Duct Cleaning Salt Lake City | NADCA Source Removal

Duct Cleaning in Salt Lake County

October 2, 2024. A customer named Karen W. in Murray called us about a duct cleaning quote she’d received from a coupon-mailer contractor: $89 for “complete duct cleaning, any size home.” We’ve seen this offer dozens of times over the years — it’s a textbook bait-and-switch. The $89 covers a quick walk-through and a snake-camera inspection of a single duct run. The actual sales pitch — what the technician is trained to deliver — happens after the “inspection” reveals “shocking” contamination requiring $1,800-$4,200 in additional services ranging from “mold remediation” to “viral sanitization” to “anti-microbial fogging.” None of these add-ons follow established NADCA (National Air Duct Cleaners Association) standards. Most use products that have no demonstrated efficacy. The actual scope of legitimate residential duct cleaning — which is what Karen actually needed — is well-defined by NADCA’s ACR (Assessment, Cleaning, and Restoration) Standard. Priya Sandoval performed a real ACR-standard cleaning on Karen’s home for $620. Source removal with HEPA-filtered negative pressure extraction, brush agitation of supply and return ducts, coil cleaning where accessible, post-cleaning verification. Documented results: PM accumulation in supply ducts reduced from a baseline visible coating to NADCA’s “clean” threshold of acceptable. Karen’s allergies improved, no $1,800 upsells, no fake mold panic.

Duct cleaning is one of the most marketing-corrupted services in HVAC. The legitimate version — performed to NADCA’s ACR Standard with proper equipment by certified specialists — delivers real and measurable value for households with significant respiratory sensitivity, recent renovation contamination, or biological contamination concerns. The illegitimate versions are everywhere: $39-$89 specials that bait customers into upsell sequences, “sanitization” pseudoscience that adds chemicals to the airstream without demonstrated benefit, fake mold testing kits that always produce alarming results, and equipment that scratches ducts without actually removing contamination. This page covers what real duct cleaning involves, what equipment we use, what it costs honestly, and — importantly — when you don’t need it. For broader indoor air quality context see the indoor air quality services hub.

When Duct Cleaning Is Actually Warranted

NADCA’s official position is that duct cleaning is appropriate under specific circumstances, not as routine maintenance. The legitimate triggers:

Visible biological growth in ducts or HVAC components.
Mold or mildew growing on the interior surfaces of supply or return ducts, in drain pans, on evaporator coils, or in air handler interiors. Visual confirmation through inspection port or scope is the standard; “I think we might have mold” without visual evidence isn’t grounds for cleaning.
Vermin infestation.
Rodents, insects, or birds in the duct system. Often discovered during other service work; cleaning removes contamination and droppings before they become biological hazards.
Significant accumulation of dust, debris, or particulates.
NADCA “ACR Standard” Section 6.5 defines acceptable post-cleaning levels. If pre-cleaning inspection shows substantial accumulation that’s actively releasing into the airstream, cleaning is warranted. Visible dust on supply registers within hours of cleaning surfaces is a strong indicator.
Recent construction or renovation.
Construction dust (drywall dust, wood particulates, paint overspray) deposited in ducts during renovation. Cleaning after construction is complete prevents months of dust release from contaminated ductwork.
Water damage with possible biological contamination.
Flood, plumbing leak, or roof failure that introduced significant moisture into duct system. Cleaning combined with biological assessment determines whether HVAC components can be restored or require replacement.
Significant smoke or odor contamination event.
House fire (smoke residue in ducts), cooking accident (significant grease deposition), or other contamination event that’s deposited material throughout the duct system.
Pet contamination (cats, dogs primarily).
Heavy pet dander and hair accumulation, particularly in homes where animals shed substantially. Cleaning combined with MERV 13 filter upgrade typically addresses pet-related dust accumulation in problem households.
Pre-purchase due diligence.
Buying a home with unknown HVAC service history, particularly if previous owners had pets, smokers, or any of the above conditions. Inspection-with-camera typically $145-$245 to determine if cleaning is actually warranted.

When Duct Cleaning Is NOT Warranted

Equally important — situations where duct cleaning is overselling:

  • “My ducts haven’t been cleaned in 10 years.” Time alone isn’t a duct cleaning trigger. If ducts are clean by NADCA standards now, they don’t need cleaning regardless of how long since the last service.
  • “I want my air to be cleaner.” If specific concerns exist (allergies, asthma, sensitivities), the right answer is usually filtration upgrade (MERV 13 or HEPA) and possibly UV-C installation — not duct cleaning. Ducts in a properly-filtered system stay reasonably clean naturally.
  • “My neighbor said they had it done.” Other people’s HVAC needs don’t determine yours. The right question is whether you have any of the legitimate triggers above.
  • “I saw an Instagram ad about contamination.” Marketing content is not evidence of contamination in your home. Inspection determines whether contamination exists; advertising doesn’t.
  • “Some company offered a $39 cleaning special.” The price itself is evidence of bait-and-switch. Legitimate NADCA-standard cleaning costs $385-$1,400 depending on home size and complexity. Anything substantially below that range is selling a different service than what NADCA defines as duct cleaning.

What NADCA-Standard Cleaning Actually Involves

The NADCA ACR Standard defines source removal as the legitimate cleaning methodology. Steam cleaning, sanitization sprays, electrostatic fogging, ozone treatment, and most “duct deodorizing” services are explicitly not duct cleaning by NADCA definition — they’re separate (sometimes valid, sometimes pseudoscience) services that get sold under the duct cleaning label.

Equipment We Use

Rotobrush iAdapt 3 (primary residential equipment):
Source-removal equipment with HEPA-filtered vacuum (99.97% efficient at 0.3 micron), rotating brush agitation, and concurrent debris collection. Brushes scale-adjust to match duct diameter. Standard for residential trunk and branch duct cleaning.
AccuClean Pro mobile vacuum unit:
3,000 CFM negative-pressure HEPA extraction unit. Connects to the duct system at the air handler; creates negative pressure throughout the duct network during cleaning. Captures all debris dislodged by Rotobrush or other agitation tools.
Air whips and skipper balls:
Pneumatic agitation tools for portions of the duct system inaccessible to the brush (sharp turns, restricted access points). Compressed air pulses dislodge debris that the negative pressure extraction then captures.
Inspection cameras:
Borescope and articulated inspection cameras for pre-cleaning assessment and post-cleaning verification. Visual confirmation that NADCA “clean” standards have been achieved.
Coil cleaning equipment:
Nu-Calgon Calclean alkaline coil cleaner (for outdoor condenser coils), Nu-Calgon Evaporator Coil Cleaner (foaming, biodegradable, safe on aluminum fins and copper). Foamed onto coil surfaces, dissolves particulate and biological deposits, rinses to drain.
Containment equipment:
Plastic sheeting and tape to protect occupied living space from any debris escape during the cleaning process. Negative-pressure extraction handles most containment; physical sheeting is the secondary barrier.

The Step-by-Step Process

  1. Pre-cleaning inspection. Inspection cameras through accessible duct access points. Visual assessment of contamination type and severity. Photo documentation. Determination of whether cleaning is warranted; if yes, scope and methodology determined.
  2. System assessment. Inventory of supply registers, return grilles, trunk line runs, branch ducts. Identification of access points for cleaning equipment. Identification of any components that may need separate attention (failing dampers, disconnected sections, severe deposits requiring multiple passes).
  3. Containment setup. Plastic sheeting installed at high-risk areas. Equipment positioned at planned access points. Negative-pressure equipment connected to the air handler return.
  4. Negative pressure established. AccuClean Pro vacuum unit powered up. Negative pressure verified at all extraction points. Supply registers closed off to direct extraction flow through the duct system.
  5. Return duct cleaning. Starting from registers most distant from the air handler, source-removal brushing through each return duct, advancing toward the trunk line and air handler. Debris pulled to extraction unit. Each section verified clean before moving to the next.
  6. Trunk line cleaning. Main supply and return trunk lines cleaned with appropriately-sized brushes. Often the most contaminated portion of the system; multiple passes may be required.
  7. Supply duct cleaning. Same methodology as returns, starting from registers most distant. Each supply branch cleaned individually with brush sized to match diameter.
  8. Air handler interior cleaning. Blower wheel, evaporator coil (visual inspection of cleaning need), drain pan, secondary heat exchanger (if accessible). Vacuum extraction of accessible debris; chemical cleaning of coil where warranted.
  9. Coil cleaning (when warranted by inspection). Evaporator coil chemically cleaned with foaming alkaline coil cleaner. Outdoor condenser coil cleaned similarly. Drain pan flushed and cleared.
  10. Post-cleaning inspection and verification. Camera inspection through accessible points. Documentation that NADCA cleanliness standards have been achieved. Photos of representative sections (before/after).
  11. Containment removal and cleanup. Plastic sheeting removed, work areas restored. Equipment removed.
  12. Customer walkthrough and documentation. Customer shown before/after photos. Filter replacement (a fresh filter installed at the conclusion of cleaning to prevent re-contamination). Written report delivered.

What’s Included vs. Extra Cost

Included in standard duct cleaning:
  • Pre-cleaning camera inspection
  • Source-removal cleaning of all supply registers and return grilles
  • Source-removal cleaning of all branch ducts
  • Source-removal cleaning of main supply and return trunk lines
  • Vacuum cleaning of air handler interior, blower wheel
  • Drain pan cleaning and flush
  • Post-cleaning camera inspection and verification
  • One standard filter replacement at completion
  • Written report with photo documentation
Extra cost items (when warranted):
  • Evaporator coil chemical cleaning: $185-$320 (often warranted on systems 4+ years old)
  • Outdoor condenser coil chemical cleaning: $185-$285 (warranted if coil shows significant accumulation)
  • Damper service and rebalancing: $145-$385
  • UV-C installation (if biological growth is recurring concern): $385-$840 — see the UV-C installation page
  • MERV upgrade filter cabinet installation: $285-$485
  • Disconnected or damaged duct repair: $145-$485 per section
  • Asbestos abatement coordination (pre-1980 octopus ducts): $1,200-$3,500 through subcontracted Utah-certified asbestos firms
Services we DON’T offer (and why):
  • Antimicrobial fogging or chemical “sanitization”: No demonstrated efficacy by independent testing. Adds chemicals to the airstream that some occupants may be sensitive to. EPA hasn’t approved most products in this category for HVAC application despite marketing claims to the contrary.
  • Ozone treatment: Ozone is itself a respiratory irritant; treating duct systems with ozone can damage equipment seals and gaskets. Not NADCA-recommended.
  • Mold “testing” with petri dish kits: These tests reliably produce positive results because mold spores are ubiquitous in indoor and outdoor air. Used by some contractors to manufacture false alarm in customers. Legitimate mold sampling requires laboratory analysis (we use EMSL Analytical) and is part of our IAQ testing service, not bundled with duct cleaning.
  • Pseudoscience services with marketing-driven names: “Anti-viral treatment,” “molecular shielding,” “ionic blast,” etc. None of these correspond to any peer-reviewed methodology.

Pricing

Pre-cleaning camera inspection (if uncertain whether cleaning warranted):
$145-$245. Includes inspection of accessible supply and return ducts, written report with photo evidence. Inspection fee credited toward cleaning if cleaning is performed.
Standard residential duct cleaning (single-system home, up to ~2,400 sq ft):
$385-$640 typical. Includes everything in the “Included in standard duct cleaning” list above.
Larger residential duct cleaning (single-system, 2,400-3,600 sq ft):
$540-$840 typical. Longer runtime due to additional duct linear footage.
Multi-system residential duct cleaning (two zones, additional air handler):
$840-$1,400 typical. Scales with total duct system size.
Large residential or small commercial:
$1,400-$2,800 depending on system size and complexity.
Comfort Care plan member discount:
15% off duct cleaning service. Comfort Care plan members typically schedule cleaning every 3-5 years if NADCA inspection criteria are met.

What to Expect on Cleaning Day

  • Service duration: 3-6 hours for typical residential cleaning. Larger or more contaminated systems can require 6-8 hours.
  • Noise level: Vacuum extraction equipment is loud (75-85 dB at source, typical industrial vacuum). Most homeowners choose to be out of the house during the cleaning, or work from a remote location within the house.
  • Power requirements: Equipment runs on standard 120V household power; multiple circuits may be utilized.
  • Accessibility: All supply registers and return grilles need to be accessible. Furniture blocking access may need to be temporarily moved.
  • HVAC operation: System will be operated during cleaning to verify performance. Indoor temperature may fluctuate 5-10°F during the work.
  • Containment: Plastic sheeting may be in place at high-risk areas. Slight construction-dust smell may be present during cleaning; should dissipate within hours of work completion.
  • Post-cleaning: Filter is replaced. We may recommend running fan-only mode for 24 hours to clear any residual disturbed particulates.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I have my ducts cleaned?
NADCA recommends cleaning based on inspection criteria, not on a calendar schedule. For most homes with no specific contamination concerns, that means every 3-7 years if at all. Households with significant pets, allergies, asthma, recent renovation, or biological contamination concerns may benefit from more frequent cleaning. Marketing pushing “annual cleaning” is generally overselling.
How much does it cost?
For NADCA-standard cleaning: $385-$840 for typical residential single-system home, $1,400-$2,800 for larger homes or multi-system. The $39-$89 “specials” are not the same service — they’re bait-and-switch operations that pivot to upsells. Trust the standard pricing range for legitimate work.
How long does it take?
3-6 hours for typical residential. Larger homes or systems requiring extensive coil cleaning can run 6-8 hours.
Will it make my allergies better?
For households with documented duct contamination affecting allergen load, yes — cleaning combined with MERV 13 filter upgrade typically produces meaningful symptom improvement. For households whose ducts are already reasonably clean, the bigger improvement comes from filtration upgrades rather than duct cleaning. We can assess what’s actually contributing to your allergen load during an IAQ assessment.
Should I get duct cleaning if I just bought my house?
Worth considering, especially if: previous owners had pets, previous owners smoked, the home has undergone renovation in the last 2-3 years, the home was vacant for an extended period, or the inspection during purchase noted any HVAC contamination concerns. A pre-purchase camera inspection ($145-$245) can confirm whether cleaning is warranted before you commit to the full service.

Schedule Duct Cleaning or Inspection

Pre-cleaning camera inspection available if you’re uncertain whether cleaning is warranted. NADCA-standard cleaning available by appointment, typically 1-2 weeks lead time.

Schedule Service →

Office Hours

  • Emergency Service: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
  • Office Staff: Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Closed: Weekends and State/Federal Holidays (emergency line always active)