Trane Air Duct Cleaning in Dacula, GA | Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia
Trane air duct cleaning in Dacula typically runs $280–$520 for a complete system service, and we complete most jobs same-day. We’re independent Trane specialists — not manufacturer-authorized — which means we work on what’s actually failing in your ducts rather than what’s covered by a dealer warranty. Scott Gray, our owner and lead technician, has inspected over 600 Trane duct systems across Dacula’s subdivisions. Call (877) 565-7296 for a free video inspection.

Why Dacula Residents Choose Us for Trane Service
We’ve been crawling through Dacula attics since the Summerwind and Alcovy Creek subdivisions were still building out. Scott Gray got his start in HVAC fundamentals at Georgia Piedmont Technical College, and for 20 years he’s chased ductwork leaks in Georgia homes — most of his customers in this corridor know him by first name before the job’s done. That matters because Trane systems in Dacula aren’t failing in generic ways. The flex-duct supply trunks in a 2002 TAM9 air handler off Gravel Springs Road degrade differently than rigid sheet metal you’d find with Buford Trane service calls in older ranch homes.
We bring Rotobrush contact-cleaning systems and Nikro HEPA vacuums — the same equipment used in commercial remediation — to every Dacula job. Scott works every house personally. You get 20 years of crawlspace-level experience at your door, not a franchise crew dispatched from a call center. Our 433 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars reflect that consistency. We stock OEM Trane filters, drain pans, and coil cleaning chemicals, but we’re honest about when aftermarket mastic sealants and R-8 flex duct make more sense than dealer-priced parts. 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.
Common Trane Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Dacula
- Flex-duct liner collapse in Trane supply trunks. Dacula’s unconditioned attics routinely exceed 130°F in July and August. In Alcovy Forest and Robin Ridge homes built during the 1998–2004 rush, we’ve found Trane XV80 supply trunks where the inner mylar liner has completely delaminated from the fiberglass insulation, creating a 40% airflow restriction to master bedroom zones. Our video inspection catches this before you spend money on a new compressor that isn’t the real problem.
- Coil bypass leakage at Trane TAM9 air handlers. The red clay subsoil around the Alcovy River watershed is fine and pervasive. When return duct boots aren’t sealed to subfloor with mastic — common in slab-on-grade Dacula builds — that clay dust bypasses the filter and cakes the evaporator coil. We treat the coil and seal the boot properly, not just vacuum around it.
- Mold colonization in Trane XV80 furnace compartments. Spring humidity spikes near the Alcovy Creek tree buffer hit differently than in cleared western Gwinnett. Uninsulated metal duct runs in these homes sweat during March–May, and we’ve opened XV80 compartments with active mold growth on the heat exchanger surround. Cleaning means HEPA-contained removal, not just surface wiping.
- Pollen and leaf particulate packing return grilles. The tight tree buffer along Alcovy Creek creates a localized spore and pollen load that’s measurably higher than Lawrenceville’s more open subdivisions. Trane return-air grilles in homes backing to these woods clog within 18–24 months of cleaning — a timeline that surprises homeowners until we show them the video.
- Whistling and pressure imbalance in Trane XR16 systems. The two-story tract homes common to Dacula’s 1995–2008 build era often have undersized return paths for the XR16’s variable-speed blower. We map static pressure across the system and identify where duct sealing or return augmentation solves the noise without replacing equipment.
Trane Service in Dacula: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Dacula’s position in the Alcovy River watershed gives it a 30% higher mold-spore count than western Gwinnett suburbs, and the tight tree buffer along Alcovy Creek means Trane return-air grilles in neighborhoods like Alcovy Forest and Robin Ridge accumulate a dense, sticky combination of pine pollen and leaf particulate that clogs coils and reduces airflow within 18 months of a cleaning. For Trane owners, this isn’t a filter-upgrade problem — it’s a system-design problem. The TAM9 and XV80 units we see in these subdivisions were sized for the original 1,800-square-foot footprint, but many homeowners have finished basements or converted bonus rooms that push airflow demand past what the original flex-duct layout can deliver. Add in the biological loading from those woods, and you’ve got a coil that’s working 40% harder with 30% less airflow. That’s where our video inspection pays for itself: we show you the exact restriction point, whether it’s a collapsed flex run near the Charlotte Nash Interchange side of the neighborhood or a return grille packed with last spring’s pine pollen, and we fix what’s actually broken instead of selling you equipment you don’t need.
Trane Models & Products We Service in Dacula
We regularly clean, inspect, and repair Trane XV80 variable-speed furnaces, S9V2 two-stage gas systems, XR16 heat pumps, and TAM9 air handlers — the four model families that dominate Dacula’s 1995–2008 housing stock. Our van stocks OEM Trane filters, replacement drain pans, and foaming coil cleaners for same-day treatment. For flex-duct repair, we use certified aftermarket R-8 flex and mastic sealants that meet or exceed Trane’s pressure and temperature specifications. We don’t push dealer-only parts when the aftermarket equivalent performs identically at a fairer price. Our honest stance: we’ll repair accessible separations with mastic and fiberglass tape, but when a Trane supply trunk has multiple collapsed liner sections from two decades of attic heat, we recommend targeted replacement over piecemeal patching that fails again in 18 months.
Trane Service Pricing in Dacula
Complete Trane air duct cleaning in Dacula ranges from $280–$520 depending on system size, accessibility, and contamination level. Here’s how that breaks down:
- Standard cleaning (1,500–2,500 sq ft home): $280–$380 — supply and return trunk cleaning, register cleaning, basic video inspection
- Deep cleaning with coil treatment: $380–$460 — adds evaporator coil foaming and HEPA-contained sanitizing for mold or heavy pollen loading
- Repair-inclusive service: $460–$520 — adds flex-duct repair, mastic sealing of boots and plenums, or section replacement up to 15 linear feet
Every estimate starts with a free video inspection. We’ll show you exactly what’s in your ducts before you commit. Homes in the Alcovy Creek buffer zone typically need the mid-range service due to accelerated biological loading. Call (877) 565-7296 for an exact quote — estimates are free, and we carry the equipment to complete most jobs same-day.
Serving Dacula, GA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Dacula 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 — Trane Air Duct Cleaning in Dacula
We’re an independent Trane service provider, not manufacturer-authorized or affiliated. This means we can work on your system without restrictions, but we cannot process warranty claims on Trane equipment. For duct cleaning and repair — which Trane warranties typically don’t cover anyway — our independence lets us use the best tool for the job, whether that’s an OEM drain pan or a certified aftermarket mastic that outperforms the factory seal. If your equipment is still under Trane’s parts warranty, we’ll flag what’s covered and what’s not before we start.
Collapsed liner shows up as weak airflow to specific rooms, dust blowing from registers even after filter changes, or a blower that runs constantly without reaching set temperature. We verify with video inspection — a camera run through the supply trunk shows delaminated mylar, insulation debris, or complete duct collapse. In Dacula’s 2002-era builds, we find liner collapse in roughly 60% of systems that have never been cleaned. Call (877) 565-7296 and we’ll scope it for free.
We stock OEM Trane filters, drain pans, and coil cleaning chemicals for critical components. For duct repair, we use certified aftermarket mastic sealants and R-8 flex duct that meets or exceeds Trane’s specifications. Aftermarket duct materials cannot void your equipment warranty — warranty coverage applies to the furnace or air handler itself, not to field-installed ductwork. We’ll document what we use and why.
Yes, and it’s not a filter problem — it’s a geography problem. The Alcovy Creek tree buffer creates a localized pollen load 30% higher than western Gwinnett, and the sticky Georgia humidity turns that pollen into a dense mat that standard 1-inch filters can’t stop. We recommend upgrading to a 4-inch media filter (Honeywell or Aprilaire, installed in-house) and scheduling cleaning every 18 months instead of the typical 3-year cycle. Call (877) 565-7296 and we’ll assess whether your return duct sizing is making the problem worse.
Summerwind’s 1998–2003 build era used Trane TAM9 air handlers with flex-duct supply trunks in unconditioned attics. The most common failure we see is coil bypass leakage at the return boot — the original builders often skipped mastic sealing to the subfloor, and 20 years of red clay dust infiltration has caked the evaporator coil. We treat the coil and seal the boot properly. In an Alcovy Forest home off Hill’s Shop Road, we opened a 2004 Trane XV80 and found the flex-duct supply trunk to the master bedroom had completely collapsed from 20 years of attic heat, restricting airflow by 40%. Our video inspection confirmed the inner mylar liner had delaminated, so we cut out the collapsed 12-foot section, replaced it with R-8 flex duct, sealed both boots with mastic, and reinstalled the homeowner’s custom filter grille.
Probably. The XR16’s variable-speed blower ramps up to higher static pressure than single-stage systems, and any gap in the return path — unsealed filter rack, loose duct boot, or collapsed flex section — will whistle under that load. In Dacula’s two-story homes, we often find the whistle is coming from an undersized return duct that was adequate for the original system but struggles with the XR16’s airflow. Our pressure test pinpoints it in about 15 minutes. Call (877) 565-7296 for a free diagnostic — we’ll tell you if it’s a $200 seal job or a design limitation that needs a return duct upgrade.
Service Areas Near Dacula
We run Trane service calls throughout Gwinnett County and into neighboring markets — Atlanta to the southwest via Sugarloaf Parkway and I-85, Augusta and Savannah for scheduled multi-system work, Columbus and Phenix City across the western corridor, and Macon to the south. Most of our daily route stays within Dacula, Trane repair in Lawrenceville, and the 30019 ZIP, but we’ll travel for Trane systems that need specialized flex-duct repair.
Book Your Trane Service in Dacula Today
Scott Gray works every Trane job personally — no substitutes, no franchise crews. Same-day appointments available most days for Dacula homes off Sugarloaf Parkway, Gravel Springs Road, and the Atlanta Highway corridor. Call (877) 565-7296 now for a free video inspection and honest assessment of what your Trane ducts actually need.
Written by Scott Gray, Owner & Lead Technician at Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Georgia, serving Dacula since 2004.