Whole House Air Duct Cleaning Cost in Los Angeles: What You’ll Actually Pay
Whole house air duct cleaning in Los Angeles typically runs $299–$599 for a standard single-family home, with most jobs landing around $350–$450 depending on square footage, duct count, and what’s actually inside the system. That range shifts higher — sometimes significantly — in older South LA and Koreatown properties where decades of accumulated particulate, mastic tape, and pre-1978 duct wrap require extra handling before a Rotobrush ever touches the trunk line. If you want a number specific to your home, call us at (866) 359-7544 — estimates are free and we won’t pad the quote with work you don’t need.

Why Los Angeles Ductwork Accumulates Differently Than Almost Anywhere Else
Most pricing guides treat duct cleaning as a square-footage calculation. In Los Angeles, that formula misses a layer of context that changes both the scope of the job and the results you should expect.
The basin’s geography is the starting point. The 110, 10, and 101 freeway corridors cut directly through the ZIP codes we work most — 90041, 90042, 90043, 90044 — and the marine-inversion lid that sits over the basin for days at a time concentrates PM2.5 from traffic and wildfire smoke at rooftop level, right where your HVAC return-air intake is drawing air. Every time your system cycles, it’s filtering that load and depositing a fraction of it on duct walls, registers, and coil surfaces.
Then Santa Ana winds arrive — typically October through March — and push a second wave of fine Mojave Desert dust and fire ash across the entire basin within 24 to 48 hours. After a sustained fire event in the Angeles or Santa Monica Mountains, Matthew Gonzalez and our crew routinely find a visible gray-brown ash layer on supply-side register faces and inside first-run ductwork in Koreatown and South LA apartments — in units whose windows stayed shut the entire event, because the return air draws through hallway gaps and under-door clearances in these older, loosely sealed multi-family buildings.
That’s not an argument to scare you into a service call. It’s context for why a Los Angeles duct system that hasn’t been cleaned in five or more years is carrying a different particulate profile than a home in a coastal city that flushes its air regularly. The cost to address it properly reflects real labor and equipment time — not inflated pricing.
What Goes Into the Price: A Line-Item Breakdown
When we quote a whole house job, here’s what the numbers actually represent. We use Nikro negative-pressure systems and Rotobrush agitation equipment — not consumer-grade shop vac setups — which means the cleaning takes longer and captures more, but that time is built into what you see below.
| Service Item | Typical Cost Range (Los Angeles) |
|---|---|
| Whole house air duct cleaning (up to 10 vents) | $299 – $399 |
| Each additional vent beyond 10 | $15 – $25 per vent |
| Air handler / air handler compartment cleaning | $75 – $150 |
| Antimicrobial / sanitizing treatment (Abatement Technologies) | $99 – $175 |
| Duct sealing (per linear foot of accessible trunk) | $2.50 – $5.00 |
| Dryer vent cleaning (add-on) | $89 – $149 |
| Pre-1978 duct wrap / mastic hazmat assessment | Quoted separately after inspection |
The hazmat line at the bottom is worth a word. Post-WWII bungalows and Craftsman duplexes throughout South LA and the broader 90043 and 90044 ZIP codes were frequently built with duct insulation wrap or mastic sealing tape that may contain asbestos. We won’t guess — if we open a system in a pre-1978 property and find suspect material, we stop, document, and tell you what the next step is before any cleaning equipment touches it. That call protects you far more than it delays us.

What the Cleaning Process Actually Looks Like — Step by Step
Understanding the process helps you evaluate any quote you receive, including ours. A job that skips steps two or three is not whole house cleaning — it’s a marketing visit.
- System inspection and vent count. We walk the home, count supply and return vents, note duct material and access points, and check for visible damage or suspect insulation wrap before quoting the final scope.
- Negative-pressure containment. A Nikro negative-pressure unit is connected to the main trunk line, creating a contained vacuum environment. This keeps dislodged debris inside the duct system rather than redistributing it into living areas.
- Mechanical agitation, zone by zone. The Rotobrush system runs through each branch duct, scrubbing accumulated dust, pet dander, and particulate off duct walls while the negative-pressure unit draws it to collection. We work register by register, sealing each one off as we go.
- Air handler and coil area cleaning. The supply plenum, return plenum, and air handler compartment are cleaned separately — these areas accumulate the highest concentration of debris and are often skipped by crews doing speed-volume work.
- Optional sanitizing treatment. For homes with allergy concerns, pet households, or visible microbial growth, we apply an EPA-registered sanitizing agent using Abatement Technologies equipment. This addresses what the mechanical cleaning can’t.
- Post-job inspection and documentation. We walk the system with you, show you what we found, and document any repair or sealing needs identified during the job.
Every one of these steps is handled by Matthew Gonzalez personally or alongside a small crew he oversees directly. For our full-service overview, visit our Air Duct Cleaning in Los Angeles page — or go back to our home page to explore the full range of services we offer under one roof.
When it’s done right, clean ducts don’t announce themselves — you just breathe better and stop wondering why your filter fills up so fast.
Key Takeaways Before You Call
- Whole house air duct cleaning in Los Angeles runs $299–$599 for most single-family homes; apartment and multi-unit jobs are quoted per unit.
- Los Angeles basin conditions — freeway-corridor PM2.5, Santa Ana dust events, and wildfire ash — mean duct systems accumulate faster here than in most other cities.
- Pre-1978 homes in ZIP codes 90043 and 90044 frequently require a hazmat assessment before cleaning begins; factor that into your timeline.
- Professional-grade equipment (Rotobrush agitation, Nikro negative pressure) takes longer than a consumer blower-and-vacuum setup — that time is the cleaning, not padding.
- Matthew Gonzalez, Owner & Lead Technician at Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service Los Angeles, is on every job — 387 customers over 11 years have found that accountability worth something.
- One crew handles Air Duct Cleaning, HVAC cleaning, duct repair and sealing, dryer vent cleaning, and air quality sanitizing — no need to coordinate separate contractors.
Frequently Asked Questions
Whole house air duct cleaning in Los Angeles costs $299–$599 for most single-family homes, with the average job falling between $350 and $450. Larger homes with more than 15 vents, older duct systems with significant debris buildup, or properties requiring sanitizing treatment will land at the higher end of that range. Call (866) 359-7544 for a free estimate specific to your home — we’ll give you a number before we schedule anything.
Your ducts are worth cleaning if it’s been more than five years since the last service, if your household has allergy or asthma concerns, if you’ve recently had construction or renovation work done, or if you’ve been through a Santa Ana fire-season event with your HVAC running. If none of those apply and you recently had a professional cleaning, you probably don’t need another one yet. Matthew Gonzalez built a 4.9-star average across 387 reviews partly by being honest about this — we’d rather you trust us on a future job than oversell you today.
Yes, but pre-1978 properties in South LA and surrounding neighborhoods require an inspection for asbestos-containing duct insulation wrap or mastic tape before any cleaning equipment is used. If suspect material is found, we stop and explain your options — proceeding without that step isn’t something we’ll do. This is especially relevant in the 90043 and 90044 ZIP codes where post-WWII housing stock is dense and original ductwork is common.
Most whole house air duct cleaning jobs take 2.5 to 4 hours for a standard single-family home, depending on vent count, duct condition, and whether sanitizing treatment is included. Homes with heavily loaded systems — often the case after a wildfire season in Los Angeles — may run closer to 4 to 5 hours when we’re running the Rotobrush through every branch duct properly rather than rushing the agitation phase.
Get a Free Estimate for Your Los Angeles Home
If you’re ready to know exactly what’s in your ductwork — and what it will cost to clean it properly — call Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service Los Angeles at (866) 359-7544. Matthew Gonzalez will give you a straight answer, a real number, and no pressure. Estimates are always free.
Written by Matthew Gonzalez, Owner & Lead Technician at Elite Air Duct Cleaning Service Los Angeles, serving Los Angeles, CA.