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Pressure Washing in Lakewood

Compare local pressure washing (power washing) pros in Lakewood and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.

Typical price: $90–$1,100

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Pressure Washing prices in Lakewood

Researched estimates for Lakewood (USD), adjusted for city size from national ranges. Updated 2026.
Job size Low Typical High
Driveway Standard 2-car concrete driveway, degrease and wash $90 $180 $370
House exterior wash Single-story home, siding soft wash or pressure wash $180 $290 $640
Deck or patio Wood deck or paver patio, cleaned and rinsed $110 $230 $410
Whole property package House, driveway, walkways, and patio in one visit $370 $600 $1,100

How to hire a pressure washing pro in United States

  1. Get 2-3 itemized quotes broken down by surface (house, driveway, deck, fence) — per-square-foot pricing makes comparison easy
  2. Verify general liability insurance (ask for a certificate of insurance, $1M coverage is the norm); pressure washing itself is unlicensed in most states
  3. Ask whether they soft wash siding and roofs — high pressure on vinyl siding or asphalt shingles causes damage insurers may not cover
  4. Check reviews on Google, Angi, or Thumbtack for photo evidence of similar homes in your area
  5. Confirm who supplies water and whether runoff handling complies with local stormwater rules (EPA and many municipalities prohibit sending detergent runoff into storm drains)
  6. Get the scope in writing: pre-treatment, chemicals, plant protection, and rain-date policy

Pressure washing is generally not a licensed trade in the US, though some cities require a business license and contractors using chemicals must follow EPA and municipal stormwater rules that prohibit discharging wash water with detergents into storm drains. Liability insurance, not licensing, is the key credential to verify.

Budgeting first?

See the full breakdown of what drives pressure washing prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.

Pressure Washing cost guide for United States

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between pressure washing and soft washing?

Pressure washing uses high-pressure water and suits hard surfaces: concrete, pavers, brick. Soft washing uses low pressure plus a cleaning solution and is the right method for painted render, siding, roofs, and timber, where high pressure would strip paint, gouge wood, or crack tiles. A good pro will recommend soft washing for delicate surfaces without being asked.

Does pressure washing remove oil stains from driveways?

Fresh oil mostly comes out with a degreaser pre-treatment plus hot-water pressure washing. Old oil that has soaked deep into concrete may only fade, not disappear — an honest pro will tell you this before quoting rather than promising full removal. Ask specifically whether stain treatment is included or extra.

Should I hire a pro or rent a pressure washer myself?

Renting a machine costs a fraction of a pro visit, but consumer machines are slower, and the main risks are damage (etched concrete, stripped paint) and injury — a 3000+ PSI jet can cut skin. DIY makes sense for a small, flat concrete area. Hire a pro for two-storey walls, roofs, timber, render, or anything needing ladders or chemicals.

Do I need to prepare anything before the pressure washing crew arrives?

Move cars off the driveway, clear pots, furniture, and toys from the work area, close all windows and doors, and cover or flag anything fragile like garden lights. Point out hairline cracks, loose pointing, or flaking paint in advance — pros will work around known weak spots but cannot see them under grime.

Can I pressure wash in winter or the rainy season?

Light rain is usually fine — surfaces are already wet. Pros avoid freezing temperatures (ice risk on cleaned surfaces and damaged equipment) and heavy storms. In hot dry regions, local water restrictions can limit or ban high-volume outdoor cleaning during drought periods, so check the current rules before booking.

Can pressure washing damage my surfaces?

Yes. Too much pressure or the wrong nozzle can etch concrete, blast mortar out of brick joints, splinter timber decking, strip paint, and force water behind siding or render. Roof tiles are especially vulnerable. Ask the pro what PSI and nozzle they plan to use per surface, and whether they soft wash delicate areas.

Do pressure washing companies in the US need a license?

In most states, no trade license exists for pressure washing — anyone can buy a machine and start a business. That makes insurance verification and reviews your main quality filter. A few cities require a general business license, and contractors must follow local stormwater discharge rules.

When is the best time of year to pressure wash a house in the US?

Spring and fall are peak season in most of the country — spring to remove winter grime and fall before listing photos or holiday hosting. In the South and humid coastal states, mildew grows year-round, so annual timing matters less than a consistent 12-month cycle. Northern pros mostly stop work below freezing.

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