Most pressure washing prices land between $0.15 and $0.45 per square foot, with a per-job minimum of $150–$350 so small jobs still cover your drive time and setup. A single-story house wash typically runs $250–$450, a two-car driveway $100–$200, and a deck $150–$350 — but the surface, how dirty it is, and your local market move every one of those numbers.
Typical ranges for common residential jobs. Build your estimate per square foot, then quote a flat number — and never go below your job minimum.
| Service | Typical rate | Typical job | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| House wash (soft wash) | $0.15–$0.30 / sq ft | $250–$450 | Priced on wall area or home footprint; low pressure + mix |
| Concrete / driveway | $0.20–$0.40 / sq ft | $100–$200 | Surface cleaner; oil & rust add cost |
| Wood / composite deck | $0.30–$0.60 / sq ft | $150–$350 | Slower, careful work; sealing is separate |
| Roof (soft wash) | $0.30–$0.60 / sq ft | $400–$700+ | Premium for risk, access, chemical; never high pressure |
| Sidewalk / patio | $0.20–$0.40 / sq ft | Often min only | Small areas usually hit the job minimum |
| Fence | $0.25–$0.50 / sq ft | $150–$400 | Per face; both sides roughly doubles area |
Ranges are conservative national-ballpark figures as of 2026 and vary widely by region, competition, and condition. Price your own costs before quoting. See Claver for pressure washing.
There is no single "right" price for pressure washing — there is a right price for your truck, your market, and the surface in front of you. The ranges above are a starting frame. What follows is how a working operator actually arrives at a number that wins the job and still makes money.
Most established companies use one of three models, and the best ones blend all three:
The mistake new operators make is quoting per square foot and forgetting the minimum, then driving 25 minutes for a $60 job that nets nothing after gas, mix, and wear. Set the minimum first; everything else stacks on top.
Almost all siding — vinyl, fiber cement, stucco, brick — gets soft washed, not blasted. You apply a sodium-hypochlorite-based mix at low pressure, let it dwell, and rinse. High pressure on siding drives water behind it and etches surfaces; it is a callback waiting to happen. Price house washing at roughly $0.15–$0.30 per square foot of wall area, or estimate off the home's footprint and story count. A typical single-story home runs $250–$450; a larger two-story with steep gables and a lot of access work can run $500–$800+. Charge more for heavy north-side algae, three-story reach, or detached structures.
Flat concrete is where a surface cleaner earns its keep — that spinning-bar attachment is far faster and leaves no zebra striping. Price concrete around $0.20–$0.40 per square foot. A standard two-car driveway (400–600 sq ft) usually lands $100–$200, which means small drives often just hit your minimum. Add cost for oil stains (degreaser + agitation), rust (oxalic/specialty treatment), or post-treatment to slow algae regrowth. Tell the customer up front that old stains may lighten but not fully vanish — managing that expectation prevents a fight at the end.
Decks are slow, careful work — wrong pressure furs the wood grain or gouges composite — so they price higher per foot, around $0.30–$0.60 per square foot, landing most decks at $150–$350 to clean. Sealing or staining is a separate line item and a separate trip after the wood dries; don't bundle it into the wash price or you will eat the labor.
Roof cleaning is the highest-skill, highest-risk service on this list, and it pays accordingly: roughly $0.30–$0.60 per square foot, with most roofs $400–$700+. It is always soft wash — high pressure strips granules off asphalt shingles and voids warranties. You are pricing for the chemical, the ladder and harness time, the risk of working at height, and the liability. If you are not set up to do it safely, refer it out rather than underbid it.
Two driveways the same size can be priced $80 apart for good reasons. The honest cost drivers:
A clean estimate protects your margin and your reputation. The repeatable process:
Once your pricing is dialed in, the bottleneck stops being the wash and becomes the back office: getting the quote out the same day, scheduling the route tight, invoicing before you leave the driveway, and actually getting paid. That is the part Claver handles — quote, schedule, invoice, and collect payment from your phone — so you can keep the wand moving instead of chasing paperwork at night.
Claver lets a pressure washing crew send a flat-rate quote, book the slot, invoice on site, and take card or Stripe payment before the truck pulls away. Start free; upgrade only when you grow.