Fast, Reliable HVAC Cleaning Across San Francisco
HVAC cleaning in San Francisco typically runs $280–$650 for a full system service and is usually completed in a single visit, though fog-belt properties in the Outer Sunset or Outer Richmond often need additional coil treatment for moisture damage. We’re Brian Rivera’s team at Northstar Air Duct Cleaning Service San Francisco, and our HVAC Cleaning crew handles every job personally — owner on-site, commercial-grade equipment in hand. From the Victorian flats of Noe Valley to the postwar tract homes off Irving Street, we know which San Francisco neighborhoods harbor mold in their ducts and which ones just need a thorough dust clearing. Call (855) 908-0725 for a free estimate.

Why Northstar Air Duct Cleaning Service San Francisco Is San Francisco’s Preferred HVAC Cleaning Company
We’ve spent 14 years focused on one trade: the air moving through your home. That specialization matters in San Francisco, where a generalist HVAC contractor might treat your ductwork like any other Bay Area system — and miss the mold blooming in your fog-saturated liners.
Our track record is documented, not decorated. 1,209 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars. That’s not a marketing number — it’s a performance record across real jobs in real San Francisco homes, from Chinatown walk-ups to Visitacion Valley bungalows. Brian Rivera — owner and lead technician — handles your job personally, not dispatched labor learning on your clock.
We respond to San Francisco calls same-day or next-day because we’re already here, not routing trucks from San Jose or Oakland. And we bring professional-grade Rotobrush and Nikro equipment, the same tools used in commercial remediation, not the lightweight gear a generalist keeps in a side van for upsell purposes.
Our HVAC Cleaning Services in San Francisco
Evaporator Coil Cleaning
Evaporator coils in San Francisco’s rare residential AC systems — mostly found in newer Mission District condos or tech-renovated Pacific Heights properties — collect a unique blend of coastal salt particulate and urban particulate matter that inland markets don’t see. We clean these coils with pressurized foaming agents and soft-bristle agitation, then apply a Guardsman-grade protective treatment that resists the corrosion acceleration common within three miles of the Pacific. Typical cost in San Francisco: $180–$320.
Blower Cleaning
The blower assembly is where your system’s airflow either lives or dies. In San Francisco’s heating-only homes — which is most of them — blowers sit dormant from May through October, giving dust and moisture a half-year head start. We remove the housing, clean the squirrel cage and motor housing with HEPA-contained vacuum extraction, and verify amp draw before reassembly. A blower cleaning in San Francisco runs $150–$260, with older systems in pre-war Nob Hill flats sometimes needing additional labor for seized hardware.
Condenser Cleaning
Condenser units in San Francisco are rarer than in virtually any other major U.S. city, given the mild climate. Where they do exist — typically in newer construction south of Market or in commercial buildings along the Embarcadero — they face salt-air corrosion and windblown debris from the Bay. We clean coils with foaming degreaser, straighten damaged fins with precision combs, and check refrigerant levels. Expect $200–$380 for condenser service in San Francisco, with coastal properties needing more frequent treatment cycles.
Air Handler Cleaning
Air handlers in San Francisco’s retrofitted older buildings are often squeezed into crawl spaces, closets, or former coal chutes never designed for mechanical equipment. Brian Rivera has cleaned handlers in converted attics in the Richmond where access requires removing a roof hatch, and in basement mechanical rooms in the Mission where flooding history left corrosion on the cabinet. We clean the full cabinet interior, drain pan, and filter rack, then treat with antimicrobial where moisture staining appears. San Francisco air handler cleaning: $240–$420 depending on access difficulty.
Heat Exchanger Cleaning
Heat exchangers in San Francisco’s heating-only systems work hard six months a year and then sit, making soot and corrosion inspection critical. We use borescope cameras to inspect exchanger cells for cracks or rust-through — a safety issue we flag immediately — and clean combustion deposits with compressed air and soft brushes. This service runs $200–$350 in San Francisco, with older floor furnaces in Victorian flats sometimes requiring additional disassembly time.
Coil Treatment
Here’s where San Francisco’s climate demands something extra. Our coil treatment service applies EPA-registered antimicrobial solutions — we use Honeywell and Aprilaire formulations — directly to evaporator and heat exchanger surfaces to inhibit mold recurrence. In the Outer Sunset and Outer Richmond, where marine fog keeps humidity above 70% even in September, this isn’t optional maintenance. It’s structural protection. Coil treatment as a standalone service runs $120–$200; bundled with full HVAC cleaning, it’s typically $80–$140 additional.

What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
- 2
You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
- 3
A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
- 4
You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in San Francisco
We don’t show up with a shop vac and good intentions. Our San Francisco jobs run on Rotobrush agitation systems for duct interior contact cleaning, Nikro HEPA vacuum equipment for contained debris extraction, and Abatement Technologies negative air machines when mold remediation protocols apply. For sanitizing and coil treatment, we deploy Honeywell and Aprilaire antimicrobial formulations — the same products specified in commercial IAQ contracts. We stock treatment chemicals and replacement filters locally, so San Francisco customers aren’t waiting on shipping for follow-up needs. That matters when you’re managing a multi-unit building in the Mission District and need consistent documentation for property management records.
Common HVAC Cleaning Problems We See in San Francisco Homes
- Mold growth on duct liners from persistent marine fog. In the Outer Sunset and Outer Richmond, we regularly pull inspection cameras through ductwork and find black or green biological staining on interior fiberglass liners. The fog layer keeps relative humidity high year-round, and without a cooling cycle to dehumidify, heating-only systems trap that moisture for months.
- Corrosion of galvanized sheet metal in retrofitted ducts. San Francisco’s pre-1940 housing stock wasn’t built for forced air, so contractors in the 1970s and 1980s routed galvanized ducting through balloon-frame walls and crawl spaces with no vapor barriers. The dampness attacks the zinc coating first, then the steel underneath. We document corrosion severity during cleaning and flag sections needing replacement before they leak conditioned air into wall cavities.
- Restricted airflow from biological debris in dormant systems. Ducts that sit unused from April through October collect more than dust — they collect spores, pollen, and in coastal neighborhoods, salt particulate that clings to damp surfaces. The first heating cycle in November often releases a musty blast that sends San Francisco homeowners searching for answers. We see this pattern every fall in the Richmond and Sunset.
- Non-standard access in converted Victorian flats. Original floor furnaces, wall heaters, and radiant systems in the Mission and Noe Valley mean HVAC equipment was often installed as an afterthought. We encounter handlers in former closets, ductwork routed through decorative crown molding spaces, and access panels that require creative problem-solving — experience that matters when you’re paying for the technician’s time, not their learning curve.
Pricing for HVAC Cleaning in San Francisco, CA
| Service | Typical Range in San Francisco |
|---|---|
| Basic blower cleaning | $150 – $260 |
| Evaporator coil cleaning | $180 – $320 |
| Condenser cleaning | $200 – $380 |
| Air handler cleaning | $240 – $420 |
| Heat exchanger cleaning | $200 – $350 |
| Coil treatment (antimicrobial) | $120 – $200 standalone; $80 – $140 bundled |
| Full system HVAC cleaning | $280 – $650 |
What moves you within these ranges? Access difficulty is the big one — a handler in a standard garage closet takes less time than one in a converted attic on Cabrillo Street. Mold remediation adds steps: HEPA containment, antimicrobial application, post-treatment verification. And San Francisco’s parking realities affect us too — truck access in the dense Mission District or steep grades in Noe Valley add logistical time we account for upfront, not as surprise line items. We provide exact quotes before starting any work. Estimates are free. Call (855) 908-0725.
We Also Serve Cities Near San Francisco
Our service radius covers the full San Francisco peninsula and immediate neighborhoods including the Mission District, Noe Valley, Chinatown, and Visitacion Valley. Whether you’re managing a multi-unit building off Valencia Street or a single-family home near McLaren Park, Brian Rivera handles the job directly with the same equipment and attention we bring to every call.
Serving San Francisco, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the San Francisco 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 San Francisco
The Outer Sunset sits directly in San Francisco’s marine fog belt, where Pacific moisture rolls in daily and keeps relative humidity above 70% even during dry summer months; Noe Valley, shielded by Twin Peaks and the Bernal Heights ridgeline, stays noticeably drier and sunnier. That persistent dampness in western neighborhoods infiltrates heating-only duct systems that lack the dehumidifying cycle of air conditioning, allowing mold to colonize fiberglass liners and sheet metal seams. We treat this with antimicrobial coil treatment and recommend more frequent inspection intervals for fog-belt properties — call (855) 908-0725 to schedule.
Yes, retrofitted ductwork is cleanable, though it requires more care than original system design because non-standard routing through balloon-frame walls creates corners and sag points where debris accumulates. We’ve cleaned retrofitted systems throughout the Richmond and Mission where contractors in the 1980s threaded flexible duct through spaces never intended for airflow, and our Rotobrush equipment navigates these irregular runs while our inspection cameras verify complete contact. The key is technician experience with San Francisco’s specific housing stock — something Brian Rivera brings to every job personally.
No, and most San Francisco homes don’t have it anyway; we use controlled airflow and, in fog-belt properties, apply EPA-registered antimicrobial treatments that inhibit mold without requiring mechanical dehumidification. In the rare case where a property has both heating and cooling, we may recommend running the system briefly to circulate treated air, but this is situational, not standard. For the typical Outer Sunset or Richmond home with heating-only equipment, our coil treatment provides the moisture protection that AC would otherwise supply. Call (855) 908-0725 for specifics on your system type.
Homes in the Outer Sunset, Outer Richmond, and other fog-exposed neighborhoods should have ducts inspected every two to three years and cleaned every three to five years, with coil treatment applied at each cleaning interval; drier eastern neighborhoods like Noe Valley or Potrero Hill can typically extend to five-year cleaning cycles if no moisture issues appear. These intervals assume no major triggers — renovation dust, pest intrusion, or visible mold events — which would accelerate the timeline. We document conditions during each visit so San Francisco customers have photographic baselines for comparison.
We clean with Rotobrush agitation systems and Nikro HEPA vacuum equipment, deploy Abatement Technologies negative air machines for mold remediation protocols, and treat coils with Honeywell and Aprilaire antimicrobial formulations — all professional-grade tools, not the consumer-level equipment some generalists substitute. Brian Rivera selects the specific configuration for each San Francisco job based on duct material, contamination type, and access constraints. Want to know what we’d use in your specific building? Call (855) 908-0725 for a free assessment.
Ready to Breathe Cleaner Air in San Francisco?
Your ductwork has been collecting whatever San Francisco’s climate and your neighborhood’s specific conditions throw at it — fog moisture in the Sunset, renovation dust in the Mission, decades of accumulated debris in a retrofitted Victorian. We’re not going to tell you it “impacts your family’s health” in vague terms. We’re going to show you what’s in there, remove it with equipment that earns its keep, and leave you with documentation you can verify. Brian Rivera handles every job personally. 14 years. 1,200+ verified reviews. 4.9 stars. That’s the accountability we bring to your door.
Call (855) 908-0725 for a free estimate. We’ll give you an exact quote, explain what your specific San Francisco property needs, and schedule service when it works for you — no pressure, no dispatch roulette, just the owner on-site with the right tools.
Written by Brian Rivera, Owner at Northstar Air Duct Cleaning Service San Francisco, serving San Francisco since 2010.