Carpet Cleaning in Eugene
Compare local carpet cleaning pros in Eugene and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: $35–$390
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Carpet Cleaning prices in Eugene
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| One room + hallway Minimum-visit job, hot water extraction | $85 | $110 | $160 |
| Three rooms Typical partial-home clean | $120 | $170 | $240 |
| Whole house (5+ areas) Full home including hallway, excludes stairs | $180 | $260 | $390 |
| Area rug Per rug, synthetic, cleaned in place | $35 | $85 | $170 |
How to hire a carpet cleaning pro in United States
- Look for IICRC-certified technicians — the de facto US industry standard for carpet cleaning
- Ask whether they use truck-mounted or portable hot water extraction — truck-mounts clean hotter and dry faster
- Get an itemised written quote: per-room price, room size caps, pre-treatment, spot work, stairs, and the minimum charge
- Confirm general liability insurance and, for crews, workers' compensation
- Be skeptical of coupon 'whole house' specials — confirm in writing that the price includes pre-treatment and normal soiling
- Ask about furniture moving policy and expected dry time before booking
- If your carpet is under manufacturer warranty, keep the receipt — most warranties require periodic professional extraction
Carpet cleaning is unlicensed in the US; IICRC certification is the industry's quality standard. State consumer-protection agencies have repeatedly warned about bait-and-switch coupon pricing in this trade, so itemised written quotes matter more than headline prices.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives carpet cleaning prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find a good carpet cleaner in Eugene?
Look for industry certification (IICRC or the national trade body), insurance, and reviews that mention stain outcomes and punctuality rather than just friendliness. Ask what method they'll use on your carpet and why — a professional will inspect fibre type and soiling before answering. Get an itemised written quote including pre-treatment and any minimum charge.
Steam cleaning vs dry cleaning — which do I need?
Steam cleaning (hot water extraction) injects heated solution deep into the pile and vacuums it out — it's the deepest clean and what most carpet manufacturers recommend, but carpets take 4-12 hours to dry. Dry methods (encapsulation, bonnet, dry compound) use minimal moisture and allow walking on the carpet within an hour, but clean mainly the surface. Choose steam for deep soiling, stains and allergy concerns; dry for maintenance cleans and situations where downtime is impossible.
Will cleaning remove old stains completely?
No honest cleaner guarantees it. Sugary drinks, urine and mud usually respond well; wine, coffee and tea often improve dramatically; bleach spots, dye transfer and burns are permanent damage, not stains — no cleaning removes them. A pro should inspect first and tell you which category each mark falls into before you pay.
Why are some advertised prices so cheap?
Ultra-low room prices are frequently bait: on arrival the price grows via 'heavily soiled' surcharges, mandatory pre-treatment fees, or per-stain charges. Consumer protection agencies in several countries have warned about this pattern in carpet cleaning specifically. Judge quotes by what's included in writing — pre-treatment, spot work, minimum charge — not by the headline number.
Does professional cleaning help with allergies and dust mites?
Yes — hot water extraction removes a large share of dust-mite allergen, pet dander and tracked-in pollen that vacuuming leaves behind, which is why allergy clinics often suggest periodic deep cleaning. For allergy households: clean every 6-12 months, ask for high-heat extraction, ensure fast drying (damp carpet can worsen things), and vacuum with a HEPA machine between cleans.
What does carpet cleaning cost in the US?
Most whole-home jobs land between $120 and $420, with the national average around $180-$280 for a 3-bedroom home. Per-room pricing typically runs $40-$90 with a minimum charge of $100-$175 per visit. Pet treatment, stain protection and stairs are the common paid add-ons.
What is IICRC certification and why does it matter?
The IICRC (Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification) sets the reference standards for carpet cleaning and restoration in North America. Certified technicians have passed formal training on fibre identification, chemistry and extraction — a useful filter in an unlicensed trade where anyone can buy a machine and print flyers.
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