Fast, Reliable HVAC Cleaning Across Pasadena
HVAC cleaning in Pasadena typically runs $280–$650 for a full system service, with evaporator coil cleaning starting around $180–$340 and air handler cleaning ranging $220–$480 depending on accessibility and contamination level. We’re usually on-site in Pasadena within a day or two, and owner Richard Anderson personally leads every job — not a subcontractor you’ve never met.
We’ve been driving to Pasadena from our base in Bell for 14 years, and we know the difference between a home near the Rose Bowl with modern ductwork and a Bungalow Heaven Craftsman where 1960s retrofit flex duct is crumbling in a crawl space. Pasadena’s position at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains channels wildfire smoke and Santa Ana dust straight into neighborhoods year-round. After the January 2025 Eaton Fire burned through adjacent Altadena and into parts of Pasadena itself, thousands of local homeowners discovered toxic ash and fine combustion particulates had infiltrated duct systems even in houses that never saw flames. That’s not a sales pitch — it’s the geography of where you live. Call (833) 958-5022 for a free estimate.
Why Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service California Is Pasadena’s Preferred HVAC Cleaning Company
Richard Anderson shows up — not a crew you’ve never met. As owner and lead technician, he personally handles every HVAC cleaning job we do in Pasadena, from the historic districts around Orange Grove Boulevard to the hillside homes near Linda Vista. Fourteen years focused on one trade means he’s cleaned duct systems in 1920s bungalows, mid-century ranch houses, and new construction alike, and he knows what each era’s HVAC retrofit demands.
Our 4.9-star average across 364+ verified customer reviews wasn’t built on a handful of cherry-picked testimonials. It reflects consistent execution — showing up on time, using real professional equipment, and explaining what we found before we bill you. In Pasadena specifically, we’ve earned repeat calls from homeowners in ZIP codes 91182, 91184, 91185, and 91188 who initially hired us for post-Eaton Fire cleaning and now schedule annual maintenance.
Response time to Pasadena is typically next-day or within 48 hours, and we carry Rotobrush rotary brush systems and Nikro negative-air extraction equipment on every truck — the same tools commercial restoration contractors use, not a shop vac and a sales pitch. Our HVAC Cleaning team understands the local housing stock: pre-WWII Craftsman homes with gravity-furnace retrofits, hillside houses with exposed condensers catching mountain debris, and everything in between.
Our HVAC Cleaning Services in Pasadena
Evaporator Coil Cleaning
Pasadena’s summer highs hit 95–105°F routinely, and that extended AC season means your evaporator coil works harder and longer than coastal systems. A dirty coil can’t transfer heat efficiently — you’ll see higher bills, weak airflow, and eventually ice buildup that shuts the system down. In the humid crawl spaces common under Bungalow Heaven and Old Pasadena homes, we’ve found coils caked with a paste of dust, wildfire ash, and microbial growth that no homeowner filter could catch. Our process includes foaming cleaner, gentle brushing, and a protective coil treatment to slow regrowth in those moisture-prone environments. A typical evaporator coil cleaning in Pasadena runs $180–$340.
Air Handler Cleaning
The air handler is where your conditioned air gets pushed into the duct system — and where debris accumulates that never makes it to the filter. In Pasadena’s post-Eaton Fire environment, we’ve opened air handlers to find blower wheels coated with fine ash that had been recirculating for months. Older homes near the Arroyo Seco often have air handlers squeezed into closets or attic knee-walls that were never designed for HVAC equipment, making thorough cleaning difficult without the right tools and patience. Richard Anderson handles these tight-access jobs personally. Air handler cleaning in Pasadena typically costs $220–$480.
Blower Cleaning
A dirty blower wheel works harder, draws more amps, and moves less air. In Pasadena’s heavy-use cooling season, that inefficiency adds up fast. We remove and clean blower assemblies when accessible, or clean in-place using Rotobrush contact vacuuming with HEPA containment. Homes near the 210 Freeway corridor or Colorado Boulevard catch extra particulate load from traffic and construction dust, so blower cleaning here often reveals more buildup than inland LA County jobs. Expect $160–$290 for standalone blower cleaning.
Condenser Cleaning
Your outdoor condenser coil is Pasadena’s first line of defense against the particulate soup that settles out of mountain air. Santa Ana winds deposit fine desert dust; wildfire seasons layer ash; and the city’s mature tree canopy drops pollen and leaf debris. A clogged condenser can’t reject heat, so your system runs longer, harder, and hotter. We clean coils with foaming agent and low-pressure rinse — never high-pressure, which can flatten the delicate aluminum fins. Condenser cleaning in Pasadena runs $140–$260, with coil treatment available for an additional $45–$85 to protect against corrosion in our mixed urban-wildland environment.
Coil Treatment
After cleaning, we apply a protective coil treatment that inhibits microbial growth and slows particulate adhesion. In Pasadena’s climate — hot summers, occasional winter moisture, and year-round airborne debris — this treatment extends cleaning effectiveness by months. We use Guardsman-formulated treatments applied at proper dilution, not over-the-counter sprays. Coil treatment as an add-on runs $45–$85; as part of a full system service, it’s often bundled at reduced cost.
Heat Exchanger Cleaning
Gas furnace heat exchangers in older Pasadena homes — especially those original gravity-furnace systems retrofitted in the 1960s–70s — accumulate soot and corrosion products that affect combustion efficiency and safety. We inspect and clean heat exchangers using borescope cameras and rotary brushes, with full documentation of any cracks or deterioration found. This is critical maintenance in pre-WWII housing stock where the furnace may be original or a decades-old replacement. Heat exchanger cleaning and inspection in Pasadena costs $200–$380.
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 Pasadena
We maintain and clean systems running Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Guardsman components — brands we encounter regularly in Pasadena’s mix of historic homes and newer construction. Richard Anderson stocks common replacement parts and treatment chemicals on his truck, so most jobs don’t wait on a parts run. For specialized components in older systems — particularly the oddball blower assemblies and coil configurations found in 1960s–70s retrofits — we source through our network of LA County HVAC suppliers with turnaround typically under 48 hours. We’re not locked to one manufacturer; we service what you have, and we service it with equipment that matches the job’s demands.
Common HVAC Cleaning Problems We See in Pasadena Homes
- Flex duct hidden in crawl spaces tears during cleaning if fragility isn’t assessed first. Pasadena’s 1960s forced-air retrofits often used cheap flex duct routed through dirt-floored crawl spaces under Bungalow Heaven and Madison Heights homes. After 50–60 years, this material is brittle. We inspect with borescope before agitation — a step fly-by-night cleaners skip, then blame on “old ductwork.”
- Fiberglass liner in wall cavities sheds particulates when disturbed without negative-pressure containment. Many Pasadena Craftsman retrofits used fiberglass-lined ductboard in wall cavities never intended for HVAC. Without Nikro negative-air extraction, cleaning these systems releases fibers directly into living space. We contain before we clean.
- Legacy floor-register plenums in pre-WWII homes recirculate debris through gaps in retrofitted systems. Those original gravity-furnace floor-register plenums were often sealed over but left in place, with gaps where 1960s forced-air trunks were cobbled in. They’re still connected to the air stream, still holding decades of debris, and still contributing to indoor particulate load.
- Post-wildfire ash infiltration affects systems that never saw flame. The January 2025 Eaton Fire proved this: homes a mile from the burn perimeter showed measurable ash in ductwork and air handlers. Pasadena’s mountain-base geography channels this debris into neighborhoods year after year, not just during active fires.
Pricing for HVAC Cleaning in Pasadena, CA
Full HVAC system cleaning in Pasadena typically runs $280–$650 depending on system size, contamination level, and accessibility. Here’s how individual services break down:
- Evaporator coil cleaning: $180–$340
- Air handler cleaning: $220–$480
- Blower cleaning (standalone): $160–$290
- Condenser cleaning: $140–$260
- Coil treatment (add-on): $45–$85
- Heat exchanger cleaning/inspection: $200–$380
What moves you toward the higher end: post-wildfire contamination requiring HEPA containment and extended cleaning time; systems in tight crawl spaces or attic knee-walls; multiple returns needing individual access; or deteriorating flex duct requiring repair before safe cleaning. We assess before we quote — estimates are free, and Richard Anderson does the assessment himself, not a commission-driven salesperson. Call (833) 958-5022 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Pasadena
We regularly work in South Pasadena, San Marino, Altadena, and East Pasadena — the same mountain-foot geography, the same wildfire exposure, the same mix of historic housing stock and newer construction. If you’re in these areas and found this page searching Pasadena, we cover your ZIP code too. Call and we’ll confirm scheduling.
Serving Pasadena, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Pasadena 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 — HVAC Cleaning in Pasadena
Yes — fine combustion particulates and toxic ash travel miles on Santa Ana winds and infiltrate duct systems through intake vents, gaps, and normal air exchange. After the January 2025 Eaton Fire, we found measurable ash in Pasadena ducts more than a mile from the burn perimeter. Even without visible smoke damage, these particles recirculate through your HVAC system and degrade indoor air quality. Call (833) 958-5022 for a free assessment — we’ll show you what your system is holding.
Because 1960s-vintage flex duct in pre-WWII home retrofits has often become brittle after 50–60 years in dirt-floored crawl spaces, and aggressive cleaning tears it. We inspect with borescope first, then adjust technique — lower brush speed, reduced vacuum pressure, or recommendation for repair replacement before cleaning. This assessment step is standard on our Pasadena jobs; skipping it is how cheap operators create expensive problems. Call for an estimate and we’ll evaluate your specific duct condition.
Yes — the evaporator coil is a primary collection point for fine particulates that bypass filters, and in Pasadena’s post-fire environment, coils we’ve cleaned showed ash accumulation that had been recirculating for months. Clean coils also restore airflow and dehumidification capacity, critical in the moist crawl spaces common under historic Pasadena homes. We follow cleaning with coil treatment to inhibit microbial regrowth. Call (833) 958-5022 to schedule.
A gravity-furnace plenum is the large sheet-metal chamber beneath a floor register that distributed heat from pre-WWII gravity furnaces — no blower, just rising warm air. In Pasadena’s Bungalow Heaven and Old Pasadena districts, these were common until the 1960s–70s, when forced-air systems were retrofitted. Often the original plenum was bridged into the new system and never cleaned again. We regularly find these chambers holding half a century of debris, including post-2020 wildfire ash, still connected to your air supply through gaps in the retrofit. Call for an assessment if your home dates to this era.
Pasadena homeowners should schedule more frequently than coastal LA Basin cities — typically every 2–3 years versus 3–5 years for Santa Monica or Long Beach — due to concentrated particulate load from wildfire smoke, Santa Ana dust, and heavy summer AC use pulling greater air volume through the system. After significant wildfire events like the January 2025 Eaton Fire, we recommend inspection regardless of schedule. Call (833) 958-5022 and we’ll recommend timing based on your specific home and system age.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service California, serving Pasadena and Bell since 2011.