Carrier Air Duct Cleaning in Tyrone, GA | Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia
Carrier air duct cleaning in Tyrone typically runs $300–$650 for a complete system, and we usually schedule within 24–48 hours. We’re Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia — an independent, owner-operated company, not a Carrier-authorized dealer — and we’ve completed over 300 our Carrier services specifically in Tyrone’s 1990s-era subdivisions. Scott Gray, our owner and lead technician, handles every job personally. Call (877) 565-7296 for a free estimate.

Why Tyrone Residents Choose Us for Carrier Service
Scott Gray has been crawling through attics and chasing ductwork leaks in Georgia homes for over 20 years, and most of his customers in the Decatur area know him by first name before the job is done. He got his start in HVAC fundamentals at Georgia Piedmont Technical College, where a hands-on instructor convinced him that the air inside a house tells you everything you need to know about how well it’s being maintained. That same philosophy drives how we approach every Carrier system in Tyrone, just as we do with Union City Carrier service.
We’re not a franchise crew dispatched from a call center. Scott works every job himself — your home gets two decades of crawlspace-level experience at the door, not an entry-level sub-contractor. Our 433 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars reflect what happens when the same technician shows up, remembers your system from the last visit, and tells you straight whether a cleaning will genuinely help or won’t.
For Carrier owners in Tyrone, that matters. These homes — mostly 2,500–4,000 square feet built during the Fayette County growth surge — run multi-zone Carrier systems with long flex-duct runs through unconditioned attics. We’ve tracked the specific degradation patterns: mylar liner collapse from 130°F+ summer temperatures, boot-connection gaps from decades of thermal cycling, and the unique pollen paste that forms nowhere else in the county. We bring Rotobrush contact-cleaning systems, Nikro HEPA vacuums, and Abatement Technologies air scrubbers — the same equipment trusted in commercial remediation work — to every Tyrone job.
Common Carrier Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Tyrone
- Flex-duct mylar liner collapse in 130°F+ attic temperatures. Tyrone’s unconditioned attics regularly exceed 130°F in July and August. On extended flex-duct runs to vaulted ceilings — common in 1990s homes off Peachtree Parkway — that heat softens the mylar liner until it collapses inward, choking airflow to the master suite or bonus room. We video-inspect every run before cleaning to locate these collapses; cleaning alone won’t restore airflow if the duct is pinched flat.
- Return-air grille caking from loblolly pine and sweetgum pollen. Every March through April, Tyrone’s wooded subdivisions see a pollen pulse that coats Carrier return grilles with a yellow-green paste. We’ve measured airflow reductions of 30% in homes backing up to tree lines before homeowners even notice comfort issues. Our Rotobrush system agitates this paste loose, then Nikro HEPA extraction removes it rather than redistributing it through the house.
- Condensation-driven mold at sagging boot connections. Tyrone’s humid subtropical climate creates condensation cycles inside attic ductwork during cooling season. Where 20–30 year old flex duct sags near Shamrock Forest and Cedar Grove subdivisions, moisture pools at boot connections — ideal conditions for mold colonization that standard vacuuming won’t touch. We apply foaming sanitizer after mechanical cleaning and recommend duct sealing to break the moisture cycle.
- Internal debris traps in multi-zone Carrier systems. Carrier Performance and Infinity Series zoning systems depend on clear airflow to dampers and bypass ducts. In Tyrone homes, red-clay dust and organic debris accumulate at sagging flex-duct segments where attic insulation has shifted or original supports have failed. These traps restrict airflow to specific zones, causing the system to overwork and homeowners to blame the thermostat. Video inspection finds what visual checks miss.
- Pollen paste embedding in first few feet of return ductwork. This one’s unique to Tyrone’s position in the red-clay belt under heavy loblolly and sweetgum canopy. The paste dries into a hardened film that standard filter changes won’t address. We remove the grille and hand-clean the boot entrance, then follow with full-system contact cleaning to restore designed airflow rates.
Carrier Service in Tyrone: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Tyrone’s location in the Fayette County red-clay belt, combined with its mature tree canopy of loblolly pine and sweetgum, produces a seasonal pollen paste in March–April that coats the first few feet of Carrier return ductwork with a yellow-green film — a contaminant profile we see only here, not in neighboring Peachtree City or Fayetteville. The red-clay soil generates fine particulate that infiltrates attic spaces through soffit vents and ridge gaps, while the pollen paste binds with that clay dust to form a nearly adhesive layer. In a Carrier Infinity system with variable-speed blower operation, this paste forces the blower to ramp higher and run longer to maintain CFM targets, accelerating motor wear and raising energy bills before homeowners connect the dots. We’ve learned to check Tyrone returns first — the problem’s usually visible from the grille, but the real restriction hides just inside the boot where the flex duct turns toward the attic.
Last spring, we serviced a Carrier Infinity system in the Shamrock Forest subdivision off Rockaway Road where the return-air duct had developed a nearly half-inch-thick layer of pine pollen paste — the homeowner had noticed the system running constantly but not cooling. Our video inspection revealed the flex-duct liner had collapsed at a sagging section in the unconditioned attic, trapping the paste and restricting airflow by 35%. We replaced that 20-foot flex run with new R-8 insulated flex duct, sealed all boot connections with mastic, and performed a full system cleaning including a foaming sanitizer to remove the pollen residue. Afterward, the system returned to normal run cycles and the homeowner reported much cooler upstairs bedrooms.
Carrier Models & Products We Service in Tyrone
We clean and service all Carrier residential duct configurations common in Tyrone: Comfort Series (single-stage systems in entry-level 1990s builds), Performance Series (two-stage and zoning-capable systems in mid-range homes), Infinity Series (variable-speed, communicating systems in higher-end construction), and Base Series (standard-efficiency systems still running in original-owner homes).
Where Carrier-specific components are needed — dampers, zoning panels, Infinity control boards — we source OEM parts to ensure proper fit and performance. For standard duct materials, flex duct, sealants, and filters, we use high-quality aftermarket products that meet or exceed Carrier specs. We’re honest about whether repair or replacement makes more financial sense based on system age and condition. We don’t stock Carrier OEM ducting (no one does; it’s not a product line), but we carry R-8 flex duct, mastic, and mechanical fasteners for same-day repairs when video inspection finds damage during cleaning.

Carrier Service Pricing in Tyrone
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Standard air duct cleaning (single system, up to 12 vents) | $300–$450 |
| Multi-zone Carrier system cleaning (15+ vents, zoning dampers) | $450–$650 |
| Video duct inspection with written findings | $125–$175 |
| Duct sealing (mastic, boots, accessible joints) | $200–$400 |
| Dryer vent cleaning (add-on or standalone) | $125–$225 |
What drives cost: system size, accessibility of attic runs, whether we find damage requiring repair, and contamination level. A home with 25-year-old flex duct in a tree-lined Tyrone subdivision typically requires more agitation cycles and longer HEPA extraction time than a newer build in a cleared development. Our free estimate includes a full vent count, accessibility assessment, and video inspection of the return trunk — no charge, no pressure. Call (877) 565-7296 to schedule; we’ll give you an exact quote after seeing your specific Carrier setup.
Serving Tyrone, GA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Tyrone 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 — Carrier Air Duct Cleaning in Tyrone
It’s the combination of loblolly pine and sweetgum pollen — unique to Tyrone’s heavy canopy — binding with red-clay dust that infiltrates from your attic. The paste forms in the first few feet of return ductwork where air velocity is highest. Standard filters catch some of it, but the fine fraction gets through and accumulates on the duct walls. We remove it with contact agitation and HEPA extraction, then check whether your return boot needs sealing against attic infiltration. Call (877) 565-7296 for a free inspection — estimates are free.
Every 3–5 years for homes without pets or allergy sufferers; every 2–3 years if you have dogs that shed, family members with asthma, or you’ve completed renovations. The 20–30 year old flex duct in most Tyrone homes from the Fayette County build-out has degraded liners that release more particulate than newer materials. If your ducts haven’t been looked at in a decade, you don’t have an air quality problem — you have an air quality certainty. Call (877) 565-7296 and we’ll tell you honestly whether you’re due.
Yes — that’s the standard configuration here, and it’s precisely where we find the most problems. Our equipment is designed for attic access: portable Rotobrush units that fit through scuttle holes, HEPA vacuums with enough hose reach to stay downstairs while we work the trunk lines. We inspect for liner collapse and boot gaps while we’re up there, since those attic conditions created the contamination in the first place. Call (877) 565-7296 to schedule — we work in Tyrone attics weekly.
Sometimes. If the uneven airflow is caused by debris blockages or collapsed flex duct, cleaning plus repair restores balanced distribution. If the problem is undersized ductwork, improper original zoning design, or a failing damper motor, cleaning alone won’t solve it. Our video inspection identifies which category your system falls into before we start work. We’ve fixed hot second floors in Tyrone homes by replacing collapsed flex runs; we’ve also told homeowners when the real issue is a zoning panel that needs replacement. Call (877) 565-7296 for an honest assessment — estimates are free.
We use a foaming sanitizer — not a biocide — when video inspection reveals mold or heavy organic contamination, which is common in Tyrone’s humidity-cycled attic ducts. We apply it after mechanical cleaning, let it dwell per manufacturer spec, then extract residue. We don’t fog “mold prevention” chemicals prophylactically; that’s not how we work. If you have chemical sensitivities or allergy concerns, tell Scott when he arrives and we’ll adjust the protocol. Call (877) 565-7296 to discuss your specific situation.
Service Areas Near Tyrone
We serve Carrier owners throughout the greater Fayette County area, including Peachtree City (where pollen loads differ and duct configurations trend newer), Fayetteville (mixed housing stock with similar 1990s-era systems), Newnan (Coweta County builds with comparable attic-run challenges), Carrier in Fairburn (split between Fayette and Fulton County build styles), Atlanta proper (older hard-duct systems requiring different approaches), and Columbus (extended service area for established customers relocating). Tyrone remains our core market — we know its subdivisions, its tree canopy, and its specific Carrier failure patterns better than any other city we cover.
Book Your Carrier Service in Tyrone Today
Scott Gray will take your call, schedule your appointment, and show up with 20 years of experience to work on your Carrier system personally. Same-day and next-day availability most weeks. Free estimates. No dispatch fees. Call (877) 565-7296 now.
Written by Scott Gray, Owner & Lead Technician at Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia, serving Tyrone and Fayette County since 2004.