Fast, Reliable HVAC Cleaning Across Portland
HVAC cleaning in Portland typically costs between $280 and $650 for a complete system service, with most residential jobs completed in a single visit. Our HVAC Cleaning team serves Portland homeowners from our Seattle base, and we regularly make the trip down I-5 for properties where the duct system’s condition demands specialist attention rather than a generalist’s quick pass. Richard Anderson personally oversees every Portland job as Lead Technician, bringing 11 years of dedicated indoor air quality experience to homes in Kenton, Raleigh Hills, and across the metro. Call (877) 335-1974 for a free estimate — we’ll give you an honest assessment of whether your system needs cleaning, repair, or replacement.

Why Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington Is Portland’s Preferred HVAC Cleaning Company
We’ve built our reputation one crawl space at a time. Across 732 verified reviews, our customers have given us a 4.9-star average — a volume and rating combination that reflects consistent, repeatable results in real homes, not cherry-picked testimonials. Portland property managers and homeowners specifically seek us out because we don’t rotate through crews; Richard Anderson is owner-led on every job, running the Rotobrush and Nikro equipment himself rather than delegating to a technician who might miss what he’s seen a thousand times before.
Our response time to Portland averages same-day or next-day scheduling for standard appointments, with emergency availability when wildfire smoke events or active mold discoveries demand immediate attention. We know the difference between a 1920s Craftsman in Laurelhurst and a 1980s retrofit in West Haven-Sylvan — and we know that the ductwork hiding beneath those homes tells a completely different story. That local knowledge isn’t something a national franchise script can replicate.
Our HVAC Cleaning Services in Portland
Evaporator Coil Cleaning
The evaporator coil in your Portland home works harder than it should. Portland’s 144 annual rain days keep indoor humidity elevated, and coils in pre-1945 homes — where the air handler was crammed into a damp basement or vented crawl space — accumulate a distinctive biofilm of mold and organic debris that dry-climate cities simply don’t see. A typical evaporator coil cleaning in Portland runs $180–$320. We remove the coil assembly when accessible, apply foaming cleaner, and verify airflow recovery with before-and-after static pressure readings. In homes near the Willamette River floodplain or in low-lying Kenton, we frequently find coils that haven’t been accessible for cleaning in 15+ years.
Blower Cleaning
Your blower motor and wheel are the engine of airflow, and in Portland’s older housing stock they’re often the most neglected component. Dust and mold spores that bypass clogged filters — common in homes with original return air grilles too small for modern filtration — adhere to blower fins and throw off balance, increasing amp draw and shortening motor life. Blower cleaning in Portland typically costs $150–$280. Richard Anderson inspects the blower housing for rust in damp installations and checks belt tension on legacy systems still running in Alameda and Irvington foursquares. We clean the entire assembly in place when removal risks damaging brittle mounting brackets common to 1970s–80s retrofits.
Condenser Cleaning
Portland’s Douglas fir pollen season and post-wildfire ash fallout create a unique condenser contamination profile. After the 2020 Labor Day fires, we cleaned condensers across SE Portland that were packed with fine particulate matter — not the typical cottonwood fluff or grass clippings, but silica-laden ash that insulates coils and corrodes aluminum fins. Condenser cleaning runs $120–$220 in Portland. We straighten fins, apply foaming cleaner, and verify refrigerant pressures when airflow restriction has forced the compressor to overwork. Homes in West Haven and West Haven-Sylvan with outdoor units placed beneath mature big-leaf maples face additional organic debris loading that demands more frequent service.
Air Handler Cleaning
The air handler is where your Portland home’s ventilation story gets complicated. In the bungalow-dense blocks of SE Portland, technicians regularly encounter air handlers installed in 1970s–80s retrofits that are simultaneously coated in mold and partially collapsed from moisture-related material breakdown — a combination almost unheard of in drier Oregon markets like Bend or Medford but routine here, where humidity never fully retreats. Air handler cleaning in Portland ranges from $200–$380 depending on accessibility and contamination severity. We disassemble the cabinet when possible, clean all contact surfaces, and treat with EPA-registered biocides where mold colonization is active. Richard Anderson documents every stage with photos for property managers and homeowners who need to show remediation completion to insurers or tenants.
Coil Treatment
Our coil treatment service addresses the root biological problem that standard cleaning leaves behind. In Portland’s chronically damp crawl spaces, mold regrowth on coils can begin within weeks if the underlying moisture issue isn’t managed. We apply specialized treatments using products compatible with Honeywell and Aprilaire system specifications, creating a residual barrier against recolonization. Coil treatment as an add-on service runs $80–$150. For homes in ZIP codes 97256, 97258, 97266, and 97267, we bundle this with crawl-space moisture assessment — because treating the coil without addressing the environment is temporary relief, not a solution.
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 Portland
We work with the equipment and products that Portland’s homes actually contain — not theoretical ideal systems. Our Rotobrush and Nikro cleaning systems are the same professional-grade units used by commercial restoration contractors, not rental-store alternatives. For air quality upgrades following HVAC cleaning, we specify and install Honeywell electronic air cleaners, Aprilaire whole-home humidifiers and dehumidifiers, Abatement Technologies HEPA filtration, and Guardsman UV-C sanitizing lamps. We maintain relationships with regional distributors to source parts quickly for Portland customers, minimizing downtime when a 1980s air handler needs a specific blower wheel or control board that big-box stores stopped stocking decades ago.

Common HVAC Cleaning Problems We See in Portland Homes
- Technicians skip crawl-space moisture assessment and miss active mold colonies growing inside flex-duct runs, leaving the biological contamination source untouched. We’ve been called in after three “cleanings” by other providers who never looked beneath the floorboards. In a 1925 bungalow on NE Prescott, the previous company had only cleaned from the registers — our crawl-space inspection revealed a collapsed flex-duct section actively growing Aspergillus that was recolonizing the entire system.
- Using high-pressure air agitation alone on brittle, damp galvanized ducts can dislodge hidden rust flakes and mold chunks that re-enter the living space. Portland’s pre-1960 galvanized ductwork has been wet for decades. We use controlled mechanical brushing with HEPA-contained extraction, not blind compressed-air blasting that turns your supply registers into particulate cannons.
- Failing to seal crawl-space vents or install a vapor barrier after cleaning, allowing recontamination within weeks during Portland’s persistent humidity. Cleaning without moisture control is gardening — you’re just preparing a fresh substrate for the next mold crop. We assess vapor barrier condition and vent sealing on every crawl-space job, and we’ll tell you honestly when that work is more urgent than another duct cleaning.
- Wildfire smoke loading from Oregon’s timber-country fire corridor creates fine ash deposits that standard residential filters never capture. The 2017 and 2020 smoke events forced Portland homes to recirculate heavily particulate-laden air for days. That ash doesn’t all settle visibly — much of it embeds in coil fins and blower assemblies, reducing efficiency and creating abrasive wear on moving parts.
Pricing for HVAC Cleaning in Portland, OR
Here’s what HVAC cleaning costs in Portland’s market:
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Evaporator Coil Cleaning | $180 – $320 |
| Blower Cleaning | $150 – $280 |
| Condenser Cleaning | $120 – $220 |
| Air Handler Cleaning | $200 – $380 |
| Coil Treatment (add-on) | $80 – $150 |
| Complete HVAC System Cleaning | $280 – $650 |
What moves you within these ranges? Accessibility is the biggest factor — a basement air handler in a 1950s ranch takes half the time of a crawl-space unit beneath a 1910 foursquare with 18-inch clearance. Contamination severity matters too: light dust and pollen versus active mold colonization requiring biocide treatment and post-clean verification. System age affects repair-or-replace decisions — we’ll tell you straight when a 1970s flex-duct system has reached the point where cleaning is throwing good money after bad. Every estimate is free, detailed, and delivered by Richard Anderson himself. Call (877) 335-1974.
We Also Serve Cities Near Portland
Our service radius extends throughout the Portland metro, including Kenton with its industrial-to-residential conversion properties, Raleigh Hills and its mid-century ranch stock, West Haven, and West Haven-Sylvan where hillside homes present unique duct routing challenges. Each community brings distinct housing eras and duct configurations — we adjust our approach accordingly rather than applying a uniform protocol.
Serving Portland, OR — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Portland 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 — HVAC Cleaning in Portland
Standing water isn’t required for mold growth — sustained humidity above 60% is sufficient, and Portland’s vented crawl spaces rarely drop below that threshold. In your bungalow’s 144-rain-day environment, the wood soil-contact members and earth floor continuously release moisture into the air, and any flex duct passing through that space acts as a condensation surface. We find active mold in seemingly “dry” crawl spaces on S.E. 22nd Avenue, S.E. Hawthorne corridor, and throughout Richmond and Mt. Tabor — it’s the humidity, not puddles, that drives colonization. Call (877) 335-1974 and we’ll assess whether vapor barrier installation or vent sealing should accompany your cleaning.
Replacement is usually the better investment for 1970s flex duct in N. Portland’s chronically damp crawl spaces. That vintage flex duct has a foil-and-fiberglass construction that degrades from the inside out in humid conditions — by the time you see external damage, the inner liner is often delaminated and releasing fiberglass into your airflow. Repair costs for isolated sections run $200–$400, but if we’re finding multiple compromised runs or the original installation used undersized duct (common in 1970s retrofits), full replacement with modern insulated flex or smooth-walled galvanized pipe ($1,800–$3,500 for a typical bungalow) eliminates the recurring failure mode. Richard Anderson will walk your specific system and give you the repair-versus-replace calculation without pressure. Call (877) 335-1974 for a free assessment.
Wildfire smoke introduces fine particulate matter (PM2.5) that penetrates standard residential filters and embeds in coil fins, blower assemblies, and duct lining — creating abrasive wear and reduced heat transfer efficiency that persists long after the sky clears. Portland’s position downwind of Oregon’s timber country makes this a recurring exposure unlike anything in drier, less forested markets. After major smoke events, we recommend HVAC system inspection even without visible indoor residue, because the accumulated ash affects system performance silently. Our cleaning protocol for smoke-loaded systems includes coil fin straightening, blower wheel deep-cleaning, and duct agitation with HEPA-contained extraction — not just filter replacement. Call (877) 335-1974 to schedule post-smoke inspection.
For a 1920s Craftsman, register-only cleaning is insufficient and potentially misleading. These homes have retrofitted ductwork with irregular routing, undocumented splices, and — in Portland’s climate — moisture degradation that concentrates in crawl-space runs invisible from the living space. We access the crawl space on every pre-1960 Portland job because that’s where the critical failures hide: collapsed flex sections, disconnected joints pulling conditioned air into the dirt, and active mold colonies. Last spring we cleared a S.E. 22nd Avenue foursquare where the owner complained of “musty air” — our crew crawled into a vented crawl space beneath the kitchen and found a 1980s flex-duct run that had partially collapsed from moisture exposure and was thick with Aspergillus. We replaced that section with smooth-walled galvanized pipe sealed with mastic, applied a biocide fog treatment to the remaining duct, and the cross-breeze from the supply registers returned to normal. Register-only cleaning would have left that contamination source pumping spores into every room. Call (877) 335-1974 — Richard Anderson inspects the crawl space personally.
Portland’s combination of chronic moisture and wildfire smoke exposure creates a dual contamination profile that dry-climate markets simply don’t face. Bend’s high-desert climate means dust-dominated duct loading and minimal mold concern; Medford’s drier Rogue Valley conditions similarly reduce biological growth. Portland’s 37+ annual inches of rainfall and persistent marine-layer humidity keep crawl spaces damp year-round, making mold colonization a first-order concern on virtually every pre-1960 home job. Add the post-2017 and 2020 wildfire smoke loading, and you have ducts that simultaneously harbor biological contamination and fine particulate ash — a combination requiring both biocide treatment and aggressive particulate removal. Our equipment and protocols are configured for this specific Portland profile, not adapted from dry-climate playbooks. Call (877) 335-1974 for an estimate tailored to your home’s actual conditions.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner and Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service Washington, serving Portland and the greater metro since 2013.