Boise Air Duct Cleaning: 21 Verified Companies with Pricing & Credentials
There is only 1 confirmed active NADCA-certified air duct cleaning company serving the entire Boise-Nampa metro as of March 2026 — one of the lowest NADCA-to-population ratios of any major US metro. Yet the Treasure Valley has some of the most compelling reasons to hire a qualified duct cleaner: wildfire smoke from Idaho, Oregon, Montana, and Washington fires pushes Boise to "unhealthy" and "very unhealthy" AQI levels each August–September, winter temperature inversions trap pollutants in the valley from late November through mid-February, and the rapid population explosion (Idaho was the fastest-growing state in the nation 2020–2025) has brought tens of thousands of new-construction homes harboring post-build dust contamination. This directory lists every verified provider independently confirmed through NADCA membership records, Idaho DOPL/DBS licensing data, and cross-referenced review profiles — with pricing ranges, spam warnings, and local environmental context clearly marked.
Stanley Steemer Boise
490 E Schiller Ln, Ste 130, Meridian, ID 83642
(208) 621-2508
stanleysteemer.com/locations/ID/Boise/967
Boise, Caldwell, Eagle, Idaho City, Melba, Meridian, Nampa, New Plymouth, Parma, and surrounding Treasure Valley
October 2022
Contact for quote; free in-person estimates
Western Heating & Air Conditioning
Boise, ID
(208) 319-1736
westernhvac.com
Boise metro and surrounding Treasure Valley
Contact for quote; duct repair included (up to 3 repairs)
Boise Air Duct Pros
1310 S. Vista Ave, Boise, ID 83705
(208) 841-0888
boiseairductpros.com
Boise metro; also Twin Falls and Spokane locations
RCE-60866 (confirmed on Facebook)
Duct cleaning from $349; dryer vent $139; free sanitation with duct cleaning
Dirty Ducts Boise
Meridian, ID (service-area)
(986) 386-4495
bookdirtyductsboise.com
Boise, Meridian, Nampa, Caldwell, Eagle, Star, Kuna, and surrounding Treasure Valley
Contact for quote; free hospital-grade sanitation included
HyperClean Boise
Canyon County HQ (service-area)
(208) 515-0845
hypercleanboise.com
Boise metro; travel fee $50–$75 for Emmett, Horseshoe Bend, Mountain Home
$450 for 15 vents; dryer vent $50 with duct cleaning; $20/additional vent; $100/additional HVAC unit
Zerorez Boise
8744 W. Fairview Ave., Boise, ID 83704
(208) 383-1000
zerorezidaho.com
Boise, Eagle, Garden City, Kuna, Meridian, Nampa, Caldwell, Middleton, Star, Idaho City
Contact for quote; 30-day satisfaction guarantee
A-1 Heating Air Conditioning & Electric
Boise, ID
208 (local number)
a1heating.com
Ada and Canyon Counties
Contact for quote; customer satisfaction guarantee
Diamond Heating, Cooling, Plumbing & Electric
Garden City, ID
(208) 273-9193
diamondheatingandcooling.com
Boise metro; 24/7/365 emergency service
Contact for quote
System Kleen
Meridian, ID
(208) 884-3300
systemkleen.com
Treasure Valley
Contact for quote
DaVine Air
630 NW 3rd St, Meridian, ID 83642 (also: 30 S Pit Ln, Nampa, ID 83687)
(208) 342-1513 (Boise) / (208) 463-6322 (Nampa)
davineair.com
Boise metro and Nampa area
Contact for quote
All American Duct Cleaning
Caldwell, ID 83607
(208) 609-9947
allamericanductclean.com
Ada, Canyon, Gem, Valley, and Washington Counties — broadest verified county coverage
Contact for quote
Idaho Indoor Air LLC
Nampa, ID
Contact via website
idahoindoorair.com
Treasure Valley (no mileage charge within service area)
Transparent pricing; no mileage surcharge within Treasure Valley
Wickstrom Plumbing Heating & Cooling
Boise and Nampa, ID
(208) 269-7190
wickstromphc.com
Boise and Nampa area
Contact for quote; satisfaction guarantee
Cascade Cleaning Services LLC
Treasure Valley / Meridian area
(208) 428-6999
cascadecleaningservices.net
Nampa, Caldwell, Kuna, Emmett, Boise, and surrounding area
Contact for quote
1:16 Extreme Clean
Treasure Valley (service-area)
Contact via website
116extremeclean.com
Boise metro and Homedale, Marsing, Wilder, Parma, Emmett (Owyhee/Gem County coverage)
Contact for quote
Superior Air Duct Cleaning Idaho
Boise area (service-area)
(208) 957-3498
superiorductcleaningidaho.com
Boise metro
Upfront pricing; contact for quote
Dryer On Fire
Boise, ID (service-area)
(208) 371-2535
dryeronfireboise.com
Boise, Eagle, Meridian, Nampa, Caldwell, Middleton, Star, Kuna
Dryer vent: $119 standard / $199 full service; transparent pricing posted online
SERVPRO of Boise / SERVPRO of Nampa-Caldwell
Meridian, ID (locally owned)
Contact local franchise office
servpro.com
Boise to McCall; covers Marsing in Owyhee County
Contact for quote; 24/7 emergency response
Thompson Vent & Duct Cleaning
Boise area (service-area)
Contact via website
idahoduct.com
Boise, Nampa, Meridian, Garden City, Eagle, Kuna, Star, Caldwell
Contact for quote; FREE dryer vent cleaning included with full system service
Idaho Plumbing, Heating & Air
Meridian/Boise (service-area)
Contact via website
idahoheating.com
Meridian, Boise, Nampa, Eagle, Kuna, Garden City
Contact for quote
Right Now Heating, AC and Plumbing
Boise area
(208) 252-9533
rightnowheatcool.com
Boise, Caldwell, Nampa, Eagle, Meridian, Garden City, Kuna
Contact for quote; day/night service line
Show more listings
"Air Duct Cleaning Boise ID" / "Boise Clean Air Solutions" (airductcleaningboiseid.com)
"Air Duct Cleaning & Repairs" Network (airductcleaningeagle.com, airductcleaningmeridian.com, airductcleaningcaldwell.com)
Riggs Bee (riggsbeeairductnj.com)
D&D Air Duct Cleaning (ddairductcleaning.com)
Idaho Clean Air (Facebook: idahocleanair)
Apex Clean Air (apexcleanair.com)
Why NADCA Certification Is Rare — and Especially Important — in Boise
The Boise-Nampa metro area has only one confirmed active NADCA-certified air duct cleaning company serving approximately 850,000 residents — a ratio of roughly one NADCA member per 850,000 people. This represents one of the most severe NADCA undersupply conditions of any major US metro. By comparison, similarly sized metros like Albuquerque, Tucson, or Omaha have substantially more NADCA representation. This scarcity means that virtually every Boise homeowner who hires a duct cleaner will use a non-certified operator, making independent verification more important here than in almost any other market in the country.
NADCA certification requires at least one ASCS (Air Systems Cleaning Specialist) — a credential earned by passing a proctored exam covering HVAC system design, contamination science, and source-removal cleaning techniques. ASCS holders must renew annually. NADCA membership also requires adherence to the ACR (Assessment, Cleaning & Restoration) standard, which mandates full source-removal cleaning of every component — trunk lines, branch ducts, blower assembly, and coil — not just the supply vent faces visible from the floor. QUADCA certification (held by Dirty Ducts Boise) is another independently verifiable credential worth recognizing in this market.
To verify any company's NADCA membership before hiring, use the NADCA "Find a Professional" directory at nadca.com/find-a-professional. For Idaho contractor licensing, use the DOPL license search at edopl.idaho.gov/OnlineServices/ and select "Search for a License." The only company in this directory with a publicly displayed Idaho license number is Boise Air Duct Pros (RCE-60866).
Boise's Unique Air Quality Drivers: Wildfire Smoke, Temperature Inversions, and Post-Construction Dust
The Treasure Valley's air quality challenges make regular duct cleaning especially defensible — particularly given the annual wildfire smoke season, winter inversion cycles, and the explosive residential construction growth across Meridian, Star, Eagle, and Kuna.
View the three air quality drivers
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Wildfire Smoke (July–September)Wildfire smoke from Idaho, Oregon, Montana, and Washington creates hazardous air quality events across the Treasure Valley each summer. The 2024 Durkee Fire pushed Boise to "very unhealthy" (purple) AQI levels for multiple days — described by Idaho DEQ's David Luft as the worst smoke event in over a decade. The University of Idaho's McClure Center projects Idaho will experience "very poor air quality for several days during multiple events each year" by 2050. PM2.5 particles from wildfire smoke are small enough to penetrate buildings through the HVAC system and embed in duct lining, where they can recirculate each time your system runs. Post-wildfire cleaning should include trunk lines, branch ducts, blower assembly, and the evaporator coil.
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Winter Temperature Inversions (November–February)Late November through mid-February brings temperature inversions to the Treasure Valley that trap cold air and pollutants close to the ground. Boise averages 2.8 unhealthy PM2.5 days annually, with inversion events contributing significantly. Idaho also ranks 8th nationally in per-capita wood-burning stove pollution, adding to the particulate load during inversion periods. HVAC return air ducts actively pull this trapped pollution indoors.
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Post-Construction Dust (New Builds)Meridian grew to become Idaho's second-largest city; Star grew 80% in just four years; Eagle's population and new construction continue to surge. CBH Homes alone has constructed 29,000+ Idaho homes. During construction, ductwork is installed and left open while drywall finishing, painting, flooring, and trim work deposit fine dust, sawdust, insulation fibers, and construction debris directly into the ducts. Most Idaho builders do not contractually include post-construction duct cleaning — new homeowners in Meridian, Star, Kuna, and Eagle should schedule cleaning before occupancy or shortly after move-in, especially if any household member has allergies or respiratory sensitivities.
Given the dual-season HVAC demand in Boise (heating October through April, cooling June through September means the system runs nearly year-round), most local HVAC professionals recommend cleaning every 2–3 years rather than the NADCA general recommendation of 3–5 years. Households near active construction zones, with post-wildfire smoke exposure, pets, or respiratory conditions may benefit from more frequent service.
How to Spot Air Duct Cleaning Scams in Boise
Our research flagged at least 9 high-confidence spam or deceptive listings specifically targeting Boise metro searches — a roughly 1:2 spam-to-legitimate ratio in online search results. The local market has documented bait-and-switch operations (BBB complaints against Apex Clean Air and Idaho Clean Air), out-of-state SEO farms (Riggs Bee from New Jersey), and a cityname-domain lead-generation network targeting Eagle, Meridian, and Caldwell simultaneously.
🚩 Red Flag #1: Any price under $100 for whole-home cleaning. Legitimate NADCA-standard duct cleaning runs $300–$550 for a standard 3BR/2BA Boise-area home. HyperClean Boise charges $450 for 15 vents; Boise Air Duct Pros starts at $349. Equipment alone costs tens of thousands of dollars. A $49 "whole house" price is economically impossible for a legitimate operator — it is always a bait-and-switch entry point. Documented in the Boise market via Apex Clean Air BBB complaints ($49 entry → $600–$1,600 upsell) and Idaho Clean Air (charged $1,535–$1,857 for products never delivered).
🚩 Red Flag #2: City-name keyword domains. Domains like airductcleaningeagle.com, airductcleaningmeridian.com, airductcleaningcaldwell.com, and airductcleaningboiseid.com are lead-generation front sites — not real companies. They use identical boilerplate text, copy Wikipedia city descriptions, list conflicting founding dates, and claim NADCA credentials with no verifiable member IDs. The airductcleaning[cityname].com pattern is a single identified network operating across at least three Boise metro cities.
🚩 Red Flag #3: Non-208/986 phone numbers. Idaho's legitimate local area codes are 208 and 986 (the 986 overlay was introduced in 2022 and is entirely legitimate). An 800, 833, 844, 855, 866, 877, or 888 toll-free number for a supposedly local Boise company is a meaningful red flag. Verify by calling and asking the technician's name, physical Idaho address, and NADCA membership number before scheduling.
To verify NADCA membership: visit nadca.com/find-a-professional and search by company name or zip code. To verify Idaho DOPL contractor licensing: use edopl.idaho.gov/OnlineServices/ and search by company name.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does air duct cleaning cost in Boise?
How many NADCA-certified air duct cleaning companies are there in Boise?
Should I have my air ducts cleaned after Boise's wildfire smoke season?
My new home in Meridian, Eagle, or Star was just built — do I need air duct cleaning before move-in?
Does Idaho require a license for air duct cleaning companies?
I see ads for $49 duct cleaning specials in Boise — are these legitimate?
How do I clean air ducts in a historic North End or Boise Bench home?
What is the difference between NADCA and QUADCA certification?
Which Boise-area duct cleaning companies serve Emmett (Gem County) and Homedale/Marsing (Owyhee County)?
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