Vetted duct cleaning providers across 4 Florida cities. Each provider is scored on a 0–100 Vouched Score blending public-record signals, customer reviews, and editorial assessment. See methodology →
Local cost drivers — climate, code, utility rebates, and refrigerant rules — that shape duct cleaning pricing in Florida.
Florida does not license air-duct cleaning as a standalone trade, but it does license mold work: any mold remediation over 10 square feet requires a DBPR Mold Remediator license (Florida Statutes Chapter 468, Part XVI). If a duct cleaner pitches mold removal, ask for that license number plus NADCA membership — a cleaning crew can't legally do the remediation without it.
Year-round AC and high humidity keep Florida ducts damp and microbial-prone, which is why sanitizing and mold scope come up more here than in dry states — but the EPA is clear that antimicrobial treatment belongs after a documented finding and a mechanical clean, not as a default add-on. Coastal salt-air homes also foul faster.
Duct sealing is the rebate-eligible piece: Duke Energy Florida's Duct Test and Repair program pays up to $50 toward the duct test and up to $400 toward repairs per HVAC system, but it requires a free Home Energy Check beforehand and one of Duke's prequalified licensed contractors.
Last updated June 14, 2026
Estimated ranges for Florida. Actual cost varies with home size, equipment, and scope — always request a written quote for your job.
| Service | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Whole-home air duct cleaning (NADCA-standard) | $300–$750 |
| Air duct cleaning (single system / condo) | $200–$450 |
| Dryer vent cleaning (professional) | $100–$250 |
| Evaporator coil cleaning (in-place) | $150–$450 |
| Air handler / blower assembly cleaning (add-on) | $75–$250 |
| Duct sealing (Aeroseal or similar) | $1,500–$3,500 |
See broader context: Duct Cleaning pricing nationwide