Trane Air Duct Cleaning in Seattle, WA | Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington
Independent Trane air duct cleaning in Seattle typically runs $350–$850 for a full residential system, with same-day scheduling available for wildfire smoke and mold-related emergencies. What sets our Trane services apart in Seattle is the intersection of Trane’s variable-speed blower technology with this city’s uniquely problematic retrofit ductwork—decades of moisture damage in crawl spaces beneath craftsman homes that most generalist cleaners never trace back to the source. We serve Seattle homeowners and property managers with owner-led service on every job. Call (877) 335-1974 for a free estimate.

Why Seattle Residents Choose Us for Trane Service
We’ve spent eleven years cleaning duct systems in Seattle’s exact housing stock—Ballard bungalows, Wallingford foursquares, Capitol Hill conversions—not as an HVAC sideline, but as our only trade. Richard Anderson, our Owner and Lead Technician, grew up in Capitol Hill and learned his fundamentals at Northern Virginia Community College before narrowing his focus entirely to duct systems. When a Trane XV20i throws a static pressure error or an XR80 develops that persistent crawl space mustiness, he’s the one running the Rotobrush and making the call on the spot.
That owner-led accountability shows up in 732 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars. It means we don’t rotate through crews who might miss a sealed gravity-furnace plenum hidden behind a wall cavity. It means we stock OEM Trane blower motors and heat exchanger components when warranty considerations demand them, but we also carry Nikro HEPA vacuums and foil-backed flex duct for the repairs that actually solve Seattle’s moisture problems. Our competitors often treat duct cleaning as an upsell to a broader HVAC contract. We’re specialists, not generalists—and that difference matters when you’re pulling decades of biological debris out of a 1920s retrofit system.
Common Trane Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Seattle
- Sagging flex-duct trapping moisture in crawl spaces. Trane systems retrofitted into Seattle’s 1910s–1940s homes often run flex-duct through damp crawl spaces that stay humid eight months of the year. The duct sags, pools condensation, and becomes a mold vector. We replace collapsed sections with insulated metal duct and seal the runs to Trane’s static pressure specs.
- High-MERV filter overload after wildfire smoke events. Trane’s advanced filtration—excellent for pollen and dander—can choke on the fine particulate from August–September wildfire smoke drifting across the Cascades. Filters overload, air bypasses the seal, and ash deposits in duct interiors. We clean the full system and recommend interim filter schedules specific to Seattle’s smoke season.
- Secondary heat exchanger debris in older Trane furnaces. The XR80 and similar models with secondary heat exchangers sit in crawl spaces where humidity never fully dries. Damp debris accumulates, creates persistent musty odors, and slowly degrades efficiency. Cleaning the exchanger and surrounding ductwork restores proper combustion airflow.
- Variable-speed blower errors from crushed or dirty ducts. The XV20i’s electronically commutated motor is precise—and unforgiving. Static pressure spikes from a rodent-crushed duct or years of accumulation trigger error codes that mimic compressor failure. We video-inspect the full return and supply paths before anyone suggests a $3,000 parts swap.
- Sealed gravity-furnace plenums packed with decades of debris. In Ballard, Wallingford, and Queen Anne, we regularly find original gravity-furnace plenums left in place when forced-air Trane systems were retrofitted. These dead-air chambers never see airflow, harbor biological material, and occasionally leak odor back into the living space through wall cavities. Only thorough inspection and physical removal solves it.
Trane Service in Seattle: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Seattle’s marine rainy season isn’t a footnote—it’s the dominant force shaping what happens inside your Trane ductwork. From October through May, crawl spaces under pier-and-beam and slab-on-grade homes maintain humidity levels that would be considered active water damage in drier climates. This isn’t Spokane’s intermittent winter damp; it’s persistent, low-grade saturation that colonizes duct interiors with mold species adapted to exactly these conditions. For Trane owners, this means the flex-duct sections installed during forced-air retrofits in neighborhoods like Ballard and Wallingford are actively deteriorating year-round, not just during obvious leak events.
The wildfire smoke season adds a second, newer pressure. Since 2017, Eastern Washington and Oregon fires have created predictable August–September particulate spikes that infiltrate even well-sealed homes. Trane’s high-efficiency systems, designed to move large volumes through fine filtration, become unwitting collection devices. The particulate that makes it past overloaded filters settles in duct interiors, waiting for the heating season to recirculate. We now schedule a distinct post-smoke cleaning window each September—something our Spokane counterparts, with their drier climate and different smoke exposure patterns, simply don’t replicate at this scale.
Trane Models & Products We Service in Seattle
We work on the full Trane residential line, with particular familiarity across the XV20i variable-speed heat pump, the XL16i two-stage systems, the S9V2 gas furnace with its sealed blower compartment, and the broad XR Series including the XR80 and XR14 that remain common in Seattle’s retrofit installations.
Our parts approach is straightforward: OEM Trane components for blower motors, control boards, and heat exchangers where warranty or exact specification matters; high-quality aftermarket for duct materials, MERV-rated filters, and foil-backed flex duct where OEM alternatives don’t exist or cost three times as much for equivalent performance. We stock common Trane blower assemblies and heat exchanger gaskets locally for Seattle jobs, which means when we find a failure during cleaning, we’re not ordering parts for a return visit. Our Rotobrush and Nikro equipment—same brands commercial restoration contractors use—handles the cleaning itself, with HEPA containment that matters in occupied homes.
Trane Service Pricing in Seattle
Full Trane air duct cleaning in Seattle homes typically falls between $350 and $850, depending on system size, accessibility, and condition. A straightforward single-system cleaning in a 1,500-square-foot home with accessible vents runs toward the lower end. Jobs involving crawl space flex-duct replacement, sealed plenum removal, or post-wildfire-smoke remediation with full HEPA containment trend higher.
What drives cost: number of supply and return vents, linear feet of ductwork, whether video inspection reveals hidden damage requiring repair, and accessibility—Seattle’s tight crawl spaces under craftsman homes add labor time that slab-on-grade construction doesn’t. Our free estimate includes a full walkthrough, vent count, and camera inspection of accessible duct runs. No charge if you decline the work. Call (877) 335-1974 to schedule—estimates are free, and we’ll give you an exact figure after seeing your specific Trane system.
Serving Seattle, WA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Seattle area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Trane Air Duct Cleaning in Seattle
Yes—Trane’s variable-speed blowers move higher air volumes at lower speeds, which increases particulate deposition in duct interiors during smoke events. The XV20i’s sensitive static pressure sensors can also flag restricted airflow that standard cleaning might miss. We use HEPA-contained Rotobrush systems and verify post-cleaning pressure readings against Trane’s specifications. Call (877) 335-1974 for a post-smoke inspection—September appointments fill quickly.
The filter only catches what passes through it. Older Trane furnaces like the XR80 with secondary heat exchangers accumulate damp debris in the exchanger fins and surrounding plenum that filters never touch. Seattle’s year-round crawl space humidity keeps this material actively biological. We disassemble and clean the exchanger assembly, then seal the surrounding ductwork to reduce future moisture intrusion.
We generally don’t recommend them. The EPA advises against routine biocide use in residential duct systems, and Trane’s coated heat exchangers and blower components can react poorly to certain chemical residues. Our approach is physical removal—HEPA vacuuming, agitation, and where necessary, mechanical cleaning—followed by duct sealing to eliminate the moisture that enables biological growth in the first place.
Significantly. Seattle’s retrofit ductwork in neighborhoods like Ballard often leaks 20–30% of conditioned air into crawl spaces and wall cavities. Sealing with mastic and foil-backed materials restores static pressure balance, which lets Trane variable-speed systems operate in their designed efficiency range instead of compensating for losses. We’ve measured 15% airflow improvements post-sealing in these homes.
Trane’s general recommendation is every 3–5 years for standard residential systems, but they don’t publish Seattle-specific wildfire guidance. Our field experience since 2017 suggests Trane homes in smoke-affected areas benefit from inspection every 2 years, with cleaning after significant smoke events regardless of interval. The fine particulate from Cascade fire complexes is smaller and more adhesive than typical household dust. Call (877) 335-1974 and we’ll assess your specific exposure and system condition.
Service Areas Near Seattle
We serve Seattle directly and travel regularly to Bellevue for Trane in Bellevue and other Eastside systems, Tacoma for south Sound properties, and Spokane for inland climate comparisons that actually inform our Seattle work. In Seattle proper, we’re frequently in Ballard, Wallingford, Queen Anne, and Capitol Hill—the neighborhoods whose housing stock defines our specialty. Minnehaha and nearby north Seattle communities fall within our standard service radius.
Book Your Trane Service in Seattle Today
Trane systems in Seattle demand more than a vacuum-and-go cleaning. The moisture, the retrofit history, the wildfire smoke—they’re local factors that shape what we find and how we fix it. Richard Anderson runs every job personally, with eleven years of duct-specific experience and the equipment to match. Same-day scheduling available for urgent mold and smoke-related issues. Call (877) 335-1974 for your free estimate.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner and Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington, serving Seattle since 2013.