Pressure washing operators leave roughly 30% of available revenue on the table by underpricing jobs or pricing them with the wrong model. This guide breaks down the three pricing methods that work, the per-square-foot rates by surface, and the exact formula to set a profitable price for any job — built on verified 2026 industry data, not guesses.
Most pressure washing contractors use one of three pricing models in 2026: per square foot ($0.20–$0.50 average), hourly ($60–$160 per hour), or flat-rate per project ($150–$1,200 depending on surface). The most profitable model is hybrid pricing: per-square-foot for large flat surfaces, flat-rate for residential houses, and hourly for unusual jobs. To set a profitable rate, calculate (Hourly Cost + Profit Margin) ÷ Square Feet Cleaned Per Hour. With industry profit margins averaging 6.8%, accurate pricing is the single highest-leverage skill a pressure washing operator can develop. The operators hitting 25-35% margins use pricing software like QuoteIQ to automate measurement, run the formula, and generate quotes consistently.
Before you set a price, you need to understand the market you’re operating in. Here’s verified 2024–2026 data on the U.S. pressure washing industry.
$27/hr
Average wage for a pressure washing technician in the U.S.
6.8%
Average industry profit margin — thin margins demand accurate pricing
$1M+
Top 10% of pressure washing firms exceed seven-figure annual revenue
$1,200
Average commercial pressure washing job — the highest-leverage segment
“The contractors who grow in 2026 will not be the ones working longer hours. They will be the ones building repeatable processes that allow them to handle more leads, close jobs faster, and reduce decision fatigue. Growth will belong to the contractors who treat structure as strategy.”
— 2025 Pressure Washing & Soft Washing Industry ReportEvery successful pressure washing operator uses one of three core pricing models — or a hybrid of all three. Here’s exactly when to use each, who it works for, and the rates that win in 2026.
Per-square-foot pricing is the gold standard for large flat surfaces. It scales transparently, customers can verify the math, and it forces accurate measurement which prevents you from underbidding by eyeball.
Rate ranges by surface:
Hourly pricing protects you on irregular, complicated, or first-time jobs where you can’t reliably estimate square footage or time. The risk: customers prefer fixed prices and may push back on open-ended quotes.
Per-crew-member rate: $50–$100/hr per technician on the job. A 3-person crew at $80/hr each = $240/hr total revenue.
Flat-rate pricing is what most homeowners actually want. It removes the “what will this actually cost me” anxiety and lets them say yes faster. Build your flat rates from your sqft model — don’t guess them.
Average flat rates by job:
The pro move: use all three. Quote per-square-foot for commercial and large flat surfaces, flat-rate for residential, hourly for the unusual stuff. The contractors who lock themselves into one model leave money on the table. The ones who match the model to the job consistently price 15–30% higher than competitors and still win the work because the price feels fair to the customer.
Every other pricing guide gives you ranges. This one gives you the actual formula. If you can plug in five numbers, you can set a profitable price for any pressure washing job — and never wonder if you underbid again.
Start here. This is the math behind every profitable per-square-foot rate.
(Total Hourly Cost + Profit Margin) ÷ Sq Ft Per Hour = Your Price Per Sq Ft
Example for a solo operator targeting 30% profit:
Important: $0.035 is your floor. Market rate is $0.20–$0.40. The difference is your competitive cushion — discount for repeat customers, charge premium for difficult access, walk away from prospects below your floor.
To set defensible prices, every operator needs to know these five inputs cold. Most don’t — which is why margins stay thin and pricing feels like guessing. Pricing software like QuoteIQ’s job costing tracks all five automatically once you set them up — but you still have to know the numbers to enter them.
Every formula in this guide can be run on a spreadsheet. But the operators making 25-35% profit margins instead of the 6.8% industry average aren’t running spreadsheets — they’re running pricing software that handles the math, the measurement, and the customer-facing quote in one workflow. After reviewing every major field service management platform, the editorial pick for pressure washing pricing specifically is QuoteIQ.
Three QuoteIQ features map directly to the pricing problems in this guide:
Measure any property’s square footage from satellite imagery before you ever drive to the site. Drop pins around the driveway, house siding, or roof — get exact sqft instantly. The biggest pricing mistake operators make is eyeballing measurements and underbidding by 20-40%.
Customers self-quote from your website at any hour. They pick services, enter property info, and get a price built from your preset pricing rules — the formula running automatically. While you’re sleeping, prospects who would otherwise call your competitor are getting quoted at YOUR price.
Live profit margin on every job. Enter your hourly cost, log labor and materials, and QuoteIQ shows you the actual margin per job in real time. The 6.8% industry average exists because most operators never look at per-job profitability. The 30%+ operators look at it on every job.
If you’re pricing pressure washing jobs in 2026 without software running these three workflows, you’re working harder than you need to and leaving margin on the table. QuoteIQ starts at $29.99/month with a 14-day free trial. For a fuller comparison of pressure washing CRM options, see our Top 10 CRMs for Pressure Washing Businesses ranking.
Here are the verified per-square-foot and flat-rate ranges for every surface a pressure washing operator regularly bids in 2026, sourced from HomeAdvisor, Angi, Thumbtack, and industry pricing surveys.
The bread-and-butter job. Standard 600 sq ft single-car driveway: $120–$240. Standard 1,000 sq ft two-car driveway: $200–$400. Set a $150 minimum to make any driveway worth the truck roll.
| Driveway Size | Sq Ft Range | Flat-Rate Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small / 1-car | 200–400 | $80–$150 | Often hits minimum job fee |
| Standard / 1-car | 500–700 | $155–$280 | Most common residential job |
| Large / 2-car | 800–1,200 | $240–$480 | Add upsell for sidewalk/walkway |
| Extra-large / 3-car | 1,500–2,500 | $400–$1,000 | Negotiate per-sq-ft below $0.35 |
Premium adders: Heavy oil/grease stains add $50–$100. Mold/mildew bleach treatment adds $0.10–$0.15/sq ft. Pavers vs concrete add 30–50% to total.
Pro tip: Driveway sqft is the easiest place to underbid. MapMeasure Pro measures driveways from satellite imagery in 30 seconds — accurate to the foot. Eyeballing a 1,000 sqft driveway as 700 sqft costs you $100+ per job. Multiply that across 200 jobs a year and underbidding costs you $20K in margin.
House washing is where flat-rate pricing dominates. Customers want to know “what will it cost to wash my house” — give them a number. Most contractors price by exterior square footage of siding, not floor square footage.
| House Type | Approx Siding Sq Ft | Flat-Rate Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small ranch (1-story) | 1,200–1,600 | $250–$400 | Vinyl siding, easy access |
| Standard 2-story | 2,000–2,800 | $400–$650 | Most common job |
| Large 2-story | 3,000–4,000 | $550–$900 | Stucco/brick adds 20% |
| Multi-story / large | 4,500+ | $700–$1,400+ | Ladders/scaffolding adds 30%+ |
Why soft wash matters: high-pressure damages vinyl siding. Soft wash uses bleach + surfactant at low pressure. It’s faster, safer, and lets you charge the same — sometimes more, because customers pay for “we won’t break your siding.”
Pro tip: House exterior sqft is harder to estimate than driveway sqft because you need wall area, not floor area. Most operators undercharge here by 15-25%. Pricing software with aerial measurement (like QuoteIQ’s MapMeasure Pro) handles wall surface area calculation automatically, eliminating the guesswork that costs operators thousands per year.
Roofs are the highest-margin surface in pressure washing — and the highest risk. Premium pricing is justified by the safety setup, slow production rate (400–800 sq ft/hr), and specialized training to avoid roof damage.
| Roof Size | Sq Ft Range | Flat-Rate Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small (single-story) | 1,200–1,600 | $350–$500 | Asphalt shingle |
| Standard 2-story | 1,800–2,500 | $500–$750 | Most common job |
| Large / steep pitch | 2,800+ | $700–$1,200+ | Adds for steep pitch over 6/12 |
Critical: never use high-pressure on asphalt shingles. Use soft wash with sodium hypochlorite. High-pressure strips granules and voids manufacturer warranties — get sued for repair costs that exceed the value of the job 20x.
Decks and patios are great upsells when you’re already on a property. Production rate is slower than concrete — wood absorbs water, requires careful pressure management, and homeowners scrutinize the result more closely than they do a driveway.
| Deck/Patio Type | Sq Ft Range | Flat-Rate Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small wood deck | 200–400 | $150–$220 | Pre-treatment for mildew adds $50 |
| Large wood deck | 500–800 | $220–$400 | Most common job |
| Concrete patio | 300–600 | $120–$240 | Faster than wood, lower rate |
| Stairs (per flight) | — | +$65 per flight | Always charge per staircase |
Stain-and-seal upsell: $0.50–$1.50/sq ft for full stain-and-seal after washing. This is where deck jobs become $1,000+ instead of $300.
Per-square-foot rates drop on commercial because production rates triple — but total job revenue is 3-10x residential. The $1,200 average commercial job is where contractors break out of the residential grind. Recurring contracts (monthly, quarterly) are the holy grail of pressure washing — predictable revenue, no marketing cost.
| Commercial Type | Typical Sq Ft | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small parking lot | 5,000–10,000 | $400–$1,200 | One-time cleaning |
| Restaurant exterior | 2,000–4,000 | $300–$800 | Often quarterly contract |
| Strip mall walkways | 3,000–8,000 | $500–$1,400 | Monthly contract = $250–$700/mo |
| Large commercial flatwork | 15,000+ | $1,200–$3,000+ | Annual contract leverage |
Commercial strategy: bid contracts, not jobs. A $300/month restaurant contract = $3,600/year recurring with one initial sales effort. Five contracts = $18,000/year of revenue you don’t have to chase.
After analyzing how operators actually price jobs in the field, the same handful of expensive mistakes show up over and over. Avoid these and you’ll out-earn 80% of pressure washing operators within 12 months.
“I think this should be about $300” is not pricing — it’s guessing. Operators who price by feel routinely underbid by 20–40% and never figure out why margins are thin. Build the formula once. Use it on every quote. Adjust upward over time, never downward. Customer self-quoting software like QuoteIQ’s InstaQuote enforces this automatically — once your pricing rules are set, every quote runs through them. No more 8pm panic-quotes that undercut your margin.
A $90 driveway pressure wash is a money-loser for almost every operator. Truck roll, fuel, setup, and breakdown alone cost $40–$60. Set a minimum job fee of $150–$250 and never break it. The customers who walk away weren’t profitable customers anyway.
Commercial customers will pay top dollar for reliability — the contractor who always shows up on time and does it right. Solo operators routinely underprice commercial because “it’s bigger volume.” Bigger volume means more leverage, not lower margin. Commercial recurring contracts should be 25–35% margin minimum.
Two-story access? Add 25–40%. Heavy mold/mildew pre-treatment? Add $0.10–$0.15/sq ft. Limited water access (you have to bring tanks)? Add $50–$150. Steep slope or terrain? Add 20%. The contractor who quotes the same price for an easy job and a hard job loses money on every hard job.
Inflation runs 3%+ per year. Fuel costs are up 15% in 2024 alone. Insurance costs rise. Equipment depreciates. If your pricing in 2026 is the same as your pricing in 2023, you’ve taken a 9%+ pay cut without realizing it. Raise prices every January. Existing customers expect it. New customers won’t know the difference.
This pricing playbook was compiled by the Service Business Academy editorial team. We reviewed pricing data from HomeAdvisor (2026), Angi (2026), Thumbtack, HomeGuide, and industry production-rate surveys. Industry statistics verified against the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, IBISWorld pressure washing services data, and the 2025 Pressure Washing & Soft Washing Industry Report. Pricing ranges reflect 2026 market conditions across the continental United States — regional variation can shift ranges 15–25% in either direction. Confirm local rates before committing to long-term flat-rate pricing structures.
Pricing data sources (verified April 29, 2026):
HomeAdvisor — Driveway Pressure Washing Costs ·
Angi — Pressure Washing Cost Guide ·
Thumbtack — National Pressure Washing Pricing ·
HomeGuide — Power Washing Prices
Industry data sources:
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Outlook Handbook ·
IBISWorld — Pressure Washing Services Industry ·
2025 Pressure Washing & Soft Washing Industry Report ·
Pressure Washing Industry Statistics 2026
Most pressure washing contractors charge $0.20–$0.50 per square foot or $60–$160 per hour in 2026. The exact rate depends on surface type, regional market, and your true hourly cost. Use the formula (Hourly Cost + Profit Margin) ÷ Square Feet Per Hour to find your minimum profitable rate, then benchmark against three local competitors to set your market rate. The median 2026 rate for residential driveways is $0.30/sq ft, house siding $0.30/sq ft, and roofs $0.65/sq ft. To automate this calculation across every quote, the editorial pick is QuoteIQ’s InstaQuote with built-in pricing rules.
The average flat-rate price to pressure wash a house in 2026 is $250–$700, with the standard 2-story home landing between $400 and $650. Price varies by exterior square footage, siding material (vinyl is cheaper than stucco or brick), number of stories, and access difficulty. A small 1-story ranch typically prices at $250–$400, a standard 2-story at $400–$650, and a large 2-story or multi-story at $550–$1,400+. Always quote based on exterior siding square footage, not floor square footage.
The average flat-rate price to pressure wash a driveway in 2026 is $155–$320, with most homeowners paying around $210 for a standard 600 sq ft driveway. Per-square-foot rates land at $0.20–$0.40 for standard cleaning and $0.30–$0.55 for power washing (hot water). Heavy oil/grease stains add $50–$100. Most contractors set a $150 minimum job fee for any driveway under 500 sq ft to make the truck roll worthwhile.
Use a hybrid approach. Per-square-foot pricing wins on driveways, parking lots, and commercial flatwork — it scales transparently and customers can verify the math. Hourly pricing wins on irregular jobs where you can’t reliably estimate time (heavy stains, multi-story access, restoration work). Flat-rate pricing wins on residential houses and decks because customers psychologically prefer fixed prices. Top-earning operators use all three: per-sq-ft for big flat surfaces, flat-rate for residential, and hourly as a safety net for unusual work.
The industry average profit margin is 6.8%, which is unhealthy. A well-run pressure washing business should target 20–35% net profit margin. To hit those numbers, you need to know your true hourly cost (labor, fuel, chemicals, insurance, equipment depreciation, truck), price every job above your floor rate, charge a minimum job fee of $150–$250, and raise prices annually to keep up with inflation. Job costing software like QuoteIQ’s job costing tool shows live profit margin on every job — making the difference between 6.8% guesswork and 30% margin discipline. The top 10% of pressure washing firms exceed $1M in annual revenue — and they do it through pricing discipline, not just volume.
Pressure washing rates for roofs run $0.30–$1.00 per square foot, with most flat-rate jobs priced at $350–$800. Roofs are the highest-margin surface in pressure washing because production rates are slower (400–800 sq ft/hr) and the safety setup justifies premium pricing. Critical: never use high-pressure on asphalt shingles — use soft wash with sodium hypochlorite. High-pressure strips granules and voids manufacturer warranties, exposing you to repair-cost liability that can exceed the job value 20-fold. Add 20–30% for steep pitches over 6/12.
Add up these five inputs: (1) Labor cost — your time and any helpers at fully-burdened rates. (2) Fuel — typically $8–$12/hr for the truck and equipment. (3) Chemicals and supplies — $4–$10/hr. (4) Insurance allocated per hour — divide annual premium by your billable hours (1,500/year is typical), most operators land at $1.50–$2.50/hr. (5) Equipment depreciation and truck payment — divide annual cost by billable hours. For most solo operators this totals $35–$55/hr. Once you know this number, you can never legitimately price below it.
The minimum job fee for pressure washing in 2026 is $150–$250 for most operators. This covers truck roll, setup, breakdown, fuel, and the opportunity cost of not taking a bigger job. Below $150, the math doesn’t work — you’re paying to drive to the customer. Set this number, communicate it on every quote, and never break it for a “favor” or “easy” job. The customers who walk away from a $150 minimum weren’t profitable customers anyway.
Commercial pressure washing jobs price at $0.08–$0.20 per square foot, with the average commercial job landing at $1,200. Per-square-foot rates drop because production rates triple on large flat commercial surfaces, but total job revenue is 3-10x residential. The big lever in commercial is recurring contracts: a $300/month restaurant cleaning contract = $3,600/year of recurring revenue from one initial sales effort. Five contracts = $18,000/year you don’t have to re-sell. Price contracts at 25–35% margin minimum, never the residential 6.8% industry average.
Raise prices every January. Inflation runs 3%+ per year. Fuel costs are up 15% in 2024 alone. Insurance, equipment, and labor all trend upward. If your 2026 pricing matches your 2023 pricing, you’ve taken a 9%+ pay cut without realizing it. Raise rates 5–8% annually as the default — existing customers expect it, new customers won’t know the difference, and your margin recovery compounds over time. The single biggest pricing mistake operators make is letting their rates erode through inaction.
The contractors hitting 25-35% profit margins use software that runs the formula automatically — accurate measurement, customer self-quoting, live job costing. Our editorial pick for pressure washing pricing is QuoteIQ, starting at $29.99/month with a 14-day free trial.
Or get the next pricing guide delivered to your inbox — subscribe to the weekly Service Business Academy roundup.