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Duct Cleaning Inspection Checklist

Checklist for Duct Cleaning Inspection Checklist per applicable building codes and industry standards.

6 items to check

BETA

These checklists are in development and testing. Information is for reference only and does not replace professional consultation. Data may contain inaccuracies. Consult a qualified professional.

If you notice an error, please email [email protected].

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System assessment and contamination check

Critical item

Per NADCA ACR 2013 (Assessment, Cleaning, and Restoration of HVAC Systems), inspect the duct system for conditions that warrant cleaning: visible mold growth on duct surfaces or components, excessive dust and debris accumulation, evidence of rodent or insect infestation, or verifiable contamination from construction or renovation. Use a borescope camera inspection at multiple points in the trunk line and branch runs to document conditions before cleaning. Not all duct systems need cleaning; only clean when specific contamination is confirmed.

Access point preparation

Critical item

Create access openings at trunk and branch line junctions if none exist, using a sheet metal cutter to make clean openings that can be sealed with access doors after cleaning. Seal all supply registers in rooms not being actively cleaned to maintain negative pressure in the system. Protect furnishings, flooring, and finishes with drop cloths in work areas. Connect the negative air machine (HEPA-filtered vacuum) to the main trunk line to capture all dislodged debris during cleaning.

Cleaning process verification

Critical item

Per NADCA standards, the source removal method is required: mechanical agitation (rotating brush, air whip, or compressed air nozzle) combined with a HEPA-filtered negative air machine to capture dislodged contaminants. Clean from the furthest duct run toward the negative air collection device. Each branch run must be individually cleaned. The entire supply side and return side must both be cleaned, along with the air handler, blower, evaporator coil, and drain pan. Do not use chemical sealants or encapsulants as a substitute for source removal cleaning.

Sanitizing treatment

Sanitizing or antimicrobial treatment should only be applied when mold growth has been confirmed (not as a routine step). Use only EPA-registered antimicrobial products that are specifically labeled for use in HVAC systems, applied per NADCA standards. Before sanitizing, the source of moisture that caused the mold must be identified and corrected; sanitizing alone will not prevent recurrence. Sanitizing is not a substitute for physical cleaning and must be applied only after thorough source removal cleaning is complete.

Filter replacement

Critical item

Install a new air filter immediately after duct cleaning is complete (never reuse the existing filter). Select a filter rated MERV 8 minimum for general dust control, or MERV 13 for enhanced allergen and particulate control (recommended for allergy sufferers). Verify the filter size matches the filter slot exactly with no gaps around the edges that allow air bypass. Confirm the filter is installed with the airflow direction arrow pointing toward the blower. Higher MERV ratings (14+) may restrict airflow in older systems; verify the HVAC system can handle the pressure drop.

Final inspection and airflow test

Critical item

Perform a post-cleaning camera inspection at the same access points used for the pre-cleaning assessment. Compare before and after images to verify visibly clean surfaces throughout the duct system. Test system airflow at representative registers using an anemometer or flow hood to confirm airflow has not been restricted (should maintain or improve from pre-cleaning levels). Verify all access doors are properly sealed, all registers are reinstalled, and no damage was done to ductwork, insulation, or flex duct connections during cleaning.

Checklist for Duct Cleaning Inspection Checklist per applicable building codes and industry standards.

Reference Standards

  • Applicable building codes and manufacturer specifications
  • Industry best practices and safety standards
  • Tools Needed

  • Standard tools for the project
  • Safety equipment (gloves, safety glasses)
  • Measuring instruments