Local know-how
Living near the coast is a trade-off most of us happily accept — sunshine ten months out of twelve, salt air drifting off the Atlantic, and the occasional summer storm that leaves your driveway looking like it hasn't been touched in years. Our job is to undo that wear and tear without damaging the house, the paint, the screen enclosure, or the landscaping you spent a weekend planting.
Between Pompano Beach and the western edge of Coral Springs, humidity rarely drops below sticky. That moisture, combined with constant warmth, is exactly what algae, mildew, and gloeocapsa magma (the dark streaks on your shingles) need to flourish. Add wind-blown sand from the beach, road grime kicked up by I-95, and pollen from every flowering tree in the neighborhood, and a year's worth of buildup can dull stucco, stain pavers, and shave years off a roof.
We see the same pattern on almost every property: north-facing walls grow green first, screen cages collect a film you can write your name in, and concrete driveways develop a chalky, gray cast that homeowners assume is permanent. It isn't. With the right approach, surfaces snap back to looking almost new — without the expense of repainting or resealing.
People use the terms interchangeably, but they're different tools for different jobs. Soft washing uses low pressure (roughly the force of a garden hose) and a biodegradable cleaning solution that actually kills the organic growth on contact. It's what we use on roofs, painted stucco, screen enclosures, and anything else that high pressure would chew up.
Pressure washing is the right call for concrete, pavers, brick, and most hard surfaces. We pair the wand with a surface cleaner that spins the water in a controlled pattern, so you don't end up with those ugly stripes a homeowner with a Home Depot rental almost always leaves behind. Knowing which method to use where is most of the job — and it's why we don't quote a property without looking at it first.
For most Broward County homes, a full exterior soft wash once a year keeps mildew, algae, and salt deposits from setting in. Roofs typically need attention every two to three years depending on tree cover and shingle type. Driveways and walkways look their best with an annual cleaning, while pool decks and screen cages often benefit from twice-yearly service because of the constant moisture.
If you live closer to the water — Lighthouse Point, Hillsboro Beach, Lauderdale-by-the-Sea — plan on slightly more frequent visits. Salt air is relentless. Properties further inland in Coconut Creek, Parkland, or Weston tend to stretch a little longer between washes.
We pre-wet your landscaping before we start and rinse it again when we finish, so the cleaning solution never has a chance to stress your plants. We dial pressure down for painted surfaces and soft materials. We tarp delicate fixtures, move what we can, and put it all back when we're done. Our trucks carry their own water tanks, so we're not draining your well or your municipal supply.
Every job ends with a walk-through. If something isn't right, we fix it before we pack up — not on a callback two weeks later. That's the part most companies skip, and it's the part that keeps our calendar full from referrals alone.
We're based in Pompano Beach, but our routes cover the whole county. On any given week, our crews are washing a two-story in Coral Springs, soft-washing a tile roof in Parkland, restoring a paver driveway in Weston, brightening a storefront on Las Olas in Fort Lauderdale, and stripping rust off a pool deck in Lighthouse Point. We know the gate codes for most of the HOA communities, the parking quirks in downtown Hollywood, and which neighborhoods in Plantation need extra care around mature oaks.
That local familiarity matters. It means we show up with the right setup the first time, finish faster, and don't leave your neighbors wondering whose truck has been parked out front all afternoon. Whether you're in Deerfield Beach, Tamarac, Sunrise, Davie, Pembroke Pines, Miramar, or anywhere in between, you're on our regular route — not a once-in-a-while detour we charge a premium for.