Window Cleaning in Fort Collins
Compare local window cleaning / window washing pros in Fort Collins and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: $90–$550
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
Window Cleaning prices in Fort Collins
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-story home, exterior only Average window count, pole or ladder clean | $90 | $140 | $200 |
| Average home, inside and out Full service including sills | $170 | $230 | $350 |
| Large / two-story home, inside and out High window count, screens included | $280 | $390 | $550 |
How to hire a window cleaning pro in United States
- Get a per-pane count and written quote — US pricing is usually per window with interior/exterior stated separately
- Confirm general liability insurance and workers' comp for crews — ladder work is the risk that matters
- Ask whether screens, tracks and storm windows are included or add-ons (they're usually add-ons)
- For two-story-plus homes, ask how upper windows are reached — water-fed pole from the ground is the safest answer
- Ask about hard-water stain treatment separately if you have sprinkler overspray marks
- Book spring and fall slots ahead — they're the peak seasons in most states
Residential window cleaning is unlicensed in the US; liability insurance and workers' compensation matter because of ladder work. Exterior work beyond safe ladder or pole reach on taller buildings is specialist rope-access territory governed by OSHA rules and priced as commercial work.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives window cleaning prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How often should windows be cleaned?
Exteriors: every 4-8 weeks on a regular round keeps glass consistently clear; quarterly is the practical minimum in cities or near trees and coasts. Interiors need cleaning 2-4 times a year in most homes. Homes near the sea (salt), busy roads (film) or construction (dust) need shorter cycles.
What is water-fed pole (pure water) cleaning?
A telescopic pole with a brush head fed by purified water — the cleaner scrubs from the ground and rinses with deionised water that dries without spots, so no detergent and no ladder. It's now the standard for residential exteriors in many countries, reaches 3-4 storeys safely, and cleans frames as part of the process. Traditional squeegee work remains standard for interiors and gives a slightly more polished finish on ground-floor glass.
How is window cleaning priced?
Three models: per pane/window (most transparent for one-offs), per visit (standard for regular rounds — a fixed price for your whole house), or hourly (rare for homes, common for commercial). Regular-round pricing is far cheaper per clean than one-offs because maintained glass cleans fast. Always confirm whether the price covers exterior only or inside and out — that single detail explains most quote differences.
What should I do before the cleaner arrives?
Unlock side gates, move cars off the driveway if poles or hoses need the space, close windows fully, and confine pets. For interior cleans, clear window sills of plants and ornaments — cleaners charge for time, and moving your things is time. Flag any cracked panes or fragile lead-light windows before work starts to avoid disputes.
Should I DIY or hire a professional?
Ground-floor glass, absolutely DIY-able with a squeegee and practice. The calculus changes with height: ladder falls are one of the most common serious home-DIY accidents, and upper-floor windows take a pro with a water-fed pole minutes from the ground. Most households that hire do it for the upper floors and the consistency of a schedule, not because the skill is exotic.
Is window cleaning seasonal?
Demand peaks in spring and before year-end holidays, and those slots book out first. The work itself runs year-round in most climates — pure water works in cold weather down to around freezing, and professionals add glycol or adjust hours in frost. If you want a new regular slot, off-peak (mid-winter, mid-summer) is when good rounds have openings.
What does window cleaning cost in the US?
Typically $4-$14 per pane, with whole-house jobs averaging $150-$300 for an average home and inside-and-out service at the top of that range. Screens (roughly $1-$5 each) and tracks are common add-ons. Two-story homes price meaningfully higher than single-story.
Are screens and storm windows included?
Usually not by default. Screen cleaning runs about $1-$5 per screen, and storm windows can effectively double the pane count — which is why quotes that skip the question balloon on site. Count your windows, screens and storms before calling and ask for an itemised all-in price.
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
How Handld works
- 1
Tell us what you need
Describe the job and where you are. It takes about a minute.
- 2
We match your request
Your request goes to local professionals who cover your area and service.
- 3
Compare quotes and choose
Pros reply with quotes. Compare, ask questions and hire on your terms — free for you.
Window Cleaning near Fort Collins
- Window Cleaning in Thornton
- Window Cleaning in Westminster
- Window Cleaning in Arvada
- Window Cleaning in Denver
- Window Cleaning in Aurora
- Window Cleaning in Lakewood
- Window Cleaning in Colorado Springs
- Window Cleaning in Provo
- Window Cleaning in Salt Lake City
- Window Cleaning in West Jordan
- Window Cleaning in West Valley City
- Window Cleaning in Albuquerque