Trane Air Duct Cleaning in Ridgefield, WA | Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington
Trane air duct cleaning in Ridgefield typically runs $280–$520 for a full system service, depending on home size and whether your ducts carry construction-phase contamination from the area’s rapid subdivision growth. We’re Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington — an independent provider of our Trane services, not manufacturer-authorized — and we’ve cleaned more than 1,500 Trane systems across Clark County’s newest neighborhoods. Call (877) 335-1974 for a free estimate and same-day scheduling.

Why Ridgefield Residents Choose Us for Trane Service
Richard Anderson, our owner and lead technician, grew up in Washington’s Capitol Hill neighborhood and has spent eleven years narrowing his focus exclusively to duct systems — first picking up HVAC fundamentals at Northern Virginia Community College, then abandoning general heating and cooling work entirely. That single-trade focus matters in Ridgefield, where Trane equipment dominates the production-built homes along the 65th Avenue and Pioneer Street corridors, and where the problems aren’t generic “dirty ducts” but specific contamination patterns tied to phased construction timelines.
We’re not a general HVAC company that added duct cleaning as an upsell. We don’t rotate through crews where the person quoting your job disappears before the work starts. Richard runs every Trane cleaning himself or alongside his small crew — owner-led on every job, with direct accountability from the first phone call to the final walkthrough. Our 732 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars reflect that consistency: the same technician who inspects your Trane XR95 is the one who decides whether that secondary heat exchanger needs attention, and the one who stands behind the result.
We carry OEM Trane filters, gaskets, and motor components for critical wear parts, and stock professional-grade Rotobrush and Nikro cleaning systems — the same equipment brands commercial restoration contractors use, not rental-grade shop vacs with brush attachments. For repairs, we use high-quality aftermarket flex duct, mastic, and insulation where OEM markup doesn’t buy better performance. That balance keeps Ridgefield Trane owners running without the dealership premium.
Common Trane Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Ridgefield
- XR95 secondary heat exchanger fouling from recirculated drywall dust. Ridgefield’s 2008–2022 construction boom left extraordinary volumes of drywall dust and fiberglass fragments sealed inside ductwork during the build. In Trane XR95 furnaces, this fine particulate settles on the secondary heat exchanger’s narrow passages, restricting airflow and forcing the system to run longer heating cycles through our damp Columbia River lowlands winters. We remove this buildup with negative air agitation and HEPA vacuum, then inspect the exchanger surface with a borescope.
- Flex-duct joint separation at the plenum from attic heat cycling. Clark County builders ran long flex-duct spans through unconditioned Ridgefield attics to hit price points in production homes. Summer attic temperatures spike, winter nights drop — that expansion and contraction loosens plenum connections in Trane systems, especially the XV Series variable-speed units whose longer run times amplify the stress. We reseat joints and seal with mastic, not tape that’ll fail in the next heat cycle.
- Condensate pan corrosion in XLi crawl-space installations. Ridgefield’s persistent morning fog from late September through April keeps relative humidity elevated in crawl spaces where many Trane XL16i and XL20i systems live. The condensate pans and adjacent sheet metal corrode slowly, flaking rust and aluminum oxide into the airstream. We clean these components during full system service and flag advanced corrosion before it compromises structural integrity.
- Return plenum silt accumulation from adjacent construction sites. Here’s the Ridgefield-specific failure mode most owners never consider: your Phase 1 home on Pioneer Street sat next to active grading and framing for Phase 2 and 3 for months or years. Your Trane system’s return-air intake pulled neighbor-site debris — sawdust, soil fines, asphalt shingle granules — directly into your ducts while you were still unpacking boxes. We’ve extracted pounds of this material from “new” homes.
- Mold colonization in flex-duct joints from seasonal condensation. The Columbia River corridor’s humidity pattern creates condensation at flex-duct joints, particularly where ducts pass through rim joists or crawl-space walls. Trane systems running heavy heating cycles through Ridgefield’s long damp season circulate spores from these colonies throughout the home. We treat with EPA-registered sanitizers from Abatement Technologies and Guardsman, then seal infiltration points to reduce recurrence.
Trane Service in Ridgefield: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Ridgefield’s phased subdivisions along the 65th Avenue corridor created a contamination pattern we’ve never seen at this scale in neighboring Vancouver or Camas. Here’s how it works: a family moves into their Phase 1 home in 2016, Trane XR80 humming, everything pristine. But Phase 2 breaks ground two months later, then Phase 3 the following spring. For eighteen months, that family’s return-air intake — typically positioned on the home’s side or near the garage — pulls construction dust from active grading, framing, and drywall finishing on lots a hundred yards away. The HVAC contractor who installed the system never warned them. The builder’s warranty doesn’t cover it. And by year five, that Trane system is circulating a half-inch layer of compacted drywall dust through the home every time the fan kicks on.
We found exactly this scenario on a Trane XR80 in a Phase 1 home on Pioneer Street. Our video inspection revealed compacted drywall dust in the return plenum — not from that home’s construction, but from Phase 2 framing. We performed a full system clean using negative air agitation and HEPA vacuum, then sealed the return duct joints with mastic to prevent recontamination. That’s the difference between a generic duct cleaning and one that understands Ridgefield’s specific construction timeline. If I can’t tell you exactly what I found and why it needed cleaning, I haven’t done my job.
Trane Models & Products We Service in Ridgefield
We clean and service the full range of residential Trane equipment common to Ridgefield’s housing stock:
- XR Series: XR80 single-stage and XR95 two-stage furnaces — workhorses in the 2008–2018 production homes, prone to the secondary heat exchanger fouling and return plenum contamination described above.
- XLi Series: XL16i and XL20i — higher-efficiency systems in later-phase builds and upgrade replacements, with condensate management issues in crawl-space installs and variable-speed blower motors that require careful cleaning to protect electronic components.
- XV Series: Variable-speed furnaces and air handlers — longer run times mean more air volume processed through any existing contamination, and more stress on flex-duct connections.
We stock OEM Trane filters and gaskets locally for fast Ridgefield turnaround, and carry aftermarket flex duct, mastic, and insulation for repairs where OEM doesn’t justify the cost. For systems with major corrosion or collapsed flex runs, we recommend repair when components are under 60% compromised — replacement if structural integrity is lost. No upsell pressure; just an honest assessment from the technician who’ll do the work.
Trane Service Pricing in Ridgefield
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Full Trane air duct cleaning (up to 2,000 sq ft) | $280–$380 |
| Full Trane air duct cleaning (2,000–3,500 sq ft) | $360–$480 |
| Full Trane air duct cleaning (3,500+ sq ft / rural acreage) | $450–$520 |
| Video inspection (standalone or pre-cleaning) | $85–$125 |
| Duct sealing with mastic (per linear foot) | $4–$7 |
| Dryer vent cleaning (bundled with duct service) | $75–$110 |
What drives cost: home size, duct accessibility (crawl space vs. attic), contamination severity, and whether we find separated joints or corrosion requiring repair. Our free estimate includes a full walkthrough with Richard — he’ll show you what he’s seeing, explain why it matters, and quote exact before any work begins. Call (877) 335-1974 for your Ridgefield Trane estimate; estimates are free and we’re typically scheduling same-day or next-day.
Serving Ridgefield, WA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Ridgefield 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 Ridgefield
Every 3–5 years for most Ridgefield homes, but every 2–3 years if your home was built between 2008 and 2022 or sits near active construction. The phased subdivision pattern here means many Trane systems carry more construction-phase debris than older homes in established neighborhoods. Call (877) 335-1974 and we’ll assess your specific timeline — estimates are free.
Yes — this is one of the most common findings in our Ridgefield work. Your return-air intake doesn’t distinguish between your home’s air and construction dust from an active lot upwind. We’ve extracted material from Phase 1 homes that was clearly generated during Phase 2 framing, sometimes years after the owner moved in. The Trane system was doing exactly what it was designed to do: moving air. It just had no filter fine enough to stop drywall dust.
Age of the equipment and age of the contamination are separate questions. An 8-year-old Trane XR95 in a Ridgefield subdivision built in 2016 may have been pulling neighbor-site debris since month three of operation. The furnace itself is fine — the ducts are the storage vessel. That’s why we lead with video inspection: we show you what’s in there, then you decide.
Three specific steps: upgrade to MERV 11–13 filtration sized for your Trane model (we stock OEM Trane filters), seal return duct joints with mastic to block infiltration from crawl spaces and wall cavities, and maintain consistent fan cycles rather than constant on/off operation that pulls unfiltered air through leaks. We handle all three during our full service arc — from cleaning to sealing to sanitizing.
Yes — we record borescope footage of your Trane system’s return plenum, main trunk, and key branch lines before any agitation begins. Richard reviews this with you on-site so you see exactly what we’re targeting. The inspection fee applies toward your cleaning if you proceed. Most Ridgefield homeowners who’ve had a bad experience with a “blow-and-go” duct cleaner tell us this transparency is why they chose us. Call (877) 335-1974 to schedule.
Service Areas Near Ridgefield
We serve Trane owners throughout Clark County and southwest Washington, with regular routes to Trane in Salmon Creek, Vancouver (15 minutes south), Minnehaha (adjacent to Ridgefield’s southern boundary), and scheduled service days in Tacoma, Seattle, Bellevue, and Spokane for property managers with multiple locations. Most Ridgefield calls run same-day or next-day — we’re not dispatching from Portland or dispatching crews we’ve never met.
Book Your Trane Service in Ridgefield Today
Your Trane system was built to last. The question is what it’s been circulating while it does. We’re scheduling now in Ridgefield — same-day availability most weekdays, free estimates with Richard Anderson on every call. Phone (877) 335-1974.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner and Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington, serving Ridgefield and Clark County since 2013.