Fast, Reliable Air Duct Cleaning Across Reading
Professional air duct cleaning in Reading typically costs between $320 and $680 for a full residential system, with most jobs completed in a single visit. We serve Reading from our Allentown base, usually arriving within 45 minutes to an hour for scheduled appointments across the city. Our Air Duct Cleaning team knows the difference between a purpose-built suburban duct system and the retrofitted maze you’ll find in Reading’s rowhome blocks — and that knowledge changes how we clean, what equipment we bring, and what results you get.

Reading’s housing stock demands a different approach. The brick row homes lining Franklin Street, the 600 blocks of North 10th, and the tight alley-load streets off Penn Square weren’t designed for forced air. When central HVAC arrived in the 1970s and 1980s, installers threaded ductwork through coal chutes, floor cavities, and party-wall chases. Larry Peterson, our owner and lead technician, has spent 17 years developing protocols specifically for these non-standard configurations. We don’t guess. We inspect first, adapt our equipment, and clean what others miss.
Call (888) 398-0831 for a free estimate — we’ll ask the right questions about your home’s layout before we even schedule.
Why Sequoia Air Duct & Vent Cleaning Greater Allentown Is Reading’s Preferred Air Duct Cleaning Company
We’ve built our reputation on showing up personally and doing work that holds up to scrutiny. Larry Peterson doesn’t dispatch crews from an office — he’s the lead technician on your job, with 17 years of focused duct and indoor air quality experience behind him. That matters in Reading, where a standard brush-and-vacuum approach can actually make retrofitted systems worse by stirring up decades of trapped soot without proper containment.
Our numbers back the claim: 756 verified reviews averaging 4.8 stars across platforms. That’s not a handful of cherry-picked testimonials — it’s the accumulated feedback of hundreds of completed jobs, many in Berks County row homes and converted multifamily buildings. Property managers in the 19601 and 19602 ZIPs call us repeatedly because we document what we find, photograph before and after conditions, and don’t create liability by disturbing hazardous debris without HEPA containment.
Response time to Reading runs 45–60 minutes from our Allentown location. We schedule tighter in the city proper because we know parking constraints, alley access limitations, and the reality of working in homes where the front door opens directly onto a narrow sidewalk. We’ve cleaned ducts on Franklin Street, along Penn Avenue corridors, and in the converted commercial-loft spaces near the 500 block of Court Street. We know which blocks have rear access, which require street permits, and which buildings have original coal chases that complicate every duct run.
Our Air Duct Cleaning Services in Reading
Residential Duct Cleaning in Reading
Reading’s residential landscape splits between dense urban row homes and outer-ZIP ranch and split-level construction. In the 19601–19604 core, we encounter retrofitted ductwork snaking through coal-era brick chases, floor cavities, and between-unit party walls. Our residential protocol starts with video inspection to map these non-standard runs before we touch a brush. We deploy Rotobrush contact-vacuum systems with HEPA-rated Nikro vacuums and Abatement Technologies air scrubbers to contain the fine soot and iron oxide dust that standard equipment merely redistributes. A typical Reading row home runs $320–$520 for full supply and return cleaning, depending on access points and system complexity.
Commercial Duct Cleaning in Reading
Reading’s commercial buildings — the converted lofts near Penn Square, medical offices along 5th Street Highway, and retail spaces in the 19601 corridor — often share the same retrofit challenges as residential row homes, scaled up. We’ve cleaned duct systems in buildings where original 1920s ventilation shafts were repurposed for modern HVAC, creating debris traps that standard commercial protocols overlook. Our commercial pricing starts around $680 for smaller systems and scales based on square footage, access requirements, and whether video documentation is needed for insurance or lease compliance. Larry handles commercial estimates personally — no sales rep who’ll disappear after signing.
Supply Duct Cleaning in Reading
Supply ducts push conditioned air into your living spaces, and in Reading’s retrofitted systems, they’re often the most compromised. We’ve found supply runs in 19602 row homes threaded through original coal chutes with rusted galvanized sections shedding flakes directly into airflow. Our supply duct protocol uses contact vacuuming with brush agitation, followed by negative-pressure HEPA extraction. We seal access points with proper fittings, not duct tape that fails in Reading’s humid summer months. Supply-only cleaning in Reading typically runs $220–$380.
Return Duct Cleaning in Reading
Return ducts pull air back to your HVAC unit, and they’re the primary collection point for particulate matter — especially critical in Reading’s valley geography, where temperature inversions trap airborne debris at higher concentrations than surrounding hilltop communities. Return runs in converted row homes often incorporate original basement plenums or floor cavities that harbor decades of accumulated dust. Our return cleaning includes inspection of boot connections and plenum integrity, since leaks here draw unconditioned basement air and drive up energy bills. Return-only service in Reading ranges $180–$320.
Full System Cleaning
Full system cleaning integrates supply, return, trunk line, and plenum service with video inspection and post-clean verification. For Reading’s complex retrofitted systems, this is our recommended approach — partial cleaning of accessible runs while ignoring hidden chases and cavity ducts leaves the problem intact. Full system jobs in Reading’s row home core run $420–$680; outer-ZIP homes with conventional duct layouts typically fall in the $320–$520 range.

Video Inspection
We don’t clean what we haven’t seen. Our video inspection service uses push-camera systems to map duct interiors, identify damage, locate debris concentrations, and document conditions for property managers and homeowners. In Reading’s older neighborhoods, video inspection routinely reveals surprises: disconnected runs in party-wall chases, rusted galvanized sections, and debris accumulation in chases that standard access points don’t reach. Video inspection alone runs $120–$180; it’s included with full system cleaning at no additional charge.
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 Reading
We work with the equipment and control systems already in your home. Our service scope includes Honeywell and Aprilaire air quality components — humidifiers, dehumidistats, and media filters common in Reading’s HVAC conversions and upgrades. For remediation-grade cleaning and containment, we deploy Abatement Technologies HEPA air scrubbers and Guardsman containment protocols. We don’t show up with shop vacs and consumer-grade tools. The brands we name are the brands we use, and we stock common fittings and access hardware to avoid delays on Reading jobs where parking and access windows are already tight.
Common Air Duct Cleaning Problems We See in Reading Homes
- Coal-chase contamination in 19601–19604 row homes. Ductwork threaded through original coal-brick chases retains layered soot and iron oxide dust that rotary brushes alone stir into airborne suspension. Without HEPA containment and negative-pressure extraction, this debris resettles deeper in the system or blows into living spaces.
- Party-wall cross-contamination between attached units. Retrofitted duct runs in Reading’s row homes often share chase spaces with neighboring units. Gaps in chase sealing create pathways for odors, smoke, and debris migration. We inspect and document these connections; standard cleaning crews rarely look.
- Hidden debris in non-standard floor-cavity and closet runs. 1970s HVAC conversions in Reading frequently used floor joist cavities and closet chases as duct passages. These locations don’t appear on standard access plans and accumulate debris for decades without detection. Our video inspection locates them before cleaning begins.
- Humidity-driven mold in unsealed duct systems. Reading’s valley geography traps summer humidity higher than surrounding communities. Duct systems without proper sealing or vapor barriers develop recurring mold and mildew, especially in basement plenums and crawl space runs. Cleaning without addressing the moisture source is temporary at best.
Pricing for Air Duct Cleaning in Reading, PA
| Service | Typical Range in Reading |
|---|---|
| Residential full system cleaning (conventional duct layout) | $320 – $520 |
| Residential full system cleaning (retrofitted row home) | $420 – $680 |
| Supply duct cleaning only | $220 – $380 |
| Return duct cleaning only | $180 – $320 |
| Commercial duct cleaning (small system) | $680 – $1,200 |
| Video inspection (standalone) | $120 – $180 |
| Video inspection (with full system cleaning) | Included |
What moves you within these ranges? System accessibility, number of vents and returns, whether video inspection reveals hidden runs requiring additional access, and the condition of existing ductwork. Retrofitted row home systems in Reading’s 19601–19604 ZIPs almost always run toward the higher end — the complexity is real, and cutting corners on containment or access creates bigger problems. We provide exact quotes before beginning work; estimates are free and carry no obligation. Call (888) 398-0831 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Reading
Our service radius extends throughout Berks County and surrounding communities. We regularly work in Wyomissing for residential and commercial duct cleaning in the shopping corridor and residential neighborhoods off Penn Avenue; Shillington for post-war ranch and split-level homes with conventional duct layouts; Blandon for newer construction and rural properties on well water with humidifier-related duct issues; and Birdsboro for mixed-age housing along the Schuylkill River corridor. Same owner-led service, same equipment, same direct accountability — wherever you are in the Reading area.
Serving Reading, PA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Reading 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 Reading
Your home was built between roughly 1890 and 1945 for coal or oil boiler heat with radiator distribution, not forced air. When central HVAC was added in the 1970s or 1980s, installers had limited options for routing ductwork through finished walls and floors. Original coal chutes and boiler vent passages became the path of least resistance. The problem: these brick chases were never designed as clean air passages, and they retain decades of combustion residue, rust flakes, and fine soot that contaminates your airflow. Call (888) 398-0831 — we’ll inspect your specific configuration and quote exact containment and extraction protocols.
No — and it can make conditions worse. Standard rotary brush systems agitate debris without adequate containment, stirring up coal-era soot and iron oxide that then resettles deeper in chases or blows into living spaces. On a row home in the 600 block of Franklin Street (ZIP 19602), we opened a return grille to find ductwork threaded through a coal-brick chase, caked with rust flakes and fine soot. Our Rotobrush with HEPA containment and a Nikro vacuum extracted over 8 pounds of debris that the homeowner had been breathing for years. Brush-only cleaning would have redistributed that material. We don’t recommend it for Reading’s retrofitted systems.
Every 3–5 years for most Reading homes, but every 2–3 years if you have retrofitted ductwork in coal chases, visible mold history, or household members with allergies or respiratory conditions. Reading’s valley geography traps particulate matter and pushes summer humidity higher than surrounding hilltop communities — both factors accelerate debris accumulation and mold risk. Homes in the 19601 and 19602 ZIPs with unsealed basement plenums or crawl space runs may need more frequent inspection. Call (888) 398-0831 and we’ll assess your specific conditions.
Yes — and we consider it essential for pre-1940 housing stock. Our push-camera inspection maps duct interiors, identifies hidden runs in floor cavities and closet chases, locates rusted or disconnected sections, and documents conditions before any cleaning begins. In Reading’s row home blocks, video inspection routinely reveals configurations that change our equipment selection and containment strategy. It’s included with full system cleaning; standalone inspection runs $120–$180. Call to schedule.
Yes, significantly — if the cleaning addresses the full system including hidden chase runs. Standard surface cleaning of accessible vents misses the debris reservoirs in coal-era brick chases and floor cavities that define 19602 housing. Our HEPA-contained extraction protocol removes accumulated particulate at the source rather than redistributing it. For homes with allergy-sensitive occupants, we also assess Aprilaire and Honeywell filtration upgrades and duct sealing to prevent recontamination. Results vary by initial conditions, but we document before-and-after debris removal so you can see what came out. Call (888) 398-0831 for a free estimate.
Ready to see what’s actually in your ductwork? Call (888) 398-0831 for a free, no-obligation estimate. Larry Peterson serves as lead technician on every Reading job — the person who built this reputation is the person who shows up at your door, with 17 years of focused experience and professional-grade equipment that matches the complexity of your home.
Written by Larry Peterson, Owner at Sequoia Air Duct & Vent Cleaning Greater Allentown, serving Reading since 2007.