Residential air duct cleaning service — is it worth it for your home?
Whether duct cleaning is worth it depends entirely on your specific situation — not a schedule

Air duct cleaning sits in an unusual place: it's a legitimate service that's also a frequent scam vehicle, and both the "it changed my life" testimonials and the "complete waste of money" dismissals contain real truth. The difference is always in the specific situation.

This guide cuts through the noise and gives you a framework to decide whether cleaning is worth it for your home — based on the actual factors that determine whether it makes any difference.

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The Short Answer

✓ Worth it if you have:

✗ Not worth it if you have:

? Consider it if you have:

What the Evidence Actually Says

The EPA's official position on air duct cleaning, published and updated on their indoor air quality page, is deliberately cautious: they state that cleaning has "never been shown to actually prevent health problems" and that "knowledge about the potential benefits and possible problems of air duct cleaning is limited." At the same time, they explicitly say that cleaning is appropriate when ducts are "substantially contaminated."

The real debate isn't whether dirty ducts should be cleaned — everyone agrees they should. The debate is over whether average ducts in maintained homes accumulate enough debris to matter. The evidence consistently says no. Dust that settles in non-turbulent areas of ductwork stays there — it doesn't get blown into your living space under normal airflow conditions. This is why the "routine maintenance every 3 years" marketing claim has no scientific backing.

The HVAC tech consensus: The most common perspective from working HVAC professionals is that routine duct cleaning is unnecessary for well-maintained systems, but genuinely valuable for specific situations — moving into an unknown home, post-renovation, mold remediation, or decades of neglect. "Once in a lifetime for most people" is a reasonable framing.

What Duct Cleaning Actually Does (and Doesn't Do)

What it does:

What it doesn't do:

How to Diagnose Your Own Situation

Before calling anyone, spend 20 minutes doing your own inspection. You need a flashlight, a screwdriver, and a phone camera.

  1. Turn off your HVAC at the thermostat
  2. Remove 3–4 vent covers throughout the house (at least one return, two supplies)
  3. Shine a flashlight inside and take a photo with your phone's flash
  4. Pull your current HVAC filter and hold it up to light — can you see light through it? How dark is it relative to when you installed it?

What you're looking for: bare metal with light dust = normal, no cleaning needed. Pet hair accumulation, construction debris, or visible dark buildup deeper than a thin surface layer = cleaning is likely warranted. Fuzzy or slimy growth = possible mold, call a professional before disturbing anything.

Not sure what you found? The indoor air quality quiz factors in your specific situation — pets, renovation history, home age, filter habits — and gives you a recommendation.

The Scam Problem (and How to Avoid It)

The reason duct cleaning has a reputation as a scam is that the industry has a large number of companies that operate specifically to exploit homeowner uncertainty. The playbook is consistent:

  1. Advertise a $69–$99 "whole house special"
  2. Show up, spend 30 minutes with a shop vac, take photos of vent grilles (which are always dusty — that's normal)
  3. Tell the homeowner their ducts are severely contaminated and quote $800–$2,000 for "antimicrobial treatment" or "sanitizing"
  4. Use high-pressure tactics to close on the spot

Red flags that indicate a scam operation: flat-rate "whole house" pricing under $150; no truck-mounted equipment (visible large white van with hose running into house); any company that "finds" mold on the first visit; pressure to approve additional services on the spot; companies with no verifiable local reviews or NADCA certification.

Legitimate pricing for a real cleaning using proper equipment runs $300–$600 for a typical home, with the price varying by home size and vent count. Anything significantly below that is either a bait-and-switch or a shop-vac job that won't accomplish much.

When the Answer Is Clearly Yes

Moving Into an Unknown Home

This is the most common situation where cleaning is unambiguously worth it. You don't know the history. Previous owners may have had pets, smoked, neglected filter changes, or had renovations done without protecting the HVAC. A camera inspection (or just pulling some vent covers) tells you what you're working with. If the ducts show significant accumulation, cleaning before you settle in is the right call.

After Major Renovation

Drywall dust is particularly problematic. It's extremely fine, bypasses standard HVAC filters, and coats duct interiors in a way that normal airflow doesn't dislodge. If your contractor ran the HVAC during renovation — which they often do — your ducts are almost certainly contaminated. Cleaning is worth it.

Mold or Moisture Events

If you've had a clogged condensate line, a flooded air handler, or any significant moisture intrusion into the HVAC system, cleaning is necessary — but only after fixing the moisture source. Cleaning moldy ducts without fixing the moisture problem just delays the inevitable.

Decades of Neglect

A 50-year-old house that has never had its ducts cleaned, had previous owners who didn't change filters consistently, and potentially housed pets at some point — that's a situation where cleaning makes a real difference. The before-and-after is dramatic and the airflow improvement is measurable.

The Bottom Line

Air duct cleaning is worth it for a specific subset of situations — and completely unnecessary for most well-maintained homes. The question was never "should I clean my ducts?" It's "are my ducts dirty enough that cleaning will make a difference?"

The answer to that question is visible in your ducts and your filter. Look before you book anything.

If you want a more structured assessment, the air quality quiz walks through the specific factors and gives you a clear recommendation for your situation.

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