Fast, Reliable Air Duct Cleaning Across Bastrop
Air duct cleaning in Bastrop, TX typically costs $280–$550 for a full residential system and is usually completed in 3–4 hours with same-day or next-day scheduling available. Douglas and the Nova team make the drive from Austin to Bastrop regularly — we know the 78602 area well, from the older ranch homes along the Colorado River to the newer subdivisions near Tahitian Village and the Colony. If your vents are pushing dust, your allergies are flaring, or you’re catching musty odors when the AC kicks on, call us at (833) 315-4216 for a free estimate. We’re on the road to Bastrop often enough that we can usually book you within 48 hours, sometimes same-day.

Why Nova Air Duct Cleaning Service Austin Is Bastrop’s Preferred Air Duct Cleaning Company
More than 1,255 homeowners have reviewed our work, and that 4.9-star average reflects the kind of hands-on accountability you get when Douglas Ross — owner and lead technician — is the one running the Rotobrush system in your attic. We’re not dispatching crews from a call center. Douglas handles the inspection, sets the negative-pressure equipment, and verifies the job himself.
Our Air Duct Cleaning team has built a strong presence in Bastrop specifically because we’ve learned the local duct problems that generic cleaners miss. The Lost Pines pollen loads, the post-2011 fire rebuild debris, the humidity-degraded flex duct in river-valley homes — we’ve seen it, we’ve cleaned it, and we’ve sealed it. Eight years focused on one trade means we don’t split attention between carpet cleaning and window washing. Ducts and HVAC systems are what we do.
Bastrop customers tell us they chose us after a bad experience with a cut-rate company that ran a shop vac into the register and called it done. Our Rotobrush and Nikro systems are professional-grade — the same equipment spec’d for commercial jobs — and we use video inspection to show you what came out. No guesswork.
Our Air Duct Cleaning Services in Bastrop
Residential Duct Cleaning
Most Bastrop homes we service fall into two camps: pre-2011 ranch-style and rural properties with original flex duct that’s been cooking in the humid Colorado River valley air for decades, and post-fire rebuilds from 2012–2015 where construction debris still hides in the system. Residential duct cleaning in Bastrop runs $280–$480 for a typical 1,500–2,500 square foot home. We clean supply and return lines, registers, boots, and the air handler cabinet. Homes near the Lost Pines — think Tahitian Village, Pine Forest, and the Colony — often need extra attention on return ducts because that loblolly pollen is coarser and stickier than cedar, and it packs tight.
Commercial Duct Cleaning
Bastrop’s commercial base has grown fast with the Austin spillover — medical offices along Highway 71, retail near the 95 intersection, and the industrial corridor toward Elgin. Commercial duct cleaning in Bastrop starts around $550 and scales with system complexity. We work after-hours to avoid disrupting your operation, and we bring the same Nikro negative-pressure equipment we use on large residential jobs. If you’re managing a property with tenants or patient traffic, clean ducts aren’t optional — they’re part of your indoor air quality liability.
Supply Duct Cleaning
Supply ducts push conditioned air into your rooms, but in Bastrop’s older homes they often deliver something else: mold spores from humid attic runs, pollen that bypassed the filter, or drywall dust from a 2012 rebuild that never got properly flushed. Supply duct cleaning as a standalone service runs $180–$320 in Bastrop. We seal each register during the process to maintain negative pressure and prevent cross-contamination. If you’ve got rooms that never cool evenly or smell stale when the blower starts, the supply side is often the culprit.
Return Duct Cleaning
Return ducts are the lungs of your system — they pull air back to the handler — and in Bastrop they’re under siege. The Lost Pines loblolly pollen is the worst offender. It’s heavier than typical Central Texas tree pollen, and standard MERV-8 filters don’t catch enough of it. That pollen packs into return cavities, mixes with dust from degraded flex duct, and creates a mat that restricts airflow and strains your blower motor. Return duct cleaning in Bastrop typically runs $200–$350, but homes with severe accumulation — especially post-fire rebuilds with construction debris — may need multiple passes. We inspect with a camera first so you see what we’re dealing with.
Full System Cleaning
Full system cleaning is our most comprehensive service: supply ducts, return ducts, registers, boots, air handler, and blower assembly. In Bastrop, this is the right call for homes that haven’t been professionally cleaned in five-plus years, properties with allergy sufferers, or any post-2011 rebuild where you’re still seeing dust months after moving in. Full system cleaning runs $380–$550. We finish with a video walkthrough so you can verify the before-and-after. For homes near the river with chronic humidity issues, we can also assess whether duct sealing would help prevent recontamination.
Video Inspection
We run a flexible borescope through your ductwork before we quote and after we clean. In Bastrop, this matters more than most places. We’ve found disconnected ducts in Tahitian Village attics, mold blooms in river-valley flex runs, and construction debris packed into returns in homes built during the 2012–2015 rebuild rush. Video inspection is included with our full system and return duct services, or available standalone for $85–$125 if you want a second opinion on a competitor’s work. You see what we see. No sales pitch needed.

What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
- 2
You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Bastrop
Douglas and the Nova team clean and service duct systems connected to Honeywell, Aprilaire, and other major HVAC brands common in Bastrop’s newer subdivisions. We also stock filters and air quality accessories from these manufacturers — handy when your Bastrop home needs a MERV upgrade to handle that Lost Pines pollen load, or when you’re looking to add an Aprilaire media cleaner to a system that can’t keep up. Our Rotobrush and Nikro equipment is matched to the duct materials we see locally: flexible duct, rigid metal, and the hybrid systems common in post-fire rebuilds. Parts and filters are typically available without the wait you’d face ordering direct.
Common Air Duct Cleaning Problems We See in Bastrop Homes
- Pre-2011 flex duct degrades in river-valley humidity. The Colorado River corridor keeps morning relative humidity high through summer, and older flex duct — common in Bastrop’s ranch-style homes — sags, cracks, and traps moisture. That moisture breeds mold. Quick vacuum-only cleanings miss it. We inspect with video and recommend repair or sealing when the duct itself is compromised.
- Post-fire rebuilds hide construction debris. Homes built in the 2012–2015 rush after the Bastrop Complex Fire often have duct connections that were hastily sealed or left with gaps. Return cavities collect Carrizo sand dust, pink fiberglass fibers, and pine pollen — a gritty mix that standard new-construction cleaning won’t touch. Our field experience: we worked a post-fire rebuild in Tahitian Village where the builder-grade duct connections were left gaping, and the return cavity was packed with Carrizo sand dust, pink fiberglass fibers, and pine pollen. Our Rotobrush brush-and-vac system required three negative-pressure passes to clear the debris that standard new-construction cleaning wouldn’t touch.
- Lost Pines pollen overwhelms standard filters. The loblolly pines of the Lost Pines region produce spring pollen that is coarser and stickier than the cedar and oak pollen typical of the broader Austin area. It bypasses MERV-8 filters, coats duct interiors, and packs into returns. Homes near the pine stand — Tahitian Village, Pine Forest, areas east of Highway 21 — see faster accumulation and may need pre-filters or more frequent cleaning intervals.
- Humidity-driven mold in older river-valley homes. The combination of Bastrop’s humid microclimate and original flex duct from the 1970s–2000s creates ideal conditions for mold colonization, particularly in supply runs that pass through unconditioned attic space. Musty odors when the AC cycles on are the tell. We locate the source, clean the affected runs, and advise on whether duct replacement or sealing is the longer-term fix.
Pricing for Air Duct Cleaning in Bastrop, TX
Here’s what air duct cleaning costs in Bastrop’s market as of 2025:
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Residential full system cleaning | $280–$480 |
| Return duct cleaning (standalone) | $200–$350 |
| Supply duct cleaning (standalone) | $180–$320 |
| Commercial duct cleaning | $550–$1,200+ |
| Video inspection (standalone) | $85–$125 |
| Full system + video + sanitizing | $420–$620 |
What moves you within these ranges? System size, duct material (flex vs. rigid), accessibility, and contamination level. A 1,200 square foot home with light dust and rigid metal ducts sits at the lower end. A 3,000 square foot post-fire rebuild with packed returns, degraded flex, and construction debris — that’s more time, more passes, more cost. We quote upfront after inspection. No estimates that balloon on arrival. Call (833) 315-4216 for your free estimate — we’ll ask a few questions and give you a realistic range before we drive out.
We Also Serve Cities Near Bastrop
We regularly run routes through Camp Swift, Elgin, Manor, and Hornsby Bend — the same Austin-metro spillover corridor that feeds Bastrop’s growth. If you’re in a rural property outside 78602 proper, near the Bastrop State Park boundary or up toward McDade, we cover those too. Same equipment, same owner-led service, same drive from Austin.
Serving Bastrop, TX — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Bastrop area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Air Duct Cleaning in Bastrop
Bastrop’s duct systems face two contamination pressures that Cedar Creek doesn’t share: the Lost Pines loblolly pine stand releases coarse, sticky spring pollen that clogs standard filters and packs return ducts, and many Bastrop homes were rebuilt rapidly after the 2011 Complex Fire with duct systems that still harbor construction debris. Your friend’s Cedar Creek home likely deals with standard Central Texas dust and pollen loads — significant, but not the same magnitude. Call (833) 315-4216 for an inspection and we’ll show you exactly what’s in your system.
Yes, especially if your home was built in the 2012–2015 rush period. We’ve found builder-grade duct connections left gaping, return cavities packed with Carrizo sand dust and fiberglass fibers, and systems that were never properly flushed before occupancy. Even newer rebuilds can benefit from a video inspection to verify. The 2011 Bastrop Complex Fire destroyed roughly 1,700 homes, and the rapid reconstruction that followed prioritized speed over duct cleanliness in many cases. Douglas and the Nova team can assess whether your system needs cleaning, sealing, or both.
A standard vacuum-only cleaning often won’t. Construction dust in Bastrop’s post-fire rebuilds is typically compacted with Carrizo sand and bound with humidity — it requires brush agitation and multiple negative-pressure passes with professional-grade equipment like our Rotobrush system. We price based on what we find during video inspection, not a flat rate that assumes light household dust. If your home was finished in the last few years and you’re still seeing dust accumulation, call (833) 315-4216 — we’ll tell you if it’s a cleaning issue or a duct sealing problem.
Homes in the direct pollen zone — near Tahitian Village, Pine Forest, or east of Highway 21 — should plan on every 2–3 years, with filter upgrades to MERV-11 or better in between. The loblolly pollen is coarser and stickier than standard Central Texas tree pollen, so it accumulates faster and resists standard filtration. Homes with allergy sufferers or respiratory sensitivities may need annual cleaning. We can assess your specific pollen load and duct condition during a free estimate visit to Bastrop.
Older homes with original flex duct from the 1970s–2000s often need more than cleaning — the duct material itself may be degraded from years of humid attic exposure. We inspect for sagging, cracking, and mold colonization during our video assessment. If the duct is structurally sound, cleaning and sealing may suffice. If it’s compromised, we’ll recommend repair or replacement options using materials suited to Bastrop’s humidity. Call (833) 315-4216 to schedule — estimates are free, and we’ll give you a straight answer on whether your system needs cleaning or something more.
Ready to get your Bastrop home’s air ducts properly cleaned? Douglas and the Nova team are scheduling appointments now. Whether you’re dealing with Lost Pines pollen, post-fire construction debris, or years of buildup in an older river-valley home, we’ll inspect with video, quote upfront, and clean with professional-grade Rotobrush and Nikro equipment. Call (833) 315-4216 for your free estimate — we’re on the road to Bastrop regularly and can usually book you within 24–48 hours.
Written by Douglas Ross, Owner and Lead Technician at Nova Air Duct Cleaning Service Austin, serving Bastrop and the greater Austin area since 2017.