Fast, Reliable HVAC Cleaning Across New York City
HVAC cleaning in New York City typically costs between $280 and $650 for a complete system service, with most Manhattan and outer-borough appointments completed same-day. We’re Empire Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, and our HVAC Cleaning team has spent 11 years navigating the specific challenges of this city’s buildings — from pre-war co-ops with steam heat retrofits to post-war high-rises pulling subway particulate through their intakes. Steven Ramirez, our owner and lead technician, runs every job himself. Call (866) 952-5794 for a free estimate and we’ll get you scheduled, usually within 24 hours anywhere from the Financial District to Flushing.

Why Empire Air Duct Cleaning Service New York Is New York City’s Preferred HVAC Cleaning Company
Nearly 1,000 customers have reviewed us — 982 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars — and that volume matters in a market like New York City where homeowners have been burned by shop-vac operators posing as duct cleaners. Those reviews come from real New York City addresses: co-op owners on the Upper East Side, property managers in Chinatown, landlords in Ridgewood. They mention Steven by name because he’s the person who answers the phone and the person who shows up with the Rotobrush and Nikro equipment.
Our response time to New York City averages same-day or next-day because we’re not routing crews from Long Island or New Jersey. We know which buildings on East 72nd Street have loading dock access, which Financial District towers require pre-registered vendor badges, and which Queens row houses still run coal-converted gravity ducts that need specialized cleaning approaches. That local knowledge saves you a wasted dispatch fee and gets the job done correctly the first time.
We don’t subcontract. Steven runs the job himself. One call covers it all — duct cleaning, dryer vent clearing, HVAC cleaning, duct repair and sealing, and air sanitizing — so you’re not coordinating multiple vendors through your building’s management office.
Our HVAC Cleaning Services in New York City
Evaporator Coil Cleaning
In New York City’s summer humidity, your evaporator coil works overtime — and it’s also where subway particulate and airborne debris first collect. We serviced a 1950s co-op tower on East 72nd Street where residents reported reduced airflow from their forced-air system. Our team found the evaporator coil caked with rust-colored debris from subway exhaust infiltration. After a thorough Rotobrush cleaning and coil treatment, airflow restored to spec and the musty smell vanished. Coil cleaning in New York City typically runs $180–$320 depending on accessibility and contamination level.
Blower Cleaning
The blower assembly moves every cubic foot of air through your system, and in Manhattan high-rises near subway vents, that means pushing iron-rich particulate through your home. A dirty blower strains the motor, raises your Con Edison bill, and redistributes debris you thought was trapped. We remove the blower housing, clean the wheel and motor assembly with Nikro vacuum extraction, and verify balanced operation before reassembly. Blower cleaning in New York City generally costs $150–$275.
Condenser Cleaning
Your outdoor condenser faces New York City’s unique punishment: construction dust, pollen from Central Park and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and particulate from street-level traffic that suburban systems never encounter. We clean coils, straighten fins, and clear debris from the cabinet base so your system doesn’t overheat during August humidity spikes. Condenser cleaning in New York City runs $120–$220 for standard residential units.
Air Handler Cleaning
Air handlers in New York City’s post-war co-op towers — common along the Upper East Side and in Flushing — often sit in cramped mechanical closets with minimal service access. We disassemble and clean the full cabinet interior, including drain pans where standing water breeds microbial growth. This service typically ranges from $200–$380 in New York City, varying with unit size and closet accessibility.
Coil Treatment
After mechanical cleaning, we apply EPA-registered coil treatment to inhibit microbial regrowth — critical in New York City’s humid summer climate where moisture-driven contamination returns quickly. This add-on service runs $80–$150 and extends the effectiveness of your cleaning by months.

What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in New York City
We clean and service systems built around Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Guardsman components — the same brands that dominate New York City’s co-op and condo mechanical specifications. Because we work exclusively on air duct and indoor air quality systems, we stock common replacement parts locally rather than ordering from a warehouse three states away. That means faster turnaround when your building’s management company is pressing for completion before a board inspection, and it means we recognize the specific failure patterns these brands develop after years in New York City’s demanding environment.
Common HVAC Cleaning Problems We See in New York City Homes
- Ambient subway particulate accumulating on coils and blowers. The MTA’s steel-wheel-on-steel-rail system releases iron-rich particulate that vents through street grates directly into building air intakes. We find rust-colored debris coating evaporator coils in Midtown and Lower Manhattan buildings at rates that reduce system efficiency faster than in any suburban market we serve.
- Condensation from humid summers combined with leftover coal soot in converted gravity warm-air ducts. In Queens row-house neighborhoods like Woodhaven and Richmond Hill, 1930s-era gravity warm-air coal furnaces were converted to gas blower systems while leaving original oversized galvanized trunk ducts in place. These wide, uninsulated rectangular mains collect decades of compacted debris — including pre-conversion coal soot — and frequently surprise technicians expecting standard modern residential ductwork. The humid New York City summer creates condensation in these uninsulated runs, producing mold growth that standard surface cleaning misses entirely.
- Technicians dispatched to pre-war buildings without verifying ductwork existence. Pre-war walk-ups, brownstones, and tenements across Manhattan, the South Bronx, and brownstone Brooklyn were built exclusively with steam radiator systems and contain no central ductwork whatsoever. We’ve heard from too many New York City homeowners who paid for a “duct cleaning” in a building that has no ducts. We qualify every lead before dispatch — it saves you money and respects your time.
- Retrofit ductwork in tight shaft spaces creating dead-air pockets. Steam-heated pre-war buildings that later added supplemental fan-coil or mini-split cooling often retrofit ductwork into tight shaft spaces. These installations create dead-air pockets where condensation and debris accumulate year-round, requiring specialized access tools and cleaning approaches that generalist HVAC contractors don’t carry.
Pricing for HVAC Cleaning in New York City, NY
A typical residential HVAC cleaning in New York City runs $280–$650 for a complete system service, with individual component cleaning priced as follows: evaporator coil cleaning $180–$320, blower cleaning $150–$275, condenser cleaning $120–$220, air handler cleaning $200–$380, and coil treatment $80–$150. Several factors push costs toward the higher end: buildings requiring rooftop access or freight elevator coordination, systems with significant contamination from subway particulate or historic coal soot, and units in tight mechanical closets where disassembly takes additional time.
We don’t quote over a vague range and then surprise you on-site. Steven provides upfront pricing after a brief phone assessment — he’ll ask about your building type, system age, and any symptoms you’ve noticed. Estimates are free. Call (866) 952-5794 and we’ll give you a firm number before we schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near New York City
Our service radius covers the full five boroughs with particular concentration in Manhattan neighborhoods including Chinatown, the Financial District, and the East Village. We also regularly service Flushing, Woodhaven, Ridgewood, and Middle Village in Queens, plus co-op towers throughout the Upper East Side. Whether you’re managing a portfolio in Lower Manhattan or maintaining your family’s row house in Queens, the same technician — Steven — handles your job.
Serving New York City, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the New York City 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 — HVAC Cleaning in New York City
Probably not. The majority of New York City’s pre-war apartment buildings were constructed with steam or hot-water radiator heating and contain no central ductwork whatsoever. Before we schedule any service, we verify your building’s HVAC type — if you’ve got radiators and window units, there’s nothing for us to clean and we won’t waste your time or money with a dispatch. Call (866) 952-5794 and Steven will walk you through a two-minute building assessment over the phone.
The rust-colored debris is iron-rich particulate from the MTA subway system’s steel-wheel-on-steel-rail friction, which vents through street grates directly into building air intakes — a contamination signature unique to dense urban environments like New York City. This debris coats evaporator coils, blower wheels, and duct interiors at rates suburban systems never experience, accelerating efficiency loss and producing a distinctive metallic odor. We remove this contamination with Rotobrush agitation and Nikro vacuum extraction, then apply coil treatment to slow regrowth. Call (866) 952-5794 for a free inspection if you’re seeing rust-colored dust around your vents.
Yes, and we specifically equip for this. In Queens neighborhoods like Woodhaven and Richmond Hill, 1930s-era gravity warm-air coal furnaces were commonly converted to gas while leaving original oversized galvanized trunk ducts in place. These wide, uninsulated rectangular mains running through unfinished basements collect decades of compacted debris — including coal soot from the pre-conversion era — that standard residential equipment can’t handle. We bring commercial-grade rotary brushes and extended-reach vacuum attachments designed for these dimensions. A typical Queens row-house duct cleaning runs $350–$580 depending on linear footage and contamination level. Call (866) 952-5794 for an exact quote — estimates are free.
Manhattan high-rises near subway lines or major construction should have HVAC components inspected annually and cleaned every 18–24 months, compared to the 2–3 year interval typical in cleaner suburban air. The subway particulate load, combined with constant construction dust and limited fresh air intake in dense building clusters, accelerates coil and blower contamination. Buildings on the Upper East Side or in the Financial District with rooftop mechanical rooms may extend slightly longer, but we recommend annual evaporator coil checks given New York City’s specific contamination profile. Call (866) 952-5794 to set up a maintenance schedule that matches your building’s exposure.
Yes, particularly for residents sensitive to the specific particulate mix in New York City’s air. HVAC cleaning removes accumulated subway particulate, pollen, construction dust, and microbial growth from your system’s components — stopping the recirculation of these irritants through your living space. We frequently hear from New York City clients, especially in high-rises with forced-air systems, that allergy symptoms decrease noticeably within days of service. For enhanced relief, we can pair cleaning with our air quality sanitizing service using Abatement Technologies equipment. Call (866) 952-5794 to discuss whether cleaning or the full IAQ suite makes sense for your symptoms.
Written by Steven Ramirez, Owner and Lead Technician at Empire Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, serving New York City since 2013.