House Washing in Fayetteville, AR
If the sides of your house look dingy, green, or like dirt is caked in the texture, the problem is almost always algae and mildew — not dirt. Northwest Arkansas has the perfect conditions for it: mild winters, humid summers, tons of pollen, and a lot of tree-shaded neighborhoods. That green film loves north-facing walls, under eaves, and anywhere that stays damp.
We handle it with soft washing. That means very low water pressure combined with a cleaning solution calibrated to kill the biology without damaging siding, paint, or landscaping. Blasting vinyl siding or stucco with high pressure is one of the fastest ways to end up with water behind your walls or gouged surfaces — we don’t do it. Soft washing is the industry-standard method for anything painted or finished.
Razorback Pressure Washing cleans vinyl, brick, Hardie board, stucco, and painted wood siding across Fayetteville, Bentonville, Rogers, Springdale, and the rest of NWA. A typical single-story ranch takes about 90 minutes; larger two-story homes take 3–4 hours. You get noticeably brighter siding, cleaner eaves and soffits, and the algae doesn’t come back nearly as fast because we killed it at the root.
What’s included
- ✓Pre-wet of landscaping and plants
- ✓Low-pressure soft wash application using calibrated cleaning solution
- ✓Algae, mildew, and mold kill at the root — not just a rinse-off
- ✓Cleaning of soffits, fascia, gutters exterior, and eaves
- ✓Spot treatment of heavy green staining (typically on north-facing walls)
- ✓Full low-pressure rinse
- ✓Post-rinse of landscaping
- ✓Walkthrough before we leave
Pricing guidance
Typical ranges, call for exact quote. Pricing depends on square footage, height, and severity of algae buildup.
Frequently asked questions
What is soft washing? +
Will it kill my plants? +
What kinds of siding can you clean? +
How often should I soft wash my house? +
Will the green algae come back? +
Do you clean gutters too? +
Get a free estimate today
Same-day quotes in most cases. Fully insured. Locally owned in Northwest Arkansas.