Fast, Reliable Air Duct Cleaning Across Santa Fe
Air duct cleaning in Santa Fe, TX typically runs $350–$650 for a full residential system and $500–$1,200 for commercial properties, with most jobs completed in a single visit. We’re usually on-site in Santa Fe within 45 minutes of a call, whether you’re off FM 646 near the Highway 6 intersection or in the 77517 ZIP code closer to Dickinson. Our Air Duct Cleaning team knows the difference between ordinary Gulf Coast dust and the petroleum-based residue that settles in Santa Fe ductwork from the nearby Texas City industrial corridor.

Santa Fe’s ranch-style homes from the 1970s through the 1990s, plus the manufactured homes on larger semi-rural lots throughout 77510 and 77517, present ductwork challenges you won’t find in newer suburban developments. We’ve spent eight years learning those differences.
Why Summit Air Duct Cleaning Service Texas Is Santa Fe’s Preferred Air Duct Cleaning Company
Michael Brown shows up and does the work. That’s not a slogan—it’s how we operate. When you book a duct cleaning in Santa Fe, you’re getting the owner as your lead technician, not a subcontracted crew learning your system on the fly. Eight years focused on one trade means we’ve cleaned ductwork in the exact housing stock that dominates Santa Fe: post-Hurricane Ike rebuilds with hastily patched flex runs, original 1980s ranch duct systems with decades of grime, and manufactured homes where loose connections leak conditioned air into attics.
Our 4.9-star average across 775 verified customer reviews reflects repeatable results, not cherry-picked testimonials. Santa Fe homeowners specifically mention the visible difference in what we pull from their systems—the dark, oily film coating return filters along FM 646 and Highway 6 corridors, the industrial particulate fallout that standard HVAC maintenance never addresses. Equipment built for this job: Rotobrush and Nikro systems, the same tools commercial restoration contractors use, not consumer-grade shop vacs that redistribute fine particulates through your vents.
Response time matters when you’re dealing with active mold colonization from Gulf humidity or petroleum residue cycling through every supply register. We keep our fleet routed to cover Galveston County efficiently, and Santa Fe’s position between Dickinson and Texas City puts you within our standard service window.
Our Air Duct Cleaning Services in Santa Fe
Residential Duct Cleaning in Santa Fe
Santa Fe’s housing stock—heavily weighted toward 1970s–1990s ranch homes and manufactured housing on larger lots—means we see a lot of original duct runs and post-Ike patch jobs. A typical residential duct cleaning in Santa Fe runs $350–$550 for a standard single-system home, scaling to $650 for larger properties or systems with extensive contamination. We clean every supply and return register, the main trunk lines, and the plenum connections where petroleum-based residue tends to concentrate.
Commercial Duct Cleaning in Santa Fe
Commercial properties near the Highway 6 corridor and FM 646 face amplified versions of the same industrial contamination residential customers see. Office buildings, retail spaces, and light industrial facilities in Santa Fe typically range $500–$1,200 depending on system complexity and square footage. We schedule around your operations, and Michael Brown personally assesses each commercial job to determine whether standard brush cleaning or chemical degreasing is necessary for petroleum-heavy buildup.
Supply Duct Cleaning
Supply ducts push conditioned air into your living spaces—which means any contamination here reaches you directly. In Santa Fe, supply runs often carry fine particulates from the Texas City refinery complex that standard filters miss. Our supply duct cleaning uses Rotobrush contact cleaning with HEPA-contained extraction, not blow-and-go methods that push debris deeper. We inspect each run with video equipment before and after so you see what was actually removed.
Return Duct Cleaning
Return ducts are where Santa Fe’s unique problems reveal themselves most clearly. The dark, oily film our technicians pull from return filters along FM 646? That’s concentrated in the return trunk and plenum. Return duct cleaning here isn’t just about dust—it’s about removing petroleum-based residue and sulfur compounds that standard household cleaning can’t touch. We often find this residue has bonded to flex-duct lining, requiring more aggressive cleaning protocols than inland jobs demand.
Full System Cleaning
Clean ducts to sealed ducts to healthier air—that’s the pathway we walk with Santa Fe customers. A full system cleaning covers supply and return ductwork, the air handler cabinet, blower assembly, and evaporator coil. In Santa Fe’s near-constant AC environment (9–10 months of operation typical), the coil and blower collect the same industrial residue as your ducts. Full system cleaning runs $550–$850 for most Santa Fe homes and includes video documentation of every major component.
Video Inspection
Before we quote any Santa Fe job, we run a video inspection. This isn’t upsell—it’s diagnosis. We’ve found post-Ike flex duct with standing water from condensation, disconnected runs blowing conditioned air into attics, and petroleum residue coating duct interiors that homeowners assumed was mold. Video inspection lets us show you exactly what’s happening inside your system and quote accurately. The inspection itself runs $150–$250, credited toward your cleaning if you proceed.
What happens when you call
- 1
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 Santa Fe
We stock and service Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Guardsman products on every Santa Fe job—brands that hold up to the industrial particulate load this area throws at them. Honeywell electronic air cleaners are particularly effective for the petroleum-based fallout we see near the refinery corridor; we install them regularly for Santa Fe customers who’ve had their ductwork cleaned and want to keep it that way. Parts availability means faster turnaround when your system needs more than cleaning—duct repair, sealing, or component replacement happens without waiting on Houston distribution centers.
Common Air Duct Cleaning Problems We See in Santa Fe Homes
- Petrochemical fallout coating duct interiors. The Texas City refinery complex produces petroleum-based particulates and sulfur compounds that standard brush cleaning can’t fully remove. We use chemical degreasing agents and high-pressure air washing to break down this oily residue before extraction.
- Post-Hurricane Ike flex duct with mismatched connections. The 2008 rebuilds throughout 77510 and 77517 often used whatever materials were available, resulting in loose connections that leak conditioned air and allow humid Gulf air to enter. Hidden mold colonies form inside duct lining where condensation accumulates.
- Chronic mold from Gulf Coast humidity. With humidity regularly above 80–90% and AC systems running 9–10 months annually, Santa Fe ductwork stays in condensation conditions that accelerate mold at joints and inside insulated flex duct. This isn’t a water damage problem—it’s a climate problem.
- Dark, oily return filters misidentified as normal dust. Homeowners along FM 646 and Highway 6 routinely replace filters more frequently, thinking their system is dirty, when the real issue is industrial particulate load that duct cleaning and upgraded filtration can address.
Pricing for Air Duct Cleaning in Santa Fe, TX
| Service | Typical Range in Santa Fe |
|---|---|
| Residential duct cleaning (standard system) | $350–$550 |
| Residential duct cleaning (large home/multiple systems) | $550–$650 |
| Commercial duct cleaning | $500–$1,200 |
| Full system cleaning (ducts + HVAC components) | $550–$850 |
| Video inspection | $150–$250 (credited toward cleaning) |
| Dryer vent cleaning (add-on) | $125–$175 |
What moves you within these ranges? System size, contamination level, and accessibility. A 1980s ranch with original metal ductwork and light dust falls at the lower end. A manufactured home with post-Ike flex duct, petroleum residue buildup, and hidden mold requires more time, specialized cleaning agents, and HEPA-contained extraction. We don’t guess—we video inspect first, then quote. Estimates are free. Call (844) 886-2161.
We Also Serve Cities Near Santa Fe
Our service radius covers Dickinson, Hitchcock, Alvin, and League City with the same owner-led response. Dickinson and Hitchcock share Santa Fe’s refinery-corridor exposure; Alvin and League City see similar Gulf humidity patterns with their own local housing characteristics. Wherever you are in Galveston County, you’re getting Michael Brown on your job, not a dispatched crew.
Serving Santa Fe, TX — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Santa Fe 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 — Air Duct Cleaning in Santa Fe
Yes—prevailing Gulf southerlies push refinery emissions inland toward Galveston County residential areas, and your HVAC system pulls that air through return vents, concentrates it in ductwork, and distributes it through supply registers. In a 1980s ranch-style home off FM 646, our crew found the entire flex-duct system coated in a tacky, black residue—not mold, but petrochemical fallout from the nearby refineries. We used Rotobrush equipment with HEPA filtration to scrub each supply and return run, then installed Honeywell electronic air cleaners to trap future industrial particulates. The homeowner was shocked to see the difference in air quality within hours. Call (844) 886-2161 if you’re seeing dark residue on filters or registers.
Post-2008 repairs often used mismatched flex duct and loose connections that leak conditioned air and allow condensation, leading to hidden mold colonies inside duct lining even 15+ years later. We find this regularly in Santa Fe’s 77510 and 77517 ZIP codes. A video inspection reveals whether your Ike-era ductwork is holding up or needs attention. Estimates are free—call (844) 886-2161.
Probably not mold—technicians working homes along FM 646 and Highway 6 frequently pull return-air filters coated with a dark, oily film that’s petroleum-based particulate fallout from the Texas City refinery complex, not biological growth. Homeowners routinely misattribute this to a dirty furnace or shedding insulation. The film feels slightly greasy and smudges rather than crumbling like typical dust. If this matches what you’re seeing, your ducts need cleaning and your filtration needs upgrading. Call (844) 886-2161 for a filter and duct assessment.
Every 2–3 years for standard maintenance, but annually if you’re within direct refinery plume exposure along FM 646 or Highway 6 corridors, or if anyone in your household has respiratory sensitivity. The petroleum-based particulate load here exceeds what inland duct systems collect, and standard 1-inch filters don’t capture fine industrial emissions effectively. We recommend pairing cleaning with upgraded filtration for Santa Fe’s specific conditions. Call (844) 886-2161 to schedule.
Yes—manufactured homes are a significant portion of Santa Fe’s housing stock, and their duct systems present specific challenges: thinner flex duct, tighter crawl spaces, and often original installations with minimal sealing. We’ve cleaned hundreds of these systems in Galveston County. The process adapts to your access points and duct configuration. Call (844) 886-2161 for an estimate tailored to your manufactured home.
Ready to see what’s actually in your Santa Fe ductwork? Call Summit Air Duct Cleaning Service Texas at (844) 886-2161 for a free estimate. Michael Brown will show up, run a video inspection, and quote you accurately—no pressure, no surprises, just eight years of focused duct and HVAC expertise applied to your specific system.
Written by Michael Brown, Owner at Summit Air Duct Cleaning Service Texas, serving Santa Fe and Houston-area communities since 2016.