Air Duct Cleaning Cost Guide: What Fresno Homeowners Pay in 2026

July 8, 2026 • Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Fresno

Air Duct Cleaning Cost Guide: What Fresno Homeowners Pay in 2026

Professional air duct cleaning in Fresno costs between $325 and $650 for most single-family homes in 2026, with the average homeowner paying around $425 for a standard cleaning of one HVAC system with 12–15 vents. Whole-home jobs with multiple systems, older ductwork, or contamination issues can run $800–$1,400. If you’d rather not sort through variables yourself, call us at (855) 643-8783 — estimates are free, and we’ll walk you through exactly what your home needs before we quote.

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Here’s the reality we’ve learned across 17 years in Fresno ductwork: a 1,800-square-foot single-story home in Fowler with one HVAC system and 12 supply vents should cost $325–$425 from a legitimate contractor in 2026. If you’re quoted $149, something is missing from that number. We’ve seen the aftermath of those “deals,” and this guide is designed to keep you from learning the hard way.

Published Price Ranges by Home Size and System Count

Fresno’s market has enough legitimate competition that pricing has stabilized, but it’s not uniform. Below is what we actually see quoted by established, NADCA-aligned contractors in the Fresno metro — including Clovis, Fowler, and the older neighborhoods near downtown where ductwork runs from the 1950s through the 1980s.

Home Profile Vent Count Typical Range
Small home / condo, 1 system 8–10 vents $275–$375
Mid-size single-story, 1 system 12–16 vents $325–$475
Larger single-story or two-story, 1 system 18–24 vents $450–$625
Two-story with 2 HVAC systems 20–30 vents $650–$900
Large home, 3+ systems or zoned 30+ vents $900–$1,400

These figures assume standard flex duct or metal duct in accessible attics. Push the price higher with hard-to-reach ductwork, significant contamination, or add-on services — which we’ll cover next. The $149 coupon outfits? They’re typically running a shop vac with a brush attachment through your registers and calling it done in 45 minutes. That’s not air duct cleaning; that’s a photo opportunity.

Five Variables That Legitimately Move the Price

Not every $425 job is equal. Here are the five factors that separate a straightforward cleaning from a complex restoration project in Fresno’s climate and housing stock.

1. System count. Each HVAC system is a separate air handler, return, and duct network. A two-system home isn’t “double” the work — there’s coordination overhead — but it’s rarely less than 1.6× the single-system price. In the 93720 and 93730 zip codes, we’re seeing more homes with upstairs/downstairs zoning that owners didn’t realize were separate systems until quote time.

2. Duct material. Older Fresno homes, especially in the Tower District and near Roosevelt High, still have asbestos-wrapped metal duct or brittle fiberboard from the 1960s–70s. These require slower, more careful handling. Flex duct in tract homes from the 1990s–2000s is faster to clean but tears easily if a technician rushes. We inspect material before we quote — it’s why we don’t give firm prices over the phone without photos or a quick site visit.

3. Attic accessibility. Fresno’s 110°F summer attics are no joke. If your air handler is tucked under a low hip roof in Old Fig Garden or buried in blown-in insulation in a Clovis addition, the technician’s working time increases significantly. We’ve spent 90 minutes just positioning equipment in attics where the scuttle hole is 14 inches square. That labor shows up somewhere — either in the quote or in the corners that get cut.

4. Add-on services. These are legitimate upsells when you actually need them, but they’re often bundled opaquely:

  • Dryer vent cleaning: $85–$150 (standalone; often discounted when bundled with duct cleaning)
  • Air handler / coil cleaning: $150–$275
  • Duct sealing (Aeroseal or manual mastic): $400–$900 depending on leakage severity
  • Sanitizing / antimicrobial treatment: $75–$150 per system
  • UV light installation: $250–$450 per light

We use Rotobrush and Nikro equipment for the core cleaning — the tools NADCA specifications actually reference — and Abatement Technologies HEPA containment when we’re dealing with significant mold or post-remediation verification.

5. Contamination severity. Light dust and pet hair? Standard process. Heavy construction debris, rodent infestation, or active mold? That’s remediation-level work. We pulled a system last month in a Sunnyside home where a previous “$179 whole-house special” had blown a minor mold patch through every supply vent. The remediation and proper cleaning cost that homeowner $2,100. The cheap job wasn’t cheap.

What “Too Good to Be True” Quotes Don’t Include

The Fresno market is saturated with coupon mailers and social media ads promising whole-home cleaning for $99–$149. Here’s what they typically omit until they’re standing in your living room:

  • Per-vent charges. The “$149” covers 5 vents; yours has 14. Now it’s $149 + $25/vent.
  • Return duct cleaning. The big, dirty return trunk? That’s “extra.” On many systems, it’s where the worst buildup lives.
  • Air handler access. Opening and cleaning the plenum and coil? Add $150–$200.
  • Sanitizing. They’ll show you a photo of black “mold” (usually just dirt) and upsell a $300 spray.
  • Equipment fees. “Rotary brush technology surcharge” — for the tool that’s standard in legitimate cleaning.
  • Trip charges. Fowler, Clovis, or north of Herndon? That’s “outside standard service area.”

By the time the invoice prints, that $149 special is $600–$800, and the work was still substandard. We’ve been called in to re-clean after these jobs more times than I can count. Ryan Bell — owner and lead technician — is the one who shows up for those callbacks, and he’s usually not happy about what he finds.

How to Compare Quotes Accurately

Two quotes for “air duct cleaning” can describe completely different scopes. Before you compare dollar amounts, compare these elements:

Ask This Why It Matters
How many supply vents are included? Establishes baseline scope
Is return ductwork included? Often 30–40% of system debris
Will you open and inspect the air handler? Reveals if coil/plenum cleaning is included
What equipment do you use? Rotobrush, Nikro, or truck-mounted are professional standards
Is the technician NADCA-certified or company-trained? Certification isn’t everything, but “trained in-house” with no curriculum detail is a flag
Can I see before/after photos from a similar home? Legitimate operators document their work
What’s your policy if I’m unsatisfied? Re-checks, refunds, or “we’ll make it right” — get specifics

We provide itemized quotes before any work begins. No surprises, no mid-job upsells. Our Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Fresno home page lists our full process if you want to see how we scope a standard job.

The True Cost of Going Cheap: A Fresno Case Study

In 2023, we responded to a call in the Huntington Boulevard historic district. The homeowner had accepted a $159 mailer special three months prior. The crew was in and out in 90 minutes, used a portable vacuum that looked like a wet/dry shop vac, and left visible debris in three registers.

Two months later, the homeowner noticed a musty smell. We inspected with a borescope camera: the previous cleaning had dislodged a mold colony in the return trunk, and the inadequate vacuum pressure had spread spores throughout the supply side. The system needed:

  • Full containment and HEPA-filtered negative air setup
  • Antimicrobial treatment with Guardsman-specified products
  • Physical removal of contaminated flex duct in two runs
  • Proper cleaning of all remaining ductwork
  • Post-remediation air sampling

Total: $2,340. The $159 “deal” cost her 15× more than a proper cleaning would have, plus three months of breathing questionable air. Fresno’s Central Valley already deals with agricultural dust, pollen loads, and seasonal inversion layers trapping particulates. Your ductwork shouldn’t compound the problem.

When to Call a Pro

Call for an inspection — not necessarily a full cleaning — if you’re seeing dust accumulation on vents within weeks of cleaning your home, uneven heating or cooling between rooms, musty odors when the system cycles, or if it’s been more than 5–7 years since your last service. After wildfire seasons or major road construction nearby, earlier inspection makes sense. We’re happy to look and tell you honestly if you’re not due yet. Call (855) 643-8783.

Related Services in Fresno

Depending on what we find, your system may need more than cleaning. We handle Air Duct Cleaning in Fowler, Dryer Vent Cleaning in Fowler, and HVAC Cleaning in Fowler — plus duct repair, sealing, and indoor air quality solutions. One company handles the cleaning, the repair, the sealing, and the air quality — start to finish. No need to source multiple contractors.

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  2. 2
    You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
  3. 3
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  4. 4
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The Bottom Line

Here’s what to remember about air duct cleaning costs in Fresno for 2026:

  • Legitimate whole-home cleaning runs $325–$650 for most single-system homes; multi-system or complex jobs reach $800–$1,400
  • The five price movers: system count, duct material, attic access, add-ons, and contamination level
  • $149 quotes almost always exclude necessary components — expect 3–4× the advertised price at invoice
  • Compare scopes, not just dollar amounts — “air duct cleaning” is not a standardized service
  • Cut-rate work can create $2,000+ remediation problems, especially with older Fresno housing stock

17 years of ductwork. 821 reviews. You can check. If you’re in Fresno and want an honest assessment of what your home actually needs, Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Fresno offers free estimates — call (855) 643-8783. Ryan Bell — owner and lead technician — is the one on your job, and he’ll tell you straight whether you’re due for service or not.

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