Fast, Reliable HVAC Cleaning Across Temple Hills
HVAC cleaning in Temple Hills typically runs $280–$650 for a complete system service, and most appointments are completed in a single visit. Our HVAC Cleaning team knows the 20748 and 20757 zip codes well — from the post-war ranchers along Brinkley Road to the split-levels near Temple Hills Shopping Center — and we usually arrive within 90 minutes of a scheduled call.

We’re not general HVAC contractors picking up side work. Robert Garcia, our owner, leads every HVAC cleaning job personally, bringing 14 years of focused indoor air quality experience and equipment that matches the challenge: Rotobrush and Nikro extraction systems, Abatement Technologies containment gear, and the patience to work through crawl spaces that haven’t been entered in decades. Temple Hills homeowners don’t need another company that treats duct cleaning as an upsell — they need someone who understands what 70-year-old fiberglass duct board does after five decades of Prince George’s County humidity.
Why Apex Air Duct Cleaning Maryland Is Temple Hills’s Preferred HVAC Cleaning Company
Temple Hills sits lower than much of the DC metro, and that elevation difference matters. The clay soils here trap ground moisture, pushing summer dew points into the mid-70s°F for weeks at a stretch. We’ve cleaned enough systems in the 20748 ranchers to know that standard brush methods can shred aged fiberglass duct board and make air quality worse, not better. That’s why Robert handles every job personally — 14 years, 254 reviews at 4.7 stars, and the judgment to know when negative-pressure cleaning is the only safe approach.
Our response time to Temple Hills averages under 90 minutes because we’re coming from Baltimore with direct routes down I-295 and MD-5. We’ve worked on Lynwood Drive, in the neighborhoods off Temple Hills Road, and throughout the older sections of Hillcrest Heights that share the same housing stock. Customers in Temple Hills mention the same thing in our reviews: Robert showed them what was actually wrong, explained why, and fixed it without pushing replacement when cleaning and sealing would do.
The equipment gap matters here. Low-bid competitors often show up with shop vacs and compressed air wands. We bring HEPA-filtered Rotobrush systems with negative-pressure containment — the difference between containing deteriorated fiberglass particulate and blowing it through your living room. For homes with Aprilaire or Honeywell air quality components, we service those in-place rather than treating them as disposable add-ons.
Our HVAC Cleaning Services in Temple Hills
Evaporator Coil Cleaning
In Temple Hills’s humid subtropical climate, evaporator coils become petri dishes. Dust combines with condensate in the mid-70s°F dew points common to Prince George’s County summers, and within a season you’ve got bio-growth recirculating through every vent. We remove the coil assembly when accessible, clean with foaming agents appropriate to your system’s age, and treat with Guardsman antimicrobial where indicated. A cleaned coil in Temple Hills can drop energy bills 15–20% simply by restoring proper heat exchange — critical when your system runs six months straight.
Blower Cleaning
The blower motor and squirrel cage in Temple Hills’s older systems are often caked with decades of accumulation. In 1960s split-levels with original ductwork, we’ve found blower wheels so fouled that airflow was reduced by 40% before the homeowner noticed anything wrong. Our process removes the blower assembly, cleans the housing and wheel with HEPA-contained extraction, and rebalances the assembly. Robert checks amp draw before and after — if the motor’s working harder than it should, that’s a failure waiting for the August humidity peak.
Condenser Cleaning
Temple Hills’s mature tree canopy — oaks and maples planted in the 1950s and 60s now towering over those ranchers — means condensers collect debris that suburban clear-cuts don’t face. We clean coils with low-pressure foaming agents (never high-pressure water that fin-folds aluminum), clear the concrete pad for drainage, and verify refrigerant pressures. A dirty condenser in July humidity makes the whole system fight itself.
Air Handler Cleaning
The air handler is where everything converges: return air, filtered or not; conditioned supply; drain pans that clog with algae in humid conditions. In Temple Hills’s 20748 zip code, we regularly find drain pans rusted through from decades of standing water, and cabinets with mold growth on interior surfaces from condensation. Our cleaning includes the full cabinet, drain line flushing with enzymatic treatment, and inspection of the heat exchanger for integrity. If the heat exchanger needs attention, we flag it — carbon monoxide doesn’t announce itself.

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 Temple Hills
We maintain active familiarity with Honeywell and Aprilaire air quality systems — common upgrades in Temple Hills homes where owners have tried to compensate for aging ductwork with better filtration. Our Rotobrush and Nikro equipment interfaces with these systems without disrupting factory calibration, and we stock replacement media and UV lamps for faster turnaround than ordering through regional distributors. For antimicrobial treatment after cleaning, we use Guardsman formulations rated for HVAC application, not the generic sprays some competitors apply. When your 1972 rancher’s system needs attention, you want someone who knows whether that Aprilaire 2400 can be cleaned in-place or needs removal — Robert makes that call on site.
Common HVAC Cleaning Problems We See in Temple Hills Homes
- Deteriorated fiberglass duct board shedding particulate. The 1950s–1970s ranchers dominating Temple Hills’s 20748 zip code frequently have original duct board that has softened from decades of interior condensation. Standard brush cleaning dislodges fibers and worsens air quality; we use negative-pressure HEPA containment to capture what’s loose without creating more.
- Crawlspace duct corrosion from clay-soil moisture. Ductwork in unvented crawl spaces over Prince George’s County clay corrodes at seams from below, leaking unconditioned air and drawing ground-level humidity. Cleaning alone won’t fix this — we identify compromised sections and seal with mastic before proceeding, or recommend repair when structural integrity is gone.
- Evaporator coil bio-growth recontaminating cleaned ducts. Temple Hills’s high-humidity climate means a dirty coil can re-seed mold into newly cleaned ductwork within weeks. We won’t clean ducts without addressing the coil — it’s incomplete work, and we don’t do incomplete work.
- Undersized returns choking modern HVAC loads. Original 1960s systems were designed for different cooling expectations. When Temple Hills homeowners upgrade to higher-SEER equipment without addressing returns, the system pulls harder through dirty ductwork, accelerating particulate distribution. Cleaning reveals these mismatches so they can be addressed.
Pricing for HVAC Cleaning in Temple Hills, MD
Complete HVAC cleaning in Temple Hills typically runs $280–$650, with most single-system rancher jobs falling in the $320–$480 range. Here’s how that breaks:
| Evaporator coil cleaning | $150–$280 |
| Blower cleaning and rebalancing | $120–$220 |
| Air handler cabinet and drain cleaning | $140–$260 |
| Condenser coil cleaning | $95–$175 |
| Full system (coil, blower, handler, condenser) | $280–$650 |
| Duct repair/sealing (when needed) | $180–$450 additional |
What moves the needle: system accessibility (crawl space work adds time), condition of existing ductwork (deteriorated fiberglass requires slower, contained cleaning), and whether coil treatment or sealant application is needed. Split-levels with multiple zones run higher than single-system ranchers. We provide exact quotes before starting — call (855) 301-6549 for a free estimate with no obligation to book.
We Also Serve Cities Near Temple Hills
Our service radius covers the full southern Prince George’s County corridor. We regularly work in Hillcrest Heights and Marlow Heights — neighborhoods sharing Temple Hills’s post-war housing stock and clay-soil moisture challenges — as well as Fort Washington and Silver Hill to the south. The same aging duct conditions, the same humidity loads, the same need for technician judgment rather than rote procedure.
Serving Temple Hills, MD — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Temple Hills 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 Temple Hills
Because standard brush cleaning on deteriorated fiberglass duct board often makes the problem worse, not better. The original duct board in Temple Hills’s 1950s–1970s homes softens from decades of interior condensation; aggressive brushing dislodges fibers that then stream through vents. We use negative-pressure HEPA containment to capture loose material without mechanical agitation, then seal compromised seams with mastic. Our crew cleaned a 1964 rancher on Lynwood Drive in 20748 where exactly this was happening — the previous company’s brush method had accelerated the shedding. Call (855) 301-6549 and we’ll assess whether your duct board can be safely cleaned or needs repair first.
We use portable Nikro negative-pressure units that fit where standard truck-mounted systems won’t, combined with flexible HEPA-contained hoses rather than rigid brush assemblies. The clay soils in Temple Hills’s low-lying areas keep crawl spaces damp year-round, and we’ve found corroded seams in virtually every 20748 rancher we’ve worked on. Robert inspects every accessible section before cleaning begins — cleaning leaking ductwork is wasted money, so we identify compromised areas and seal with mastic or recommend replacement when structural integrity is gone. The crawl space doesn’t get easier with age, but 14 years of doing this work means we’ve developed techniques that fit the space.
Our primary extraction systems are Rotobrush and Nikro, with Abatement Technologies HEPA containment to prevent cross-contamination during service. For antimicrobial treatment after cleaning, we use Guardsman formulations rated for HVAC application. These aren’t marketing names — they’re the tools that let us work safely in Temple Hills’s aging fiberglass duct systems where lesser equipment would cause damage. We match the equipment to the job; a 2023 install in Fort Washington gets different treatment than a 1962 rancher in Temple Hills.
Yes — in Temple Hills’s humidity, coil bio-growth is often invisible from the cabinet exterior and recontaminates cleaned ducts within weeks. The coil sits downstream of the filter but upstream of the supply plenum; any mold or bacterial colonization there distributes through the entire system. We remove and inspect the coil directly when access permits, and we’ve found substantial bio-film on coils that looked fine from the outside. Skipping this step in Prince George’s County’s mid-70s°F dew points is planning to redo the work.
Every 3–5 years for systems in good condition; every 2–3 years for homes with original ductwork, visible moisture issues, or occupants with respiratory sensitivity. Temple Hills’s combination of aging fiberglass ducts and high humidity creates conditions that accelerate particulate accumulation and bio-growth compared to drier or newer-construction markets. If you’re running the system six months a year and the ducts have never been cleaned, you’re past due. Call (855) 301-6549 for a free assessment — we’ll tell you honestly whether you’re a candidate for cleaning or if other priorities should come first.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Air Duct Cleaning Maryland, serving Temple Hills and the Baltimore-Washington corridor since 2010.