Homeowners want to know whether duct cleaning actually improves air quality, what the NADCA source removal standard means, and how to tell if their ducts genuinely need cleaning versus a contractor selling an unnecessary service. A website that explains contamination indicators and the cleaning process earns the legitimate call. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Duct Cleaning in KC

Web Design for HVAC Air Duct Cleaning Companies in Kansas City

HVAC air duct cleaning customers are homeowners who just moved into a house with unknown duct history, are dealing with visible mold growth on supply registers, had a rodent infestation in the home, completed a renovation that generated significant dust, or have household members with allergies or asthma and are evaluating every possible air quality improvement. The central education is what duct cleaning can and cannot do — and the NADCA (National Air Duct Cleaners Association) source removal standard: NADCA ACR 2021 defines acceptable duct cleaning as the removal of visible contamination from all system components including supply and return plenums, all duct branches, coil surfaces, drain pans, and blower compartments — not just blowing air through the main trunk. The EPA does not recommend routine duct cleaning for dust accumulation alone — normal dust in ducts does not enter the airstream in significant quantity because it adheres to duct surfaces. When cleaning is warranted: visible mold growth inside the ductwork or on HVAC components; ducts infested with rodents or insects (nesting material, droppings, carcasses); ducts substantially clogged with debris after renovation or construction; and after flooding events where ductwork was submerged. Equipment required for legitimate source removal: truck-mounted or portable negative air machine (minimum 6,000 CFM) that places the system under negative pressure so dislodged debris is pulled to the vacuum rather than into the living space; contact vacuum cleaning tools for supply and return branches; rotary brushes for heavy debris. Flex duct: flexible duct with inner liner folds traps debris and is difficult to clean without damaging the liner — if flex duct is heavily contaminated, replacement is often better than cleaning. Duct sealing opportunity: during cleaning, duct leakage at joints and connections is visible — mastic or metallic tape sealing of leaks found during cleaning improves system efficiency and prevents future contamination entry at the leakage point. A duct cleaning website that explains when cleaning is genuinely warranted, what the NADCA source removal standard requires, and why a $99 special does not accomplish what a proper cleaning does earns the homeowner who wants honest guidance rather than a sales call.

What homeowners research before hiring a duct cleaning company

  • When cleaning is warranted — mold, rodents, renovation debris, flooding vs. normal dust accumulation
  • NADCA source removal standard — what complete system cleaning includes, not just trunk blowout
  • Equipment requirements — negative air machine CFM, contact vacuum tools, why truck mount matters
  • Flex duct cleaning limits — inner liner damage risk, when replacement is better than cleaning
  • Duct sealing — finding and sealing leaks during cleaning, efficiency improvement, future contamination prevention

What your duct cleaning website would include

  • When to clean section — mold, rodents, renovation, flooding — with what normal dust does and doesn't do
  • NADCA standard explainer — full system component list, negative pressure requirement, contact cleaning tools
  • Equipment section — negative air machine spec, why low-bid companies skip contact cleaning tools
  • Flex duct section — liner damage risk, cleaning vs. replacement decision, how to identify problematic flex
  • Duct sealing add-on — mastic vs. metallic tape, leakage cost, combining sealing with cleaning visit
  • Quote form with home age, recent renovation or infestation, visible mold or odor issues, flex or rigid duct

What clients say

“The hardest thing about this industry is that $99 specials have trained customers to think duct cleaning is cheap and all the same. The website section on what the NADCA source removal standard actually requires — the negative air machine, every branch, every component — changed the kind of customers who called. The ones who read it arrived understanding why a legitimate cleaning costs what it costs. The section on when cleaning is not even warranted also built trust — customers appreciated that I was honest about what dust alone does not require.”

— M. Koonce, HVAC duct cleaning, Kansas City, MO

Simple pricing

A duct cleaning site with when-to-clean guide, NADCA standard explainer, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with equipment section, flex duct guide, and duct sealing content is $425–$750. One full system cleaning covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

Ready to get started?

Get a free mockup — no obligation. Fill out the form below, or give me a call.

(816) 520-5652