Furnace Duct Cleaning Cost in Los Angeles: What You’ll Actually Pay and Why
Furnace duct cleaning in Los Angeles typically runs $299–$599 for a standard single-family home, depending on system size, duct count, and how long it’s been since the last cleaning. If your home sits in the 90066–90068 ZIP codes or anywhere in the mid-city basin, factor in the air quality reality: thermal inversions, Santa Ana wind events, and freeway particulate from the 10 and 110 corridors push a measurable load of PM2.5, desert dust, and — after fire season — visible ash into your return-air system every time your furnace cycles. That changes how we approach the job. Call (866) 359-7544 for a free, no-pressure estimate specific to your home’s system.

Los Angeles Housing Stock and Why It Changes the Estimate
Most cost calculators treat Los Angeles like any other city, and that’s where they go wrong. The post-WWII bungalows, Craftsman duplexes, and low-rise apartment buildings that make up the bulk of the older corridor from South LA through Koreatown were built between the 1940s and late 1960s. A large portion have never had their original ductwork professionally serviced — which means the first cleaning isn’t maintenance, it’s excavation.
There’s a second factor that genuinely matters before any price conversation starts: pre-1978 properties in this part of Los Angeles frequently have duct insulation wrap or mastic sealing tape that may contain asbestos. Matthew Gonzalez, our Owner and Lead Technician, flags this with every older-home customer before we ever pull a panel. A hazmat assessment has to happen first — we won’t skip that step to save time, and you shouldn’t want us to. If your home predates 1978, the assessment cost is a separate line item before cleaning begins, and any contractor who skips that conversation isn’t doing you a favor.
For newer builds and thoroughly updated systems, the job is more predictable. But Los Angeles is not a city with a uniform housing stock, and honest pricing reflects that.
What Furnace Duct Cleaning Actually Costs in Los Angeles: A Honest Price Table
The ranges below reflect real work in Los Angeles — not a national average pulled from a zip code database. Pricing varies by access difficulty, duct count, system age, and whether sanitizing is warranted after fire season or a pest intrusion.
| Service | Typical Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Furnace duct cleaning — small home (up to 8 vents) | $299–$375 | Single-story bungalow, accessible ducts |
| Furnace duct cleaning — mid-size home (9–15 vents) | $375–$499 | Most 3-bed/2-bath LA homes fall here |
| Furnace duct cleaning — large home or multi-zone (16+ vents) | $499–$699 | Two-story, dual systems, complex layouts |
| Air quality sanitizing (post-fire, mold, or pet) | $125–$250 add-on | Abatement Technologies fogger treatment |
| Duct repair and sealing (per section) | $150–$400 | Often found during cleaning in older homes |
| Pre-1978 asbestos assessment referral | Varies — third-party | Required before cleaning on older properties |
These are honest working ranges, not bait-and-switch entry points. When we give you a number on the phone, it doesn’t balloon when we arrive. Estimates are free — call (866) 359-7544 and we’ll give you a real range based on your square footage and system type before anyone shows up at your door.
What to Look for When Comparing Duct Cleaning Quotes in Los Angeles
The $49 coupon ad you’ve probably seen isn’t a price — it’s a foot in the door. Here’s what actually separates a legitimate furnace duct cleaning job from a rushed one:

- Equipment matters more than the crew count. We run Nikro and Rotobrush systems — the same class of negative-pressure and agitation equipment used in commercial and remediation-grade jobs. A shop-vac with a long hose is not the same thing, and the inside of your ductwork will show the difference.
- Negative pressure is non-negotiable. The system should be under negative pressure the entire time debris is being agitated, so particles are captured rather than redistributed into your living space. Ask any quote how they maintain containment.
- One crew, every service. We handle cleaning, repair, sealing, and sanitizing in one visit. Coordinating three separate contractors for one duct system is how jobs fall through the cracks.
- The lead technician should be able to answer questions on-site. Matthew is on the job — not in a dispatch office. If a quote comes from a company where you’ll never meet the person doing the work, that’s worth weighing.
- Post-Santa Ana and post-fire timing is real. After a fire event in the Angeles or Santa Monica Mountains, technicians regularly find a visible gray-brown ash layer on supply-side registers in Los Angeles apartments — even in units that kept every window shut. The return air draws from under-door gaps in older multi-family buildings. That’s not a scare tactic; it’s what we’ve found on job after job across this city for 11 years.
For a full picture of what a professional system service includes beyond the ducts themselves, our HVAC Cleaning in Los Angeles page covers the broader scope — coil cleaning, air handler service, and what links furnace performance to duct condition. And if you’re new to how these services connect, the home page gives you a quick map of everything Elite Air Duct Cleaning covers under one roof.
How We Approach a Furnace Duct Cleaning Job: Step by Step
- System walkthrough before anything starts. We locate every supply and return register, check access points, and — in homes built before 1978 — inspect duct wrap and tape for any materials that warrant a hazmat assessment before the mechanical work begins.
- Establish negative pressure at the furnace unit. A Nikro or Rotobrush system is connected to create a continuous vacuum from the main trunk through every branch run. This is what keeps disturbed debris from floating back into your rooms.
- Agitate each branch run systematically. Rotary brushes work through flexible duct runs while the negative pressure system pulls loosened material back to the collection point. We don’t skip branch runs because they’re harder to reach.
- Clean the furnace air handler and blower compartment. The mechanical components adjacent to the duct system — blower wheel, drain pan, return plenum — accumulate the same debris. Cleaning ducts while leaving a fouled blower wheel behind is an incomplete job.
- Sanitize if warranted. Homes with documented mold growth, a recent fire-season ash load, or significant pet dander concentration get an Abatement Technologies fogger treatment applied to supply-side ductwork. We’ll tell you honestly whether your system needs it or not.
- Walk you through what we found. Matthew reviews the before-and-after findings with you before he leaves. If we found a duct breach, disconnected flex duct, or a section that should be sealed, you’ll hear about it then — not in a follow-up upsell email.
Clean ducts don’t announce themselves — you just breathe better and stop wondering why your filter fills up so fast. That’s the result we’re after, not a dramatic reveal.
Frequently Asked Questions About Furnace Duct Cleaning Cost in Los Angeles
Furnace duct cleaning in Los Angeles typically costs between $299 and $599 for a residential home, with most mid-size single-family homes in the $375–$499 range. Variables include duct count, system age, access difficulty, and whether sanitizing is needed. Homes in older Los Angeles neighborhoods with original ductwork from the 1950s or 60s often run closer to the higher end of the range because of debris accumulation and occasional repair needs discovered during the job. Call (866) 359-7544 for a free estimate tailored to your home.
Every three to five years is a reasonable baseline for most Los Angeles homes, but the real triggers are specific: a Santa Ana wind event followed by a fire in the local hills, a recent renovation that pushed drywall dust into the return system, visible debris at register faces, or a household member with worsening allergy or asthma symptoms. The LA basin’s combination of thermal inversions and wildfire smoke means the accumulation rate is genuinely higher here than in cities with cleaner ambient air.
Professional furnace duct cleaning — done with proper negative-pressure equipment and thorough mechanical agitation — is worth it for homes that haven’t been serviced in several years or that have experienced a specific contamination event. The “scam” version is the $49 special that sends one person with consumer-grade equipment for 45 minutes. The difference shows up in how the system performs afterward and whether debris was actually captured or just relocated. Our HVAC Cleaning service is a related option when the whole system — not just the ductwork — needs attention.
Same-day and next-day scheduling is available across Los Angeles, including the 90066, 90067, and 90068 ZIP codes, depending on current job load. Call (866) 359-7544 directly — we’ll tell you honestly what the earliest opening looks like rather than book you into a slot we can’t hold.
Ready for a Straight Answer on Your Duct Cleaning Cost?
With 387 reviews averaging 4.9 stars over 11 years in Los Angeles, Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service has built its reputation on giving homeowners a real number before the job starts and delivering exactly what we said we would. Call (866) 359-7544 for a free estimate — Matthew will talk through your system, your home’s age, and what the job actually involves before you commit to anything.
Written by Matthew Gonzalez, Owner & Lead Technician at Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service Los Angeles, serving Los Angeles, CA.