Fast, Reliable Air Quality & Sanitizing Across Beaverton
Air quality and sanitizing service in Beaverton typically costs $275–$650 for most residential jobs, with mold treatment and UV light installation running higher depending on system size and duct condition. We’re usually on-site within 24–48 hours for Beaverton calls, and our Air Quality & Sanitizing team carries the specialized equipment needed for the flex-duct systems that dominate this market. Call (877) 335-1974 for a free estimate.

We’ve been driving out to Beaverton from our Seattle base for years, and we’ve learned the hard way that this isn’t Portland’s market. The west-side hillside neighborhoods — Cooper Mountain, Sexton Mountain, Murrayhill — sit in the Tualatin Valley’s wet pocket, with 37 inches of annual rain and a humidity-heavy shoulder season that stretches from October through May. That moisture gets into everything, especially the aging flexible plastic ductwork that builders installed in the 1980s and 1990s tract homes that define Beaverton’s housing stock. Richard Anderson, our owner and lead technician, has personally treated mold colonies in hundreds of these systems. He knows the difference between a quick sanitizing job and a full duct replacement before he even opens the crawl-space hatch.
Why Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington Is Beaverton’s Preferred Air Quality & Sanitizing Company
Our 732 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars include a growing share from Washington County homeowners who found us after local generalist HVAC companies treated their duct mold as an afterthought. Beaverton customers specifically mention Richard’s willingness to crawl the full length of a tight attic chase or explain why a sagging flex duct run near Murray Boulevard can’t just be cleaned — it needs repair or replacement to prevent recontamination.
Response time to Beaverton averages 24–48 hours for standard appointments, with same-day availability for active mold situations that are affecting respiratory health. We coordinate arrival times around Beaverton’s traffic patterns, hitting the west-side hills early to avoid the afternoon backup on Murray Boulevard or Cornell Road.
Our local knowledge runs deeper than zip codes. We know that a home on Cooper Mountain with a heat pump runs its air handler ten months a year, recirculating fine Tualatin Valley clay dust and whatever’s growing in that damp flex duct. We know that Sexton Mountain crawl spaces from the 1980s often lack vapor barriers, so the subfloor moisture problem isn’t fixed by sanitizing alone. That depth of specific insight is what 11 years of single-trade focus buys you — we’re not a carpet cleaning company that bought a duct vacuum last year.
Our Air Quality & Sanitizing Services in Beaverton
Mold Treatment
Mold treatment in Beaverton homes typically runs $350–$750 for localized remediation, with full-system treatments reaching $900–$1,400 when contamination has spread through multiple flex duct runs. Beaverton’s combination of 30–40-year-old plastic ductwork and persistent maritime humidity creates conditions we simply don’t see at this scale in drier markets east of the Cascades. We treat confirmed mold with Abatement Technologies antimicrobial agents applied through professional-grade fogging equipment, then verify reduction with visual inspection and odor elimination. In homes without vapor barriers — common in 1980s Sexton Mountain construction — we’ll tell you honestly if sanitizing is a temporary fix and duct replacement is the only permanent solution.
Bacteria Sanitizing
Bacteria sanitizing in Beaverton runs $275–$450 for most residential systems, with multi-zone heat pump setups on the higher end due to extended runtime and broader contamination distribution. The year-round operation of Cooper Mountain and Sexton Mountain heat pump systems means bacterial biofilms get continuous airflow and moisture, not the seasonal dormancy that furnace-only systems experience. Our protocol targets both the duct surfaces and the air handler cabinet, using application methods designed for the restricted access that Beaverton’s dense housing stock often presents.
Odor Removal
Odor removal service in Beaverton typically costs $300–$550, with pricing driven by whether the source is surface contamination in accessible ductwork or deeply embedded in degraded flex duct insulation that requires replacement. Musty odors in Murrayhill split-levels and similar 1990s construction often trace to mold-saturated flex duct that has sagged against the crawl-space floor, creating a reservoir that standard cleaning can’t reach. We identify the actual source before quoting — no point in sanitizing what needs replacing.
UV Light Installation
UV light installation in Beaverton homes ranges from $450–$850 for a properly sized in-duct unit, with placement critical in heat pump systems that run continuously through shoulder seasons. For Cooper Mountain and Sexton Mountain homeowners specifically, UV-C lamps installed at the air handler coil can suppress mold regrowth between cleanings — a genuine need in these year-round circulation environments. We size and position lamps for actual microbial load, not marketing lumens, and we use brands like Honeywell and Aprilaire that have field-proven ballast reliability. A UV light won’t fix sagging flex duct or a missing vapor barrier, but in a properly sealed system, it’s a legitimate maintenance tool.

Allergen Reduction
Allergen reduction service in Beaverton typically runs $250–$425 for duct sanitizing paired with high-efficiency filtration upgrades. The Tualatin Valley’s fine clay dust — distinct from the coarser organic debris of wetter western Washington — penetrates standard filters and accumulates in ductwork, especially in homes with the continuous airflow patterns of heat pump systems. We combine mechanical cleaning with filtration assessment, recommending upgrades where the existing return path is undersized or the filter rack is poorly sealed.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Beaverton
We install and service air quality products from Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Abatement Technologies — the same brands specified by commercial restoration contractors and institutional HVAC engineers. For Beaverton customers, this means replacement parts and compatible accessories don’t require special ordering from distant distributors; we stock common UV lamp sizes, antimicrobial formulations, and filtration media for faster turnaround. Our Rotobrush and Nikro cleaning systems are professional-grade units, not rental-shop equipment, with the suction power and hose reach to handle Beaverton’s longer flex duct runs and restricted access configurations.
Common Air Quality & Sanitizing Problems We See in Beaverton Homes
- Year-round heat pump circulation accelerating contamination. Homes on Cooper Mountain and Sexton Mountain run air handlers continuously through spring and fall, not just winter. That constant airflow drives Tualatin Valley clay dust and mold spores through every duct segment, every day — contamination builds faster than in furnace-only homes that sit idle half the year.
- Moisture-saturated flex duct insulation in unconditioned crawl spaces. Beaverton’s 37 inches of annual rain, combined with missing or degraded vapor barriers in 1980s tract construction, leaves flex duct insulation wet for months. Once that insulation layer is compromised, it’s a mold reservoir that sanitizing alone cannot permanently resolve.
- Micro-tears and disconnected joints in aging plastic ductwork. After 30–40 years of thermal cycling and rodent activity, Beaverton’s original flex duct develops gaps that pull crawl-space air directly into the supply stream. We find this routinely in Murrayhill and similar build-outs — the duct looks intact from the register, but the middle section has separated.
- Restricted equipment access in dense urban-core housing. Alley-load townhomes and narrow-lot configurations in central Beaverton limit hose runs and vacuum placement. Our crew adapts with portable equipment and extended reach tools, but these constraints can extend service time and affect which cleaning methods are practical.
Pricing for Air Quality & Sanitizing in Beaverton, OR
| Service | Typical Range in Beaverton |
|---|---|
| Bacteria Sanitizing (standard residential) | $275–$450 |
| Odor Removal | $300–$550 |
| Allergen Reduction with filtration upgrade | $250–$425 |
| Mold Treatment (localized) | $350–$750 |
| Mold Treatment (full system) | $900–$1,400 |
| UV Light Installation | $450–$850 |
What moves a Beaverton job toward the higher end: heat pump systems with multiple zones requiring extended treatment time, confirmed mold extending beyond accessible duct segments, restricted access requiring specialized portable equipment, and degraded flex duct that needs repair or replacement before sanitizing is effective. We inspect before we quote — estimates are free, and Richard Anderson personally evaluates whether your system is a candidate for sanitizing or needs more extensive work. Call (877) 335-1974.
We Also Serve Cities Near Beaverton
Our service radius covers Cedar Hills, Raleigh Hills, West Haven, and West Haven-Sylvan — all within the same Washington County humidity zone and sharing similar 1980s–1990s housing stock challenges. The same flex-duct degradation, vapor-barrier gaps, and heat pump circulation patterns we treat in Beaverton appear throughout these adjacent communities. We coordinate multi-property appointments for residential property managers with portfolios spanning several of these areas.
Serving Beaverton, OR — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Beaverton 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 — Air Quality & Sanitizing in Beaverton
Beaverton’s mold problem is worse than Portland’s primarily because of its housing stock and topography, not just rainfall. The 1980s–1990s tract homes in Murrayhill, Sexton Mountain, and Cooper Mountain were built with flexible plastic ductwork through unconditioned crawl spaces, while Portland’s older housing uses more durable metal duct; combined with Beaverton’s position in the Tualatin Valley where cool air settles and humidity lingers, that flex duct stays damp enough for mold colonization year after year. Call (877) 335-1974 and we’ll inspect your specific system — estimates are free.
Yes, a properly sized and positioned UV-C lamp can suppress mold regrowth in a Cooper Mountain heat pump system, but only if the underlying moisture and duct integrity issues are also addressed. Because your air handler runs nearly year-round, mold has continuous opportunity to recolonize; UV at the coil and drain pan interrupts that cycle, though it won’t fix sagging flex duct or a wet crawl space. We install Honeywell and Aprilaire units sized for actual system airflow, not generic coverage claims. Call (877) 335-1974 for placement recommendations specific to your heat pump configuration.
Yes, we can sanitize alley-load and townhome configurations in central Beaverton, though equipment access determines which methods we use. Our Nikro portable systems fit through narrow side yards and gate openings that exclude larger truck-mounted vacuums, and we extend hose runs when needed; in the tightest accesses, we may recommend a staged approach with smaller equipment rather than a single-pass truck-mounted clean. Richard Anderson evaluates access during your free estimate — call (877) 335-1974 to schedule.
Sagging flex duct in Beaverton’s 1980s–1990s homes often needs replacement, not just cleaning, once the internal wire helix has deformed and the insulation layer is compromised. Cleaning removes surface contamination but doesn’t restore structural integrity or dry out waterlogged insulation; in our experience with Murrayhill and Sexton Mountain homes, sagging sections that trap debris and moisture will recontaminate within months if left in place. We’ll show you the condition during inspection and give you straight guidance on repair versus replacement. Call (877) 335-1974 for an honest assessment.
Tualatin Valley clay dust is finer and more abrasive than typical organic household dust, penetrating standard filters and embedding in duct seams and flex duct corrugations where it becomes a persistent particulate source. In Beaverton’s heat pump homes, that clay dust circulates continuously rather than settling seasonally, and it can carry moisture deeper into the duct system than coarser debris would. Our Rotobrush agitation and high-velocity extraction are specifically effective on this fine particulate, and we assess filter sealing as part of the service. Call (877) 335-1974 for a free estimate — we’ll evaluate your current dust load and filtration.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner and Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington, serving Beaverton and the greater Portland metro area since 2013.