Fast, Reliable Duct Repair & Sealing Across Orange
Duct repair and sealing in Orange typically runs $180–$650 depending on accessibility and material type, with most jobs completed same-day or next-day. Our crew covers all Orange ZIP codes — 92863, 92864, 92865, and 92866 — and we’re familiar with the specific challenges this city’s housing stock presents, from Old Towne bungalows to post-war ranch homes near the Anaheim Hills border. If your vents are blowing weak, your energy bills are climbing, or you’re noticing dust buildup after Santa Ana wind events, call us at (866) 359-7544 for a free estimate. Matthew is on the job, not sitting in an office dispatching subcontractors.

We’ve spent 11 years working in attics and crawl spaces throughout northern Orange County, and Orange’s mix of historic construction and aging retrofit ductwork keeps us busy year-round. The Santa Ana winds that funnel through the Santa Ana Canyon don’t just rattle windows — they force fine desert particulates through every gap in your building envelope, loading duct systems with abrasive dust that accelerates wear on joints and seals. When that combines with 50-year-old fiberglass flex duct or crumbling mastic from a 1970s HVAC retrofit, you’ve got a system that’s leaking conditioned air into your attic and pulling unfiltered air back into your living space.
Why Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service Los Angeles Is Orange’s Preferred Duct Repair & Sealing Company
We’re not a franchise operation rotating through technicians you’ve never met. Owner Matthew Gonzalez is the lead technician on every Duct Repair & Sealing job we run in Orange — the same person whose name is on the business, the same person answering for the work afterward. That matters when we’re crawling through a 1920s attic in Old Towne or working around original plaster-and-lathe walls that most crews have never encountered.
Our reputation is built on verifiable results: 387 customers reviewed us — read what they found — with a 4.9-star average across 11 years of focused air duct work. That’s not a lucky streak from recent jobs. That’s consistency.
Response time to Orange is typically same-day for calls received before noon, next-morning for afternoon requests. We know the local streets — Chapman Avenue, Glassell Street, the traffic circle, Shaffer Street toward the hills — so we’re not wasting time with GPS confusion while your system keeps bleeding energy.
Our equipment investment separates us from entry-level operators. We run Rotobrush and Nikro systems alongside Abatement Technologies solutions — the same class of tools used in commercial remediation jobs, not consumer-grade hardware store rentals. When we encounter Orange’s unique problem of ducts run through original plaster walls in Craftsman bungalows, we have the flexible brush extensions and hand-cleaning capability to handle it. Most suburban duct cleaners don’t.
Our Duct Repair & Sealing Services in Orange
Duct Sealing & Mastic Sealant Application
Mastic sealant is our primary weapon against the air leaks we find in Orange’s older housing stock. In Old Towne bungalows near Chapman University — ZIP 92868 — we regularly encounter 1960s-era retrofit ductwork where the original mastic joints have dried and cracked from decades of attic temperature swings. These aren’t minor leaks. A typical unsealed duct system in one of these homes can lose 20–30% of conditioned air into the attic before it ever reaches a vent. We remove deteriorated old mastic, clean the joint surfaces, and apply fresh EPA-certified mastic sealant rated for the temperature cycling these attics see. For metal-to-metal connections, we reinforce with fiberglass mesh tape before mastic application. A full system seal on an average Orange ranch home runs $280–$450.
Flex Duct Repair & Replacement
Orange’s post-war ranch neighborhoods — especially north and east of the traffic circle, toward the Anaheim Hills border — are filled with original fiberglass flex duct from the 1950s through 1970s. After 50–60 years, this material sags at supports, separates at collar connections, and gets crushed in attics with inadequate insulation. We recently sealed a failing flex duct run in a 1960s ranch home on Shaffer Street near the Anaheim Hills border, where Santa Ana winds had loaded the system with fine dust and the original mastic joints were crumbling. Our crew replaced the deteriorated section with insulated galvanized duct and re-sealed all connections using EPA-certified mastic, restoring airflow to the master bedroom. Flex duct replacement sections in Orange typically run $180–$340 per run depending on length and attic accessibility.
Metal Duct Repair
The galvanized sheet metal duct runs in Orange’s 1950s tract homes near the Santa Ana River corridor develop a specific failure pattern we don’t see as often in coastal cities: rust pinholing from moisture intrusion during Santa Ana wind-driven rain events. These storms force water through soffit vents and attic penetrations that stay dry during normal weather. Once pinholes develop, the metal corrodes rapidly from the inside out due to condensation. We cut out damaged sections, fabricate replacement pieces on-site, and seal with mastic and mechanical fasteners. Metal repair work in Orange averages $220–$380 per damaged section.
Duct Insulation
Many Orange homes — particularly the retrofitted Old Towne bungalows — have bare metal duct runs with no insulation wrap whatsoever. In summer, that means 140°F attic air heating your cooled air before it reaches the vent. In winter, reverse the problem. We install R-6 or R-8 fiberglass duct insulation with vapor barrier jacketing, secured with proper mechanical fasteners and sealed at seams. For Orange’s climate, with its combination of hot summers and Santa Ana-driven temperature spikes, insulation pays for itself faster than in milder coastal zones. Full duct insulation on a typical Orange system runs $450–$650.

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 Orange
We stock parts and materials from Honeywell and Aprilaire for integration with existing HVAC controls, and our sealing and sanitizing work uses professional-grade Abatement Technologies and Guardsman products. For Orange customers, this means faster turnaround — we’re not ordering parts from a warehouse in another county while your system stays compromised. When we find a failing component during a repair, we can usually source the correct replacement same-day from our stocked inventory. We’ve learned over 11 years that carrying the right materials matters more than promising speed you can’t deliver.
Common Duct Repair & Sealing Problems We See in Orange Homes
- Mastic joint failure in Old Towne retrofits. The 1960s–70s HVAC retrofits in Orange’s historic district used mastic that wasn’t formulated for the temperature swings of unconditioned attics. Sixty years later, that mastic is powder. We find this on nearly every Old Towne job we inspect.
- Flex duct sag and separation in post-war ranches. Original fiberglass flex duct in Orange’s 1950s–1970s neighborhoods has exceeded its design life. Supports fail, ducts sag onto attic insulation, and collar connections pull apart. The result is rooms that never heat or cool evenly.
- Santa Ana dust loading accelerating wear. Orange’s inland position exposes duct systems to higher particulate loads than coastal Orange County cities. Fine desert dust works into joints and seams, abrading seals and increasing leakage rates year over year.
- Galvanized metal corrosion near the Santa Ana River. Wind-driven rain during Santa Ana events introduces moisture into attic spaces that normally stay dry. Combined with temperature cycling, this produces rust pinholes in metal duct runs that go unnoticed until airflow drops significantly.
Pricing for Duct Repair & Sealing in Orange, CA
| Service | Typical Range in Orange |
|---|---|
| Mastic sealant touch-up (localized) | $180–$280 |
| Full system mastic sealing | $280–$450 |
| Flex duct repair/replacement (per run) | $180–$340 |
| Metal duct section repair | $220–$380 |
| Duct insulation (full system) | $450–$650 |
| Air leak detection & sealing combo | $320–$520 |
These ranges reflect Orange’s market and the specific accessibility challenges we encounter in local housing stock. Old Towne bungalows with ducts through plaster walls run toward the higher end due to labor intensity. Post-war ranch homes with open attics typically fall in the lower-to-middle range. We don’t quote over the phone without seeing the job — every system is different, and “ballpark” numbers that change on arrival aren’t how we operate. Call (866) 359-7544 for a free, exact estimate. Matthew will walk the job with you and explain what we’re finding.
We Also Serve Cities Near Orange
Our service radius covers the full northern Orange County corridor. We regularly run Duct Repair & Sealing calls in Villa Park — where estate homes on larger lots present their own duct accessibility challenges — as well as North Tustin, Tustin, and Anaheim. Each city has distinct housing stock and climate exposure patterns, and we adjust our approach accordingly rather than applying a one-size template.
Serving Orange, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Orange 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 — Duct Repair & Sealing in Orange
The 1960s–70s HVAC retrofits in Old Towne bungalows used mastic and support methods that weren’t designed for the temperature swings of unconditioned attics, and the original plaster-and-lathe walls often conceal duct runs that can’t be inspected without specialized equipment. After 50+ years, that mastic has dried and cracked, while fiberglass flex duct has degraded at connections. We find 25–35% air loss as typical in these homes. Call (866) 359-7544 for a free inspection — we’ll show you exactly where your system is bleeding conditioned air.
We recommend inspection every 3–5 years for Orange homes, with full re-sealing every 7–10 years depending on original material quality. The Santa Ana wind season — October through November, with secondary events in winter — loads duct systems with abrasive particulates that accelerate seal degradation compared to coastal Orange County. Homes within a mile of the Santa Ana Canyon corridor or near the 55 Freeway may need more frequent attention due to higher dust exposure.
Yes, though access is limited and the approach differs from standard attic work. In Orange’s Old Towne district near Chapman University, we’ve handled numerous Craftsman bungalows where ducts were run through original plaster-and-lathe walls during later HVAC installs. We use flexible brush extensions from our Nikro system and hand-cleaning methods where standard equipment won’t fit. When repair is needed, we evaluate whether localized access through existing vent openings suffices or if minimal plaster work is required. We’ll explain the specific approach for your home before starting — no surprises.
Yes — Orange’s inland position produces hotter attic temperatures than coastal cities, and uninsulated ducts in 140°F attics waste significant cooling energy. The payback period for duct insulation in Orange typically runs 3–5 years depending on your cooling usage and current energy rates. For homes with existing bare metal runs — common in Old Towne retrofits — insulation is usually the highest-ROI improvement we can make after sealing leaks.
For Orange’s climate and housing conditions, we typically recommend insulated galvanized sheet metal for permanent installations, or high-quality insulated flex duct with anti-microbial lining for runs where rigid metal isn’t practical. Galvanized metal withstands Santa Ana dust abrasion better than fiberglass and won’t sag over time. For the specific conditions we see in Orange — temperature cycling, dust loading, and occasional moisture intrusion — metal with proper mastic sealing and external insulation provides the longest service life. We’ll recommend the right material for your specific layout and accessibility constraints.
Ready to stop losing conditioned air into your attic? Call (866) 359-7544 today for a free estimate on duct repair and sealing in Orange. Matthew Gonzalez personally evaluates every job, and we offer same-day service for calls received before noon. One crew, every service — from sealing and repair to full-system cleaning and air quality sanitizing.
Written by Matthew Gonzalez, Owner at Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service Los Angeles, serving Orange and northern Orange County since 2013.