Pressure Washing, Engineered for Houston Humidity
Residential and commercial exterior cleaning planning tuned for Gulf Coast conditions, with scope notes that separate soft-wash surfaces from durable concrete, brick, and stone.
Pressure Washing Services
From single-family homes inside the Loop to commercial properties in the Energy Corridor, each scope depends on the surface, soil level, access, and runoff conditions. See the full service catalog →
Pressure Washing
High-pressure cleaning for concrete, brick, stone, and other hard surfaces around your Houston home or business.
DetailsHouse Washing
Soft wash scope for siding, stucco, painted brick, mildew, algae, runoff, and surface sensitivity.
DetailsRoof Cleaning
Low-pressure roof-cleaning scope for shingles, tile, black streaks, moss, access, runoff, and manufacturer guidance.
DetailsDriveway Cleaning
Driveway scope for oil, tire marks, clay splatter, grime, concrete or paver condition, drainage, and access.
DetailsCommercial
Storefront, parking lot, dumpster pad, and drive-thru cleaning planned around site access and operating needs.
DetailsPatio & Pool Deck Cleaning
Patio and pool-deck scope for concrete, pavers, drains, furniture, algae, shade, and pool-adjacent access.
DetailsCommercial Surface Cleaning
Storefronts, parking lots, dumpster pads, and high-traffic surfaces planned around business access needs.
DetailsHow Houston Surfaces Get Scoped
Surface type, condition, runoff, nearby fixtures, and access notes shape the cleaning method. Durable concrete and brick may need a different plan than painted brick, stucco, roof shingles, or storm-drain-adjacent areas.
Soft Wash When It Matters
Painted brick, stucco, wood, and roof shingles call for a lower-pressure, chemistry-first approach. Scope notes help determine the right method before work begins.
Surface and Site Notes
Material, drainage, landscaping, access, and nearby fixtures all affect the cleaning plan. Clear notes reduce surprises before work begins.
Scope-First Scheduling
Scheduling depends on scope, weather, access, and property needs. A written request helps confirm the details before a time is set.
Review Before Wrap-Up
Final review areas are easier to clarify when they are named before work starts. The scope should identify priority surfaces, access limits, and follow-up notes.
Three-Step Work Order
Scope Request
Share the surfaces, approximate square footage, access notes, and any problem areas. Photos help clarify the request.
Assess + Schedule
The details are reviewed so scope, pricing, access, and scheduling expectations can be aligned before work begins.
Work + Review Notes
When work is scheduled, review focuses on the surfaces and constraints identified before the visit.
Details That Help Plan the Work
Driveway and concrete requests are easier to assess with notes about oil, tire marks, drainage edges, and nearby landscaping.
House washing requests should note siding material, paint condition, roofline access, and any delicate exterior fixtures.
Commercial requests benefit from access notes, traffic patterns, tenant constraints, and the surfaces that need priority attention.
Houston Metro Coverage
From inside the 610 Loop to the outer suburbs. Click a neighborhood for location-specific information, common surfaces, and pricing ranges.