic lowers your SDG&E bill and fixes rooms that never cool. If high bills are your real complaint, sealing matters more than cleaning. We give you the honest read first.
How long does a duct cleaning take?
Three to five hours for most single-family Escondido homes. A larger Hidden Meadows home with two HVAC systems can run most of a day. We protect floors and furniture, work from a parked truck or portable unit, and clean up fully before we leave.
Does living near the groves or open land affect my ducts?
It can. Homes in Hidden Meadows, the San Pasqual Valley, and the rural edges of town pull more pollen and field dust into the system than valley-floor homes do. If your registers show heavy dust or someone in the home has unexplained allergy symptoms, a cleaning is a fair call.
Do I need duct cleaning after a remodel?
Usually yes. Drywall dust is fine and it gets everywhere, including deep into supply and return ducts. A cleaning after an Escondido remodel pulls that construction debris out before it circulates for years. It is one of the few times we recommend cleaning without hesitation.
Do you charge extra to come to Hidden Meadows or the San Pasqual Valley?
No. Pricing is flat across all of Escondido and San Diego County. There is no mileage or travel surcharge for Hidden Meadows, the San Pasqual Valley, or any rural address on the edge of town. The quote you get is the same wherever your home is.
How often should I clean my ducts?
Every five to seven years is typical for most Escondido homes. Clean sooner if there is mold, pests, a remodel, or a new home with unknown history. The EPA does not recommend cleaning on a fixed annual schedule. If a company pushes yearly cleaning, that is a sales pitch.
Will duct cleaning lower my energy bill?
A little, by restoring airflow if the ducts were badly clogged. But the bigger savings come from duct sealing, not cleaning. Sealing the leaks that lose 20 to 30 percent of your conditioned air is what actually moves your SDG&E bill. We will tell you which one your home needs.
Do you need a permit for duct cleaning in Escondido?
No. Duct cleaning is maintenance and needs no permit in the City of Escondido. If the inspection finds ductwork that is collapsed or disconnected, that is a duct replacement, and replacement does need a mechanical permit. We tell you which category your system falls into before any work starts.
Service area
Where we serve Escondido
We cover Escondido and the surrounding North County Inland communities, with same-day service on most duct cleaning calls.
Serving Escondido
Need duct cleaning in Escondido?
Call for a free quote. Same-day service on most repairs, next-day on most installs.