Long Island Air Duct Cleaning: How to Choose the Right Company (and Avoid Scams)
What “Air Duct Cleaning” Should Mean
Real HVAC air duct cleaning is a whole-system cleaning, not just vacuuming a few vents. A professional job typically focuses on source removal, placing the system under negative pressure and using agitation tools (brushes/air whips) to dislodge debris so it can be captured, not blown around your home.
Important: The EPA recommends duct cleaning mainly when there’s a specific, verifiable problem (like visible contamination, pest debris, or heavy buildup), not just because “it’s been a while.”
When duct cleaning is actually worth considering (common Long Island situations):
- After renovations/drywall dust
- After a roof leak or HVAC moisture issue (once the moisture source is fixed)
- Visible debris blowing from supply vents
- Pest evidence in ductwork
- Severe buildup confirmed by inspection/photos

The Most Common Air Duct Cleaning Scams (And Exactly How They Work)
They advertise an ultra-low price, arrive, then claim you need “mold treatment,” “deep cleaning,” or “sanitizing” for $800–$2,500+. NADCA specifically warns consumers about these low-ball offers.
A crew spends 20–45 minutes, vacuums a few registers, and leaves. NADCA calls out inferior “blow-and-go” operators and explains proper methods involve agitation + containment + full-system scope.
Some scammers perform a quick “test,” then pressure you into expensive add-ons. NADCA warns homeowners not to rely on instant mold tests or high-pressure mold upsells during duct cleaning.
Common red flags: brand-new page, no local address, cash/Zelle only, generic name, stock photos, and they won’t provide proof of insurance or a written scope before collecting a deposit.
They collect a deposit, stop responding, or repeatedly reschedule. (This is especially common with pop-up “coupon” duct cleaning operations.)

How to Hire the Right Duct Cleaning Company on Long Island (Customer Checklist)
Before booking air duct cleaning in Nassau County or Suffolk County, ask for:
- Written scope + total price before work starts (EPA recommends written agreements outlining scope and cost).
- Before/after photo expectations (supply trunks, return trunks, blower compartment access points)
- Exact method: negative pressure + agitation tools + full-system cleaning (not “just the vents”).
- Local consumer licensing guidance: Suffolk County Consumer Affairs advises getting written estimates and verifying licensing/complaints before hiring.

“Undercover” Duct Cleaning Scam Investigations
(Videos You Can Share)
Here are a few examples customers often watch to understand bait-and-switch tactics and “blow-and-go” work:
Dateline NBC (duct cleaning/low-cost company scam segment):
“What This Air Duct Cleaner Was Caught Doing on the Job” (example of poor practices):
Rob Wolchek “Hall of Shame” (duct cleaner investigation-style segment):





