Fast, Reliable HVAC Cleaning Across College Park
HVAC cleaning in College Park, GA typically costs $280–$650 for a complete system cleaning and is usually completed in a single visit. For homes near Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the job often requires additional HEPA vacuuming passes to remove jet exhaust particulates that standard cleaning misses.

We’re Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia, and we’ve been pulling ductwork apart in College Park for two decades. Scott Gray, our owner and lead technician, knows the difference between a routine cleaning and what this city actually demands. College Park sits in the flight path of the world’s busiest airport, and that matters when we’re talking about what’s circulating through your vents. Whether you’re in a mid-century ranch off Main Street or running a hotel along Camp Creek Parkway, your system is dealing with contamination profiles we don’t see in East Point or Riverdale. Call us at (877) 565-7296 — we’ll give you a free estimate and show up with the owner, not a substitute.
Why Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia Is College Park’s Preferred HVAC Cleaning Company
Our HVAC Cleaning team has worked the full stretch of College Park — from the Historic College Park neighborhood’s 1950s ranches to the commercial corridors along Virginia Avenue and the airport hotel district. That range matters. We’ve cleaned original ductwork in bungalows built in the 1940s and serviced rooftop units on properties that never sleep.
433 neighbors have rated us 4.9 stars — the numbers speak for themselves. Many of those reviews come from repeat customers in the 30337 ZIP code who initially called because they noticed a dark film building up on their return vents. They stayed because Scott Gray showed up, identified the airport particulate issue, and cleaned it properly.
We’re located in Atlanta and typically reach College Park properties within 30–45 minutes. For commercial accounts near the airport terminals, that response time keeps occupancy disruptions minimal. We don’t dispatch from a call center — Scott coordinates directly with property managers and homeowners.
Two decades of crawlspace-level experience goes into every inspection. In College Park, that means knowing how Georgia humidity interacts with unconditioned attic ductwork, and how jet exhaust residue accelerates biofilm growth in ways that standard cleaning protocols miss.
Our HVAC Cleaning Services in College Park
Evaporator Coil Cleaning
The evaporator coil is where your system generates cold air — and where moisture condenses by design. In College Park’s older ranch homes, that coil often sits in an attic plenum with 140°F summer temperatures on one side and 55°F air on the other. The temperature differential drives heavy condensation, and when you add airport particulate matter drawn through compromised return ducts, you get a sticky, dark coating that standard foaming cleaners won’t touch. We remove the coil when accessible, clean with low-pressure foaming agents, and inspect the drain pan for biofilm. In properties near Camp Creek Parkway, we’ve found coils requiring two full cleaning cycles due to accumulated jet exhaust residue binding with Georgia pollen.
Blower Cleaning
Your blower motor and wheel push conditioned air through every room. When the wheel fins load up with dust and particulate, airflow drops, energy costs climb, and the motor strains. College Park’s airport-adjacent location means blower wheels here collect a distinctive dark, oily dust — kerosene combustion byproducts that standard household vacuums won’t extract. We remove the blower assembly, clean the wheel and housing with compressed air and contact methods, and balance the assembly on reinstallation. In a recent job on a Virginia Avenue commercial property, the blower wheel was so loaded with airport residue that static pressure had dropped 40% from design spec.
Condenser Cleaning
The outdoor condenser unit rejects heat to outside air — air that in College Park contains elevated fine particulate matter from jet operations. Condenser fins clog faster here than in inland metro Atlanta cities. We use foaming cleaners and low-pressure water to restore fin geometry without flattening the aluminum. For properties in the flight path near I-285, we recommend condenser cleaning as a standalone spring service, since the contamination load justifies more frequent attention than the standard annual recommendation.
Air Handler Cleaning
The air handler is the central station — coils, blower, filters, and controls in one cabinet. In College Park’s mid-century homes, original air handlers often sit in closet-sized mechanical rooms with minimal access, installed when ductwork was galvanized steel and cleaning wasn’t part of the maintenance vocabulary. We clean the full cabinet interior, replace deteriorated insulation if present, and inspect the heat exchanger for sooting or cracks. For properties in the Historic College Park district, we’ve found air handlers with 30+ years of accumulated debris, including the dark airport residue that signals this city’s unique contamination profile.
Coil Treatment
After deep cleaning, we apply EPA-registered coil treatments that inhibit microbial growth without releasing volatile compounds into occupied space. In College Park’s humid climate, this step is particularly valuable — the treatment buys time between cleanings by making the coil surface less hospitable to mold and biofilm. For homes with allergy sufferers or respiratory sensitivity, we specify treatments compatible with Honeywell and Aprilaire air quality systems we install.

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 College Park
We clean and service equipment from every major manufacturer, and we stock common replacement components for faster turnaround on College Park jobs. Our service vehicles carry filters, belts, and contactors for Carrier, Trane, Lennox, Goodman, and Rheem systems — the brands we see most often in the 30337 area’s residential and commercial installations. For air quality upgrades, we install Honeywell electronic air cleaners and Aprilaire media filters in-house, so you don’t need a second contractor to close the loop from dirty ducts to genuinely cleaner air. Our Nikro HEPA vacuums and Rotobrush contact-cleaning systems are the same equipment trusted in commercial remediation — not rental-grade tools.
Common HVAC Cleaning Problems We See in College Park Homes
- Collapsed flex duct in original ranch homes. Many College Park properties built in the 1950s–1960s have flex duct that has sagged, torn, or detached entirely. We find this routinely in attics over Main Street and Harvard Avenue — the ductwork was never designed for sixty years of thermal cycling, and the original mastic seals have turned to powder.
- Dark residue recirculating after inadequate cleaning. Companies that don’t recognize College Park’s airport particulate profile often complete a standard cleaning and leave jet exhaust residue behind. Within weeks, homeowners see dark streaking on supply registers. We use additional HEPA vacuuming passes and verify cleanliness with visual inspection.
- Moisture and mold in unconditioned attic plenums. Georgia’s humidity meets cold supply air in College Park’s common attic-mounted systems, creating condensation that wets insulation and drywall. When airport particulates bind with this moisture, the resulting biofilm grows faster and darker than typical household dust mold.
- Undersized returns in renovated properties. College Park’s older homes often have original return ductwork sized for heating-only systems. Additions and conversions strain these returns, pulling unfiltered air through wall cavities and amplifying any contamination load — including airport particulates that enter through envelope leaks.
Pricing for HVAC Cleaning in College Park, GA
| Service | Typical Range in College Park |
|---|---|
| Evaporator coil cleaning | $180–$340 |
| Blower assembly cleaning | $150–$280 |
| Condenser coil cleaning | $120–$220 |
| Air handler cabinet cleaning | $200–$380 |
| Full HVAC system cleaning (all components) | $480–$850 |
| Coil treatment application | $75–$150 |
College Park’s airport-adjacent location affects pricing on some jobs. Properties requiring additional HEPA passes for jet exhaust residue removal — typically those within two miles of the terminal complex — may fall at the higher end of these ranges. Commercial systems along Camp Creek Parkway and Virginia Avenue, with larger air handlers and extended duct runs, are quoted individually. We don’t estimate over the phone for commercial work; Scott Gray inspects in person. Residential estimates are free — call (877) 565-7296 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near College Park
Our service radius extends naturally from our Atlanta location to neighboring communities. We regularly work in Hapeville, where similar airport particulate issues appear; East Point, with its own stock of mid-century housing; Riverdale, where newer construction brings different ductwork challenges; and Union City, at the outer edge of our standard response zone. Each city gets the same owner-led service — Scott Gray doesn’t delegate to regional crews.
Serving College Park, GA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the College Park 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 College Park
Jet exhaust introduces fine particulate matter and kerosene combustion byproducts into outdoor air that your HVAC system draws through return vents and condenser intakes. In College Park, this creates a dark, oily residue that standard cleaning equipment often fails to fully extract, requiring additional HEPA vacuuming passes with commercial-grade systems like our Nikro units. Call (877) 565-7296 for a free inspection — we’ll show you exactly what’s in your ducts.
Yes — we clean ductwork and HVAC components in detached structures throughout College Park and surrounding areas, including properties with workshop HVAC systems and garage-mounted mini-splits. These systems often run independently and accumulate contamination faster due to less frequent filter changes and proximity to vehicle exhaust. We’ll quote these as standalone systems, typically in the $200–$450 range depending on component count.
We use Rotobrush contact-cleaning systems for duct interior surfaces, Nikro HEPA vacuums for particulate extraction, and Abatement Technologies air scrubbers for job-site air quality control during cleaning. For coil treatment and air quality upgrades, we specify Honeywell and Aprilaire products installed in-house. This is the same equipment roster we deploy on commercial remediation jobs — not consumer-grade alternatives.
The dark residue is almost certainly unremoved jet exhaust particulate — a contamination profile unique to airport-adjacent areas like College Park that generalist cleaners don’t recognize or don’t have the equipment to address. Standard rotary brushes and shop-vac suction won’t extract these fine, oily particles; they require HEPA-sealed extraction systems and additional contact-cleaning passes. We see this failure mode regularly in College Park homes that had “clean” ducts six months prior. Call (877) 565-7296 — we’ll assess what remains and quote proper remediation.
For College Park homes, we recommend every 2–3 years for standard residential systems, and annually for properties within two miles of the airport terminals or with allergy-sensitive occupants. Commercial systems along Camp Creek Parkway and Virginia Avenue, running near-continuous occupancy, benefit from semi-annual service. The airport particulate load accelerates accumulation beyond what NADCA’s general 3–5 year guideline suggests for inland markets. Call (877) 565-7296 — we’ll evaluate your specific exposure and system load.
On a recent job in the Historic College Park neighborhood, we cleaned an original 1950s duct system in a ranch home near Main Street. The supply ducts were coated with a fine dark residue from jet exhaust, requiring additional HEPA vacuum passes with our Rotobrush system to remove the contamination. The homeowner had lived there fifteen years and never understood why her vents kept staining the wallpaper — until Scott Gray showed her the extraction filter.
Ready to see what’s actually in your College Park HVAC system? Call (877) 565-7296 for a free estimate. Scott Gray, our owner and lead technician, will inspect your system personally — no substitutes, no call-center dispatch. From dirty ducts to repaired, sealed, and sanitized, we handle the full scope.
Written by Scott Gray, Owner at Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia, serving College Park since 2004.