Dryer Vent Cleaning in Kingsville, TX
South Texas climate transitioning toward Gulf Coast moderation.
For dryer vent cleaning, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Kingsville.
Common reasons to call
- The dryer takes two or three cycles to dry one load of clothes
- Clothes come out hot and damp and the dryer feels very warm to the touch
- A burning or musty smell shows up when the dryer runs
- The lint screen fills up fast or the vent flap outside barely opens
- It has been a year or more since the vent was last cleaned
- A home inspector, insurer, or landlord asked for proof the vent was cleaned
Typical work
- Cleaning a short, straight vent run that goes right through an outside wall
- Cleaning a longer run that travels through the attic or up through the roof
- Clearing a fully clogged vent where the dryer keeps shutting off from heat
- Cleaning the vents on a stacked or closet unit in an apartment or condo
- Cleaning a shared or long commercial run at a laundromat, salon, or gym
- Removing a bird nest or animal blockage from the outside vent hood
Typical turnaround
Most single-home jobs are done in about one to two hours in a single visit; longer roof runs or commercial lines can take longer or need a scheduled slot.
Materials and equipment
- Flexible rotary brush kit on connecting rods
- Vacuum or blower to pull lint out of the run
- New rigid or semi-rigid metal transition duct to replace crushed foil or plastic
- Metal foil tape and clamps to seal the joints
- A vent hood or cover with a working flap or a pest guard for the outside opening
Job sizes
Minor
A short, straight vent that runs a few feet through an outside wall with easy access to the back of the dryer.
Standard
A normal home vent with a longer run through the attic, wall, or roof, including pulling the dryer out and cleaning both ends.
Major
A long, twisting run, a roof-top vent that needs ladder work, or a fully clogged line plus replacing crushed or wrong-type transition duct.
Replacement
Rerouting or rebuilding the whole vent path, adding a new roof or wall vent hood, or handling a shared multi-unit or commercial run.
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro cleans the whole run from the back of the dryer all the way to the outside vent hood, not just the part they can reach.
- ✓They check and clear the outside vent flap so it opens freely when the dryer runs.
- ✓They replace thin foil or plastic accordion duct with rigid or semi-rigid metal duct when they find it.
- ✓They pull the dryer out, clean both ends, and reconnect it so the joints are sealed and the line is not crushed behind the unit.
- ✓They carry general liability insurance and can tell you plainly what they cleaned and whether anything needs a follow-up.
- ✓For a gas dryer, a careful pro either avoids disturbing the gas line or has licensed help reconnect it safely.
- ✓A trustworthy pro tells you if your run is fine and does not push repairs you do not need.
Look for general liability insurance and, for pros who focus on this work, voluntary training or certification through a group like the National Air Duct Cleaners Association (NADCA); manufacturers and code guidance also point to metal, not foil or plastic, transition duct.
Common questions
How often should I get my dryer vent cleaned?
A common rule of thumb is about once a year for a normal household. You may need it sooner if you do a lot of laundry, have a long vent run, share a laundry area, or notice clothes taking longer to dry. Watch the warning signs rather than only the calendar.
What are the signs my dryer vent is clogged?
Clothes stay damp after a full cycle, the dryer and clothes feel very hot, drying takes two or three cycles, there is a burning or musty smell, or the flap on the outside vent barely moves when the dryer runs. Lint building up around the door or lint screen is another clue.
Why does a clogged dryer vent matter for safety?
Lint is very easy to catch fire, and a blocked vent traps heat and lint inside the run. That is why fire safety groups list dryers as a home fire cause. A clean, metal vent lets heat and moisture escape the way the dryer was built to work. If your dryer is gas, a blocked vent can also trap combustion gases indoors.
Can I just clean the lint screen myself instead?
Cleaning the lint screen every load is good and you should keep doing it, but it only catches part of the lint. The rest builds up deep in the vent run, in the elbows, and at the outside hood where you cannot easily reach. That deeper part is what a vent cleaning clears.
Is flexible foil or plastic duct behind my dryer a problem?
Thin white plastic or foil accordion duct sags, traps lint, and can melt, and most manufacturers and code guidance say to use rigid or semi-rigid metal duct instead. A good pro will point this out and can swap it for metal while they are there.
What is the difference between an air duct cleaning and a dryer vent cleaning?
Air duct cleaning is about your home heating and cooling ducts. Dryer vent cleaning is only the single line that carries hot, moist air and lint from your dryer to the outside. They are different jobs, so ask for dryer vent cleaning specifically if that is what you need.
What should I ask a dryer vent pro before they start?
Ask if they clean the full run from the dryer to the outside hood, not just the first few feet. Ask whether they check the outside flap, whether they replace foil or plastic duct with metal, and whether they carry liability insurance. For roof vents, ask if ladder work is included.
Do businesses and apartments need this too?
Yes. Laundromats, salons, gyms, and apartment or condo buildings often have longer or shared runs that clog faster because the dryers run all day. A dead or slow dryer at a business costs money, so many owners set up regular cleanings instead of waiting for a problem.