Fast, Reliable Air Duct Cleaning Across Rochester
Air duct cleaning in Rochester typically runs $350–$750 for a full residential system, with most jobs completed in a single visit. We’re usually on-site in Rochester within 24–48 hours of your call, sometimes same-day if you’re in Park Avenue, South Wedge, or the 19th Ward corridors. Richard Anderson — owner and lead technician — handles your job personally, bringing two decades of duct work and contractor-grade Rotobrush and Nikro equipment to homes that generic crews simply aren’t equipped to clean properly. Call (833) 754-6107 for a free estimate.
Rochester isn’t like other markets. Our Air Duct Cleaning team knows the difference between a 1990s suburban split-level and a 1920s Foursquare on Maplewood whose gravity-furnace plenum hasn’t been opened since the Eisenhower administration. That local fluency matters when we’re routing flexible brushes through dead-leg duct runs that were never designed for modern forced-air systems.
Why Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service New York Is Rochester’s Preferred Air Duct Cleaning Company
We’ve built our reputation one Rochester job at a time — 548 verified reviews, 4.9 stars, and counting. Those numbers reflect something simple: Richard Anderson shows up, does the work himself, and stands behind it. No franchise dispatcher sending whoever’s available. No subcontractor network where accountability dissolves between three different companies.
Our Rochester customers mention the same things in their reviews — that we found problems other cleaners missed, that we explained what we were seeing in plain language, that the house smelled different (better) within hours. That last point matters especially in Rochester’s older rental stock, where decades of layered heating-system debris can make a building smell like every fuel it’s ever burned.
Response time to Rochester neighborhoods averages same-day to 48 hours, depending on season. October through April, when furnaces are cycling hard and indoor air quality complaints spike, we prioritize heating-system calls. Summer months, we book dryer vent and full-system maintenance for the landlords getting properties ready for new tenants.
The local knowledge runs deeper than neighborhood names. We know which ZIP 14605 triple-deckers still have original galvanized plenums that will fight standard equipment. We know which Park Avenue basements stay damp enough year-round to grow mold in low return ducts. That specificity is what separates a specialist from a generalist with a vacuum hose.
Our Air Duct Cleaning Services in Rochester
Residential Duct Cleaning
Rochester’s housing stock demands residential work that’s closer to restoration than routine maintenance. In the Park Avenue and South Wedge districts, we regularly open systems converted from coal gravity furnaces in the 1950s–70s and find plenum chambers large enough to stand in — chambers that standard residential equipment can’t reach without adaptation. Our Rotobrush systems run flexible extensions specifically for these oversized runs. A typical residential duct cleaning in Rochester runs $350–$550 for a single-family, $450–$750 for a two- or three-unit rental with extended ductwork.
Commercial Duct Cleaning
Commercial work in Rochester spans the medical corridor near Strong Memorial, converted warehouse spaces in the High Falls district, and the steady churn of restaurant and retail HVAC off East Avenue. Each brings different contaminant profiles — medical facilities need HEPA containment, restaurants need grease-laden exhaust systems addressed alongside supply ducts. We scale our Nikro and Abatement Technologies equipment to the job, not the other way around. Commercial duct cleaning in Rochester typically starts at $800–$1,500 for smaller systems, with larger facilities quoted after video inspection.
Supply Duct Cleaning
Supply lines in Rochester’s converted gravity-furnace systems are where we find the most dramatic buildup. Those original coal-era plenums fed multiple branch runs at low velocity; when gas blowers were retrofitted in the 1960s, the increased pressure drove particulate deeper into the system rather than clearing it. Supply duct cleaning isolates these lines, removes the accumulated debris, and verifies airflow balance afterward. Expect $200–$400 as an add-on to full-system work, or $300–$500 standalone for targeted supply-line restoration.
Return Duct Cleaning
Return ducts in Rochester pull air through basements that Lake Ontario keeps perpetually humid. That moisture condenses inside low-lying return trunks, creating active mold growth we find on maybe half the older homes we inspect. Return duct cleaning without antimicrobial treatment is temporary here — the mold returns within weeks. We use Abatement Technologies sanitizing systems after mechanical cleaning, addressing the humidity-driven regrowth pattern that’s specific to this lakeside climate. Return cleaning runs $250–$450 as part of a full system, $350–$550 standalone with treatment.
Full System Cleaning
This is what most Rochester homes actually need — and what most competitors undersell. Full system cleaning covers supply and return trunks, all accessible branch runs, the main plenum, and the air handler cabinet. For converted gravity-furnace homes, it includes adapted brushing of dead-leg chambers and soot-layer removal that standard residential packages skip. Full system cleaning in Rochester ranges $450–$750 for typical residential, with larger or heavily contaminated systems running higher after video inspection.
Video Inspection
We recommend video inspection for any Rochester home built before 1960, any system that’s never been professionally cleaned, or any property with persistent odor or allergy complaints after previous cleaning. Our camera systems map duct configuration, identify hidden mold growth, and document before-and-after condition — especially valuable for landlords in 14608 and 14605 managing tenant air-quality concerns. Video inspection runs $150–$250 standalone, or included with full-system quotes over $600.
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 Rochester
Our equipment comes from the same suppliers commercial contractors use: Rotobrush for residential duct agitation and vacuum, Nikro for high-capacity commercial extraction, and Abatement Technologies for HEPA containment and antimicrobial application. We also service and clean integrated air quality systems from Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Guardsman — brands we encounter regularly in Rochester’s higher-end renovations and landlord upgrades. Parts and replacement media for these systems are stocked locally where possible, so filter changes and component swaps don’t add waiting time to your job.
Common Air Duct Cleaning Problems We See in Rochester Homes
- Coal-era soot layers beneath modern dust. In ZIPs 14605 and 14608, we routinely open converted gravity-furnace plenums and find original cast soot from coal operation still coating interior surfaces under decades of accumulated debris. Standard brushes skim the top layer and leave the soot — which then feeds mold growth fed by lake-effect humidity.
- Oversized, irregular plenums that standard equipment can’t navigate. Park Avenue and 19th Ward Foursquares have dead-leg chambers and unconventional branch runs from their 1950s–70s gas conversions. Without flexible extensions and adapted brush heads, these chambers stay uncleaned — and recontaminate the system within months.
- Mold regrowth from untreated lake-effect moisture. Lake Ontario’s persistent basement humidity condenses inside low-lying duct runs, making active mold a routine finding rather than an exception. Cleaning without antimicrobial treatment, or without addressing the moisture pathway, means the problem returns before the next heating season.
- Never-cleaned rental stock. Two-families and triple-deckers throughout 14608 and 14605 frequently show ductwork that hasn’t been professionally cleaned since the original gravity-to-gas conversion — fifty-plus years of tenant turnover, cooking residue, and heating-system debris compressed into layers that restrict airflow and degrade indoor air quality.
Pricing for Air Duct Cleaning in Rochester, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Rochester |
|---|---|
| Residential full system cleaning (single-family) | $350–$550 |
| Residential full system (multi-unit rental) | $450–$750 |
| Commercial duct cleaning (small system) | $800–$1,500 |
| Supply duct cleaning (standalone) | $300–$500 |
| Return duct cleaning with antimicrobial | $350–$550 |
| Video inspection | $150–$250 |
What moves you within these ranges? System size and accessibility matter most — a bungalow with a clean basement and straight duct runs sits at the low end; a three-decker with a cramped stone basement and dead-leg plenums needs more time and adapted equipment. Previous cleaning history matters too — first-time cleans on fifty-year systems take longer than maintenance on five-year intervals. We quote upfront after inspection, not after we’re halfway through the job. Call (833) 754-6107 for a free estimate — we’ll give you a firm number, not a range that doubles on arrival.
We Also Serve Cities Near Rochester
Our service radius extends to Irondequoit along the lake shore, Gates-North Gates and North Gates to the west, and Greece to the northwest — all within our standard response window. These communities share Rochester’s lake-effect climate patterns and much of its pre-WWII housing stock, so the same specialized approach applies. If you’re in these areas and suspect your ducts need attention, the same equipment and the same lead technician come to your door.
Serving Rochester, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Rochester 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 — Air Duct Cleaning in Rochester
Because standard cleaning equipment often misses the coal-era soot layer unique to Rochester’s converted gravity-furnace homes. That original cast soot sits beneath modern dust accumulation; brushes designed for conventional ductwork skim the surface without reaching the substrate. We use adapted Rotobrush extensions and slower pass rates to break that bond, then extract rather than redistribute. If you’ve had a “cleaning” that left black residue, call (833) 754-6107 — we’ll inspect and quote proper remediation.
Yes — if your South Wedge home was built before 1960 and has never had a documented professional cleaning, video inspection will likely reveal hidden configuration issues and contamination layers. In a South Wedge bungalow (14607), we opened a converted gravity-furnace plenum to find an inch of historic coal soot beneath decades of dust. Using our Rotobrush system adapted with a flexible extension, we cleared the dead-leg runs and applied an Abatement Technologies antimicrobial to suppress the mold fed by Lake Ontario’s persistent basement humidity. Without that camera mapping, we’d have missed the full extent. Video inspection is $150–$250; call for scheduling.
Lake Ontario’s proximity keeps Rochester basements humid year-round, and that moisture condenses inside cold duct runs when furnaces cycle on in October. The result is active mold growth inside return trunks and low supply branches — a pattern we find in roughly half the older homes we inspect. Winter heating dries the air upstairs while the basement stays damp, creating a humidity gradient that drives condensation exactly where ductwork is most vulnerable. We address this with mechanical cleaning plus antimicrobial treatment, and we’ll point out ventilation improvements that reduce recurrence. Call (833) 754-6107 to discuss your specific basement conditions.
We adapt Rotobrush residential systems with flexible shaft extensions and reduced-diameter brush heads to navigate the irregular chambers left by Rochester’s coal-to-gas conversions. For heavily contaminated commercial or large residential plenums, we bring Nikro high-capacity extractors with HEPA containment. The key isn’t the brand — it’s the adaptation. Standard residential crews run their equipment down the main trunk and call it done; we reconfigure ours for dead-leg chambers that haven’t been cleaned since the original conversion. Ask about our equipment when you call (833) 754-6107 — Richard Anderson will explain exactly what we’re bringing to your specific system.
Rochester’s rental property codes require maintained heating systems and habitable air quality, but do not explicitly mandate duct cleaning on a set schedule. However, documented professional cleaning — especially with video inspection records — protects landlords in tenant complaints and habitability disputes. We’ve provided documentation for landlords in 14605 and 14608 facing city inspection follow-ups; the video record and before/after imagery typically resolve questions without further escalation. For rental properties with converted gravity-furnace systems, we recommend cleaning every 3–5 years with interim filter monitoring. Call (833) 754-6107 to set up landlord documentation protocols.
Ready to address ductwork problems that generic guides — and generic cleaners — don’t even recognize? Richard Anderson handles your job personally, from inspection through completion, with equipment adapted to Rochester’s specific housing stock and climate challenges. Call (833) 754-6107 for a free estimate. We’ll give you a firm number, explain exactly what your system needs, and schedule work that actually solves the problem — not just moves the debris around.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner & Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, serving Rochester since 2004.