Commercial HVAC Cleaning

Commercial duct cleaning for occupied buildings that cannot afford downtime or compliance gaps.

We clean and document commercial HVAC duct systems for offices, restaurants, schools, and hospitals with scheduling built around your facility operations, tenant needs, and air quality goals.

  • Typical project pricing ranges from $0.20 to $0.60 per square foot for standard commercial HVAC duct cleaning scopes.
  • Nights, weekends, and phased work plans are available for facilities that need to stay open during service.
  • Restaurant kitchen exhaust and grease duct cleaning are typically quoted separately because NFPA 96 requirements and grease loading are different from standard HVAC duct systems.
Where We Work

Commercial duct cleaning by facility type

Different buildings create different airflow, contamination, and scheduling demands. The scope is adjusted around the way your building actually operates.

Offices

Office buildings and mixed-use properties

Dust loading, renovation debris, tenant turnover, and inconsistent filter maintenance can all reduce airflow quality across open office floors, suites, and common areas.

Restaurants

Restaurants, cafeterias, and food service facilities

Restaurants often need two scopes: HVAC duct cleaning for dining and prep support areas, plus separate grease duct and kitchen exhaust cleaning requirements for cooking operations.

Schools

Schools, campuses, and education facilities

Schools need practical scheduling around class calendars, summer projects, and indoor air quality planning for classrooms, gyms, offices, and shared common spaces.

Hospitals

Hospitals, clinics, and healthcare environments

Healthcare sites need tighter infection-control coordination, access control, and documentation before work begins in patient care, treatment, and support areas.

Pricing

Typical commercial pricing starts with square footage, then moves with access, system complexity, and documentation needs.

For many standard commercial HVAC duct cleaning projects, budgeting usually lands between $0.20 and $0.60 per square foot. Final pricing depends on the actual system layout and the level of containment, access, and reporting your facility requires.

  • Large open office and retail footprints often price near the lower end when access is straightforward.
  • Multi-zone buildings, restricted mechanical rooms, and occupied facilities usually increase labor time and project cost.
  • Hospitals, labs, and high-sensitivity environments often require tighter containment and coordination, which should be quoted after a site review.
  • Restaurant kitchen exhaust and grease duct cleaning are commonly priced separately from standard HVAC duct cleaning because code scope and cleaning frequency differ.
NADCA

Why NADCA certification matters on commercial projects

NADCA matters because commercial cleaning should be a defined process, not a vague promise. Facility teams need a contractor who can explain scope, protect occupied spaces, and verify what was actually cleaned.

Recognized cleaning standard

NADCA members agree to clean according to ACR, the NADCA standard for HVAC system assessment, cleaning, and restoration. That gives owners and facility managers a common baseline for scope and documentation.

Certified specialist oversight

NADCA states that regular member companies keep at least one certified Air Systems Cleaning Specialist on staff at each location. That matters when your project involves occupied buildings, access constraints, and post-project reporting.

Verification and accountability

Commercial facility teams often need cleanliness verification, photos, and closeout records. NADCA guidance emphasizes inspection, visible cleanliness, and documentation rather than sales claims with no measurable standard behind them.

Compliance

Compliance requirements are facility-specific, but the common thread is documented maintenance, safe access, and code-aware cleaning methods.

Commercial duct cleaning is rarely just a cleaning issue. It intersects with indoor air quality programs, ventilation standards, fire safety rules, and infection control procedures depending on the building type.

General Commercial

Offices and standard commercial buildings

Owners and property managers usually need a contractor who can protect occupied areas, maintain access control, preserve system integrity, and provide documentation for building records. Ventilation and indoor air quality programs commonly reference ASHRAE 62.1 for ongoing building operation expectations.

Restaurants

Food service and commercial cooking operations

Restaurant HVAC cleaning is only part of the picture. Commercial cooking exhaust systems have separate fire protection obligations under NFPA 96, including inspection and cleaning schedules based on cooking volume and grease production.

Schools

K-12 schools and education facilities

EPA school indoor air quality guidance emphasizes preventive HVAC maintenance, inspection, and air cleaning practices that support healthy classrooms. For schools, scheduling and maintenance records are often as important as the cleaning scope itself.

Hospitals

Hospitals and healthcare environments

Healthcare work should be coordinated with facility engineering and infection control teams. CDC guidance notes that poor HVAC maintenance can contribute to airborne infection risks, and healthcare facilities often rely on ASHRAE healthcare ventilation standards for critical areas.

Requirements vary by jurisdiction and facility type. We treat commercial cleaning proposals as scope-specific documents, not generic promises. For regulated environments, final work plans should be reviewed against local code, your authority having jurisdiction, and your internal facility policies before work begins.
Process

How commercial projects are handled

1
Walkthrough and scope review

We review square footage, access points, system zones, occupancy restrictions, and any documentation or compliance requirements that affect the project.

2
Scheduling and containment planning

Work is organized around your operations. That may include after-hours cleaning, phased scheduling, access coordination, and containment for sensitive or occupied areas.

3
Cleaning and closeout documentation

We perform the cleaning scope, verify completion, and provide the photos or reporting your facility team needs for internal records and project closeout.

FAQ

Questions facility teams ask before booking

How is commercial duct cleaning priced?

A common budgeting range is $0.20 to $0.60 per square foot for standard commercial HVAC duct cleaning. Final pricing depends on system size, contamination, access, occupancy restrictions, and whether special documentation or containment is needed.

Is restaurant duct cleaning the same as hood cleaning?

No. Standard HVAC duct cleaning for dining or support areas is different from grease duct and kitchen exhaust cleaning. Restaurant cooking exhaust systems are generally handled under separate fire-code requirements and usually need their own quote.

Why should we hire a NADCA-certified company?

NADCA membership and ASCS-certified oversight help show that the contractor follows a recognized cleaning standard, maintains insurance, and can speak clearly about inspection, cleaning methods, and verification instead of selling a vague add-on service.

Can work be done after hours?

Yes. Offices, schools, healthcare sites, and restaurants often need nights, weekends, holidays, or phased scheduling to reduce disruption. We build the work plan around your occupancy and access requirements.

Do hospitals and clinics need extra coordination?

Yes. Healthcare projects usually require review with facility engineering and infection control teams before work starts. Sensitive ventilation zones, patient areas, and pressure relationships should never be approached like a basic office project.

What documentation do we receive?

That depends on project scope, but commercial clients commonly request site notes, before-and-after photos, scope confirmation, and closeout records for building files, compliance reviews, or internal maintenance tracking.

Schedule a Walkthrough

Get a commercial duct cleaning quote built for your facility, not a generic price sheet.

If you manage an office, restaurant, school, hospital, or multi-use property, we can review the building, define the scope, and provide a clear proposal with scheduling and documentation expectations upfront.

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