Gutter Cleaning Cost Calculator
Estimate your professional gutter cleaning cost with 2024 US pricing. Enter your linear feet of gutters, number of stories, gutter condition, and any add-on services to get a realistic low, mid, and high cost range — per visit and annually.
Estimates are based on 2024 national average US gutter cleaning pricing and are intended for initial budget planning only. Actual costs depend on your local market, roof pitch, gutter accessibility, specific property conditions, and contractor pricing. Always obtain at least two itemized quotes before hiring a gutter cleaning service.
How Much Does Professional Gutter Cleaning Cost in 2024?
Professional gutter cleaning is one of the most important — and most frequently neglected — home maintenance tasks in the United States. Clogged gutters cause water to back up against the fascia board, seep under roofing materials, and pool at the foundation. The resulting damage — rotted fascia, basement water intrusion, and compromised foundations — can cost thousands to repair. A $150–$225 gutter cleaning visit, done annually, is one of the highest-return maintenance investments a homeowner can make.
In 2024, professional gutter cleaning costs between $75 and $400 per service call for most US residential properties. The wide range reflects the primary pricing variables: total linear footage of gutters, number of stories (which determines ladder requirements and safety procedures), gutter condition and debris accumulation level, add-on services such as downspout flushing and minor repairs, and regional labor costs. This calculator applies current market data across all these variables to give you a realistic estimate before you request a single quote.
A typical 1-story ranch home with 140–160 linear feet of gutters in good condition costs $115–$190 to clean professionally. The same linear footage on a 2-story home costs $170–$280 due to the ladder height premium. A 2-story home with moderate debris accumulation and a downspout flush add-on — a very common service configuration — typically runs $250–$425.
Gutter Cleaning Cost Calculator
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Why Gutter Cleaning Matters: The Hidden Cost of Neglect
Gutters have one job: channel rainwater away from your home's roof, walls, and foundation. When gutters clog, that water has nowhere to go. It backs up against the fascia board — the horizontal board directly behind the gutter — and begins to saturate and rot the wood. Fascia replacement costs $6–$20 per linear foot, meaning a full fascia replacement on a typical home runs $900–$3,000. A single season of neglected gutters can initiate this process.
Water that overflows from clogged gutters runs down the exterior wall, saturating siding and eventually reaching the foundation. Hydrostatic pressure against basement walls is a leading cause of basement water intrusion in homes without waterproofing membranes. Foundation crack repair and interior waterproofing starts at $3,000 and frequently exceeds $10,000 for significant issues — costs that dwarf a decade of professional gutter cleaning.
In winter climates, clogged gutters contribute directly to ice dam formation. When debris blocks water flow, standing water freezes and expands in the gutter channel, forcing ice under shingles and into the roof deck. Ice dam damage is typically not covered by homeowners insurance when caused by deferred maintenance, making it one of the most financially painful outcomes of gutter neglect.
The True Annual Cost of Clogged Gutters
Consider the compounding costs of a homeowner who skips gutter cleaning for 5 years on a 2-story home:
- Fascia damage: $1,200–$2,500 for partial fascia replacement after wood rot sets in
- Soffit damage: $600–$1,800 if water penetrates beyond fascia to soffit boards
- Foundation repair: $3,000–$10,000+ if water consistently pools at the foundation
- Ice dam remediation: $500–$2,000 per winter event in cold climates
Against those costs, 5 years of twice-yearly professional gutter cleaning at $200 per visit totals $2,000 — and prevents all of the above damage scenarios. The math strongly favors maintenance.
Gutter Cleaning Frequency Guide
How often you need to clean your gutters depends primarily on the trees surrounding your home, your local climate, and the type of debris your roof collects. There is no universal answer — a home in an open suburban area with minimal tree coverage may only need cleaning once per year, while a home surrounded by mature oaks may need cleaning four times annually.
Once Per Year
Annual cleaning (late fall after leaf drop) is appropriate for homes with minimal deciduous tree coverage within 50 feet of the roofline and no pine trees. A single thorough cleaning in November removes the full season's debris accumulation and prepares gutters for winter and spring snowmelt. This is the minimum recommended frequency for any home with gutters.
Twice Per Year
Twice-yearly cleaning (spring and fall) is the most widely recommended schedule for typical US homes. Spring cleaning in March or April removes winter debris, shingle grit that accumulates over the cold months, and early spring seed pods that are prolific cloggers. Fall cleaning in November removes the season's leaf accumulation before winter. Most gutter cleaning companies offer a 10% discount for twice-yearly contracts, recognizing the scheduling efficiency of committed repeat customers.
Three to Four Times Per Year (High-Coverage Properties)
Homes with deciduous trees directly overhanging the roofline — especially oak, maple, sweet gum, or similar high-debris species — may need cleaning 3–4 times per year. Oak trees drop catkins in spring, acorns in fall, and leaves throughout the season. Sweet gum trees drop spiky seed balls year-round. Maple trees produce seed helicopters in spring that pack densely into gutters and germinate if not removed promptly. If you find yourself dealing with overflowing gutters between annual cleanings, more frequent service is warranted.
Pine Trees: A Special Case
Pine trees shed needles year-round, unlike deciduous trees that drop leaves in a concentrated fall period. Pine needles are particularly problematic because they pack densely, resist decomposition, and create a near-solid mat that blocks water flow even in small quantities. Homes with pine trees directly adjacent to the roofline typically need gutter cleaning every 2–3 months during the growing season. Gutter guards are especially cost-effective for pine tree situations — the payback period is much shorter when cleaning would otherwise be needed quarterly.
Warning Signs Your Gutters Are Clogged
Catching clogged gutters early prevents minor maintenance from becoming major structural repairs. Inspect your gutters visually from the ground after a heavy rain, and from a ladder at least once per year. Key warning signs include:
- Water spilling over the gutter edge: The most obvious sign. During or after rain, water should exit only through downspouts, not over the front edge of the gutter. Any overflow means a clog exists somewhere in the system.
- Water stains on exterior walls: Brown or green streaking on siding below the gutter line indicates chronic overflow that has been saturating the wall surface.
- Sagging gutters: Water-saturated debris is heavy. Gutters loaded with wet leaves and compacted sediment pull away from the fascia board, creating visible sags. This can also indicate that gutter hangers have pulled out of the fascia.
- Plant growth in gutters: Moss, grass, or even small tree seedlings growing in gutters are a definitive sign of deep debris accumulation with sufficient organic matter for germination. This level of clogging requires immediate professional attention.
- Peeling paint or rust on gutters or fascia: Chronic moisture exposure from standing water in gutters causes paint failure and accelerates rust on metal gutters, beginning the process of structural deterioration.
- Foundation pooling: Standing water near the foundation after rain may indicate that downspouts are clogged and not discharging water away from the home.
- Basement dampness after rain: Unexplained moisture in the basement that correlates with rainfall may indicate that water is pooling at the foundation due to clogged gutters or inadequate downspout extensions.
DIY vs. Professional Gutter Cleaning: A Safety and Cost Analysis
Gutter cleaning is one of the few home maintenance tasks where the primary argument for hiring a professional is safety rather than skill. The actual work — scooping debris from gutters and flushing with water — requires no special expertise. The hazard is the ladder work, particularly for 2-story and 3-story homes.
1-Story Homes: Reasonable DIY Candidate
For a 1-story home with accessible gutters, DIY cleaning is a practical option for most homeowners. A gutter cleaning attachment for a standard wet/dry vacuum ($25–$60) or a gutter cleaning wand for a garden hose ($15–$30) allows ground-level cleaning on many 1-story gutters. Where ladder work is required on a 1-story home, a 6-foot stepladder provides a stable working platform. Total DIY cost for a single-story home: $20–$60 in equipment for the first year, then essentially zero ongoing cost.
2-Story and Above: Strong Case for Professional Service
At 2 stories and above, the safety calculus shifts decisively toward professional service. Extension ladders at 20–24 feet require a second person for safety, proper angle and footing technique, and frequent repositioning that increases fall risk. Ladder falls at height are among the leading causes of serious home DIY injuries in the US, resulting in tens of thousands of emergency room visits annually. Professionals carry general liability insurance — if an uninsured DIY attempt results in injury or property damage, the homeowner bears the full financial consequences. For a 2-story home, the $150–$280 professional cleaning cost is extremely reasonable risk mitigation.
What Professionals Do That DIYers Miss
Beyond the safety aspect, professional gutter cleaners typically provide value beyond simply scooping debris: they flush all downspouts under pressure (the most commonly missed step in DIY cleaning), inspect gutter hangers and seams for early failure, identify shingle overhang and roof edge issues visible only from the gutter level, and note fascia and soffit conditions that may require attention before water damage progresses.
Gutter Guard Types and Costs: A Complete Guide
Gutter guards are covers or inserts designed to keep debris out of gutters while allowing water to flow through freely. The gutter guard market ranges from $0.75/lf screen products at hardware stores to $45/lf professionally installed micro-mesh systems. Understanding the tradeoffs — effectiveness, durability, maintenance requirement, and cost — helps homeowners make a financially sound decision.
Screen Guards ($0.75–$2/lf)
Basic screen guards are the most affordable option, consisting of metal or plastic mesh stretched over the gutter opening. They block large leaves and debris effectively but allow pine needles, shingle grit, and seed pods to pass through or accumulate on top. They are DIY-installable and inexpensive, but require more frequent cleaning than higher-end options because debris builds up on the screen surface itself. Payback period versus cleaning costs: 3–5 years for moderate debris conditions.
Brush Inserts ($3–$4/lf)
Cylindrical brush inserts sit inside the gutter channel, with bristles extending upward. Leaves are supposed to rest on the bristles and blow away. In practice, debris becomes intertwined in the bristles and is difficult to remove — many homeowners find that brush guards actually create worse clogs than no guards at all. This type is generally not recommended by gutter cleaning professionals.
Reverse Curve Guards ($10–$20/lf)
Reverse curve (or surface tension) guards use the physics of water surface tension: water follows the curved surface into the gutter while debris falls off the front edge. They work well for large debris but can allow fine particles to enter via the water stream. They are bulky and visible from the ground, which affects aesthetics on some home styles.
Micro-Mesh Guards ($15–$45/lf professionally installed)
Micro-mesh guards are the most effective debris-blocking option available, using extremely fine stainless steel mesh (often 50 microns or finer) bonded to an aluminum frame. Water flows through the mesh while virtually all debris — including pine needles and seed pods — stays on top and blows away. High-quality micro-mesh systems (LeafFilter, MasterShield, HomeCraft) carry lifetime warranties. At $15–$45/lf installed on a 150 lf home ($2,250–$6,750 total), micro-mesh systems are a significant investment. The payback makes sense when: you have heavy tree coverage requiring frequent cleaning, you are on a 2-story or 3-story home where cleaning is expensive, or you want to eliminate ladder work entirely.
The Real Maintenance Story for Gutter Guards
No gutter guard eliminates maintenance entirely. Even micro-mesh guards accumulate shingle grit and mineral deposits from rainwater over time, eventually reducing flow capacity. Industry professionals recommend inspecting guarded gutters annually and cleaning every 2–3 years at minimum. Any homeowner who believes their gutter guard system is truly maintenance-free is likely deferring a significant cleaning job.
Downspout Problems: The Most Overlooked Gutter Issue
Downspouts are the vertical pipes that carry water from gutters to the ground and away from the foundation. They are the most critical — and most overlooked — component of the gutter system. When downspouts clog, the entire connected gutter section backs up and overflows, even if the gutter itself is clean.
Why Downspouts Clog
Debris that makes it past the gutter collects at the elbow joints where downspouts transition from horizontal (the gutter outlet) to vertical. Leaves, shingle granules, seed pods, and even bird nesting materials compact at these bends, creating solid blockages. A small blockage at a downspout elbow can back up and overflow 20–40 linear feet of connected gutter during a heavy rain.
Signs of a Clogged Downspout
The most reliable sign is overflow at the gutter outlet (where the downspout connects to the gutter) rather than at the middle of the gutter channel — this localized overflow points to a downspout blockage. You can also test downspouts by running a garden hose into the gutter above the downspout connection: the water should flow freely from the downspout outlet at the bottom. Slow or no discharge indicates a blockage.
Downspout Flushing Cost and Process
Professional downspout flushing costs $50–$100 as an add-on to gutter cleaning. The technician runs a pressurized hose or plumbing snake through the downspout from the top, clearing debris at bends and joints, then confirms clear flow at the bottom outlet. This is the single most valuable add-on service in the gutter cleaning toolkit — nearly all professionals recommend flushing downspouts at every cleaning visit, though many base quotes do not include it. Always ask whether downspout flushing is included in any gutter cleaning quote.
Fascia Damage Prevention: Protecting Your Home's Structural Edge
The fascia board runs horizontally along the roofline, directly behind the gutter. It provides structural support for the bottom row of roof tiles and the gutter mounting system. When gutters clog and water backs up, the fascia is the first structural component to suffer. Wood fascia saturated with water develops rot in as little as one season of chronic overflow.
Early Signs of Fascia Damage
Inspect the fascia during your annual gutter cleaning. Early signs of water damage include: soft or spongy wood when pressed, paint bubbling or peeling on the fascia face, brown discoloration or dark staining on the fascia surface, visible separation between the gutter and the fascia board (indicates the fascia has expanded and contracted from moisture cycles), and rust or corrosion where gutter spikes or screws attach to the fascia.
Fascia Replacement Cost
Partial fascia replacement (one wall of a home) runs $300–$700 for materials and labor. Full fascia replacement on a typical 2-story home costs $1,500–$3,500. PVC or aluminum fascia wrap — a waterproof aluminum or vinyl cover installed over existing wood fascia — costs $800–$2,000 for a full home and provides long-term protection against moisture damage. Some homeowners install fascia wrap proactively after a cleaning and repair, preventing future damage regardless of gutter condition.
Spring vs. Fall Gutter Cleaning: Timing Strategy
If you can only clean gutters once per year, fall is the right choice for most US climates. Late fall cleaning — after the last deciduous trees have dropped their leaves, typically November in most of the US — removes the full season's debris accumulation and prepares gutters for winter precipitation, snowmelt, and spring rain. Clean gutters heading into winter reduce ice dam risk and ensure spring runoff routes properly away from the foundation.
The Case for Spring Cleaning
Spring cleaning (March–April) addresses several issues that fall cleaning cannot: maple seed helicopters and oak catkins that fall in April–May and are prolific cloggers; winter debris such as shingle granules loosened by freeze-thaw cycles and small sticks and twigs that accumulate during storms; and bird nesting materials that are inserted into gutters and downspouts during spring nesting season. For homes in regions with significant spring debris sources, an April cleaning prevents the first heavy spring rain from finding a blocked system.
Optimal Timing for Annual Cleaning
Mid-October is not the ideal time for fall cleaning — many deciduous trees are only 50–70% through leaf drop at that point. The most efficient timing is late November to early December, once leaves have fully fallen and before the first significant snowfall. This single visit captures the entire year's leaf accumulation. If you have a twice-yearly contract, schedule spring cleaning in mid-April and fall cleaning in mid-to-late November for maximum effectiveness.
Formulas Used
Per-Visit Cost
Per Visit = (Linear Feet × Base Rate/LF × Condition Multiplier × Contract Discount) + Add-On CostsWhere:
Linear Feet= Total length of gutters on the propertyBase Rate/LF= 2024 rate per linear foot by number of stories (low/mid/high)Condition Multiplier= Debris level adjustment: clean 0.8, light 1.0, moderate 1.3, heavy 1.7Contract Discount= One-time 1.0x, twice-yearly 0.9x, annual contract 0.85xAdd-On Costs= Downspout flush, repairs, gutter guard install, inspection
Example:
150 lf × $1.70/lf × 1.3 (moderate) × 1.0 (one-time) + $75 (downspout) = $406.50 per visit
Annual Cost
Annual Cost = Per-Visit Cost × Visits Per YearWhere:
Per-Visit Cost= Calculated cost per service callVisits Per Year= One-time = 1, twice-yearly = 2, annual contract = 1
Example:
$406.50 × 1 visit = $406.50 annual (one-time); $365.85 × 2 = $731.70 (twice-yearly with discount)
Gutter Guard Add-On
Guard Cost = Linear Feet × Cost Per Linear FootWhere:
Linear Feet= Total gutter length requiring guardsCost Per Linear Foot= $3–$12/lf depending on guard type (screen, micro-mesh, reverse curve)
Example:
150 lf × $7.50/lf (mid) = $1,125 for gutter guard installation
Common Gutter Cleaning Mistakes to Avoid
- Cleaning in October before leaves have fully fallen: Half the season's debris accumulates after an October cleaning. Wait until late November for maximum single-visit efficiency.
- Skipping downspout flushing: Gutters may look clean while downspouts are completely blocked. Always confirm water flows freely from downspout outlets after cleaning.
- Installing gutter guards without cleaning first: Guards installed over existing debris trap the debris inside the gutter permanently, creating an inaccessible clog that is harder and more expensive to clear.
- Waiting for visible overflow to schedule cleaning: Visible overflow means the clog has been present for some time. By that point, fascia saturation may have already begun. Proactive annual scheduling prevents this entirely.
- Hiring the cheapest provider without checking insurance: An uninsured worker who falls from a ladder on your property creates significant personal liability. Always ask for proof of general liability insurance before hiring any gutter service.
Pro Tips for Gutters and Downspouts
- Add downspout extensions ($10–$30 at any hardware store) to route water at least 6 feet from the foundation. A 6-inch splash block at the outlet prevents soil erosion and directs runoff away from the home.
- Ask for a condition report when your gutter cleaner finishes. A good professional will note any sagging sections, failing joints, loose hangers, or early fascia damage observed during the service.
- Take before-and-after photos when gutters are cleaned. This documents their condition for insurance purposes and gives you a visual baseline to compare year-over-year.
- Consider seamless aluminum gutters if your current gutters are aging. Sectional gutters with multiple joints leak and clog at connections over time. Seamless gutters, custom-cut to length on-site, cost $5–$12/lf installed and have a lifespan of 20–30 years.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Calculators
Authoritative Resources
- HomeAdvisor — Gutter Cleaning Cost Guide 2024
HomeAdvisor — Consumer-reported gutter cleaning pricing data with cost breakdowns by region, home size, and service type.
- Angi — How Much Does Gutter Cleaning Cost?
Angi (formerly Angie's List) — Comprehensive cost guide covering gutter cleaning prices, factors affecting cost, and when to hire a professional.
- This Old House — Gutter Guard Types and Installation Costs
This Old House — Expert guide to gutter guard types, materials, installation costs, and long-term maintenance expectations.
Estimates are based on 2024 national average US gutter cleaning pricing and are intended for initial budget planning only. Actual costs depend on your local market, roof pitch, gutter accessibility, specific property conditions, and contractor pricing. Always obtain at least two itemized quotes before hiring a gutter cleaning service.
Calculator Assumptions
- Base rates reflect standard aluminum K-style gutters accessible by standard extension ladder
- Linear footage includes all gutters on the property (front, back, sides)
- 3-story pricing reflects additional safety equipment and labor time requirements
- Condition multipliers reflect increased labor time for heavier debris accumulation
- Gutter guard installation cost is per linear foot in addition to cleaning cost
- Contract discounts apply to the cleaning portion only, not add-on services
- Minimum charge of $75 applies regardless of gutter length
Pro Tips
- ✓Schedule your annual cleaning in late November (after leaf drop) rather than mid-October for maximum single-visit effectiveness
- ✓Ask your gutter cleaning provider to flush all downspouts and confirm clear water flow at the bottom — this is the most critical step most people skip
- ✓Bundle gutter cleaning with a roof inspection to share ladder setup cost — combined visits often cost less than two separate calls
- ✓Ask about a twice-yearly contract (spring and fall) — the 10% discount compounds over years and ensures you never miss a season
- ✓Take photos of gutters before and after service to document condition for insurance purposes and track deterioration over time
- ✓Install splash blocks or downspout extensions to direct water away from your foundation — a $15–$30 DIY improvement that prevents costly water intrusion