Pressure Washing vs Soft Washing: What Jacksonville Homeowners Need to Know
These two terms get used interchangeably across the internet, in advertisements, and even by some cleaning companies. They are not the same thing. They use different equipment, operate at different pressures, rely on different cleaning mechanisms, and are designed for completely different surfaces. Using the wrong method on the wrong surface does not just produce poor results — it causes damage that costs real money to repair.
In Jacksonville’s climate, where every exterior surface develops biological growth within months — as outlined in our NE Florida exterior maintenance schedule — understanding the distinction between pressure washing and soft washing is essential. This guide explains exactly when each method is appropriate, what happens when the wrong one is used, and how to make sure the company you hire knows the difference.
Pressure Washing: Cleaning with Force
Pressure washing uses a commercial-grade pump to push water through a concentrated nozzle at 3,000 to 4,000 PSI (pounds per square inch) with a flow rate of 4 to 8 gallons per minute. That focused stream of pressurized water physically displaces contaminants from the surface through mechanical force alone.
A surface cleaner — the disc-shaped attachment that spins two or four high-pressure jets beneath a plastic or metal shroud — is the standard tool for flat surfaces. It eliminates the striping pattern a bare wand creates and produces a uniform, even clean across driveways, walkways, and pool decks.
Surfaces That Should Be Pressure Washed
- Concrete driveways — dense enough to withstand 3,000+ PSI without damage
- Concrete walkways and sidewalks — same density as driveways, same treatment
- Concrete patios — flat concrete surfaces respond well to surface cleaner treatment
- Concrete pool decks — removes algae, body oil stains, and mineral deposits
- Brick and concrete pavers — properly set pavers handle pressure washing without displacement
- Brick walls and retaining walls — structural brick is pressure-wash safe
- Garage floors — oil stains, tire marks, and embedded grime require mechanical force
The common factor: these are all dense, rigid, non-porous or semi-porous hardscape surfaces that can absorb the impact of high-pressure water without structural damage.
What Pressure Washing Does Best
Embedded staining that chemical cleaning alone cannot remove. Tire marks ground into concrete. Oil drips that have soaked into the surface. Years of accumulated grime in the pores of concrete. Rust stains from irrigation water. These require the mechanical action of pressurized water to extract.
The most effective approach for heavily stained hardscape is actually a combination: pre-treat with a soft wash solution to kill biological organisms at the root, then pressure wash to remove all surface contamination. This dual approach produces the cleanest result and the longest-lasting outcome.
Soft Washing: Cleaning with Chemistry
Soft washing uses a dedicated application system to apply a biodegradable cleaning solution at low pressure — under 500 PSI, and typically closer to 60 to 100 PSI. For reference, a standard garden hose operates at 40-60 PSI. The water is not doing the cleaning. The chemical solution is.
The primary active agent in professional soft wash solutions is sodium hypochlorite (the same compound in household bleach, but at a calibrated concentration appropriate for exterior surfaces). It is combined with surfactants that help the solution cling to vertical surfaces rather than running off, and sometimes with additional algaecides or mildewcides depending on the application.
The solution is applied, allowed to dwell on the surface for a specific period (typically 10-20 minutes), and then rinsed away with low-pressure water. During the dwell time, the solution chemically destroys the cellular structure of mold, mildew, algae, lichen, and bacteria. It kills the organism at the root — not just the visible surface growth.
Surfaces That Should Be Soft Washed
- House siding — all types: vinyl, stucco, painted wood, Hardie board, brick veneer, EIFS
- Roofs — all types: asphalt shingle, concrete tile, clay tile, metal, flat (see our Jacksonville roof cleaning cost guide for pricing)
- Screen enclosures — aluminum frames and screen mesh
- Wood fences — cedar, pine, pressure-treated lumber
- Wood decks and docks — all wood and composite decking materials
- Painted surfaces — shutters, trim, exterior doors, porch ceilings
- Windows — glass surfaces and surrounding frames
- Outdoor furniture — cushion frames, tables, and decorative elements
The common factor: these surfaces are either soft, porous, coated, or constructed in a way that allows water to penetrate behind or beneath the material. High-pressure water either damages the surface itself or drives water into spaces where it causes secondary damage.
What Happens When You Use the Wrong Method
This is not theoretical. We see the results of incorrect cleaning methods on Jacksonville homes regularly. Here is what goes wrong:
Pressure Washing Siding
- Vinyl siding: High pressure forces water behind the siding panels and into the wall cavity. There is no drainage path for that water. It sits against the sheathing and studs, where it breeds mold inside the wall. You may not discover it until you smell it or until an inspection reveals it. Repair cost: $2,000 to $10,000+ depending on extent.
- Stucco: Pressure creates pockmarks, gouges, and rough patches in the stucco surface. These damaged areas trap moisture and accelerate future biological growth. The stucco also absorbs water at the impact points, which can lead to substrate damage behind the stucco layer. Repair cost: $500 to $3,000+ per wall section.
- Painted wood: Pressure strips paint in sheets and raises the wood grain underneath. What started as a cleaning job becomes a sanding, priming, and repainting job. Repair cost: $1,000 to $5,000+ depending on the surface area.
- EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish System): This is the worst-case scenario. Pressure washing EIFS can punch through the finish coat and allow water to saturate the foam insulation layer beneath. EIFS moisture intrusion leads to severe structural damage. Repair cost: $5,000 to $20,000+.
Pressure Washing Roofs
- Asphalt shingles: High pressure strips the protective granule layer. Those granules are the shingle’s defense against UV radiation. Once compromised, the underlying asphalt degrades rapidly, leading to curling, cracking, and premature failure. The Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association explicitly warns against pressure washing shingle roofs. Damage cost: accelerated roof replacement ($10,000-$30,000).
- Concrete and clay tile: Concentrated pressure cracks tiles, creating direct pathways for water intrusion into the underlayment and roof deck. Repair cost: $200 to $500 per cracked tile, plus water damage repair if intrusion occurs.
Pressure Washing Screens and Fences
- Screen enclosures: Pressure tears screen mesh and bends aluminum frames. Rescreening a standard pool cage: $1,500 to $5,000.
- Wood fences: Close-range pressure washing tears wood fibers, creating a rough, splintered surface that looks worse than the dirty fence it started as. The damaged surface also absorbs more water and deteriorates faster.
The Jacksonville Factor: Why Method Matters More Here
Northeast Florida’s subtropical climate creates conditions that make exterior cleaning both more necessary and more consequential than in most regions:
- Year-round biological growth. The combination of heat, humidity, and frequent rain means mold, mildew, and algae grow on every exterior surface throughout the year. There is no winter kill-off like in northern states. This makes regular cleaning mandatory, which means the method used matters — it will be applied repeatedly over the life of the surface.
- Moisture sensitivity. In a climate averaging 74% relative humidity, any moisture driven behind siding, into stucco, or beneath roofing material does not dry out. It sits and breeds mold. Water intrusion from incorrect pressure washing is a more serious problem in Florida than in arid climates where moisture evaporates.
- Prevalence of stucco. A large percentage of Jacksonville homes — particularly in newer communities like Nocatee, St. Augustine, and Durbin Crossing — feature stucco exteriors. Stucco is one of the surfaces most vulnerable to pressure washing damage.
- Coastal exposure. Homes in Ponte Vedra Beach, Jacksonville Beach, and Fernandina Beach deal with salt air that accelerates both biological growth and surface degradation. These homes need more frequent cleaning with the correct method.
How to Know What Your Home Needs
The surface type dictates the method. Not your preference. Not the contractor’s convenience. The material determines the approach.
| Surface | Correct Method | Max PSI | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete driveway | Pressure wash | 3,000-4,000 | Dense surface; embedded stains require force |
| Paver driveway/patio | Pressure wash | 2,500-3,500 | Slightly lower PSI to protect joint sand |
| Concrete pool deck | Pressure wash | 3,000-3,500 | Handles algae and body oils on dense surface |
| House siding (any type) | Soft wash | Under 500 | Prevents water intrusion and surface damage |
| Roof (any type) | Soft wash | Under 500 | Protects shingle granules and prevents tile cracks |
| Screen enclosure | Soft wash | Under 200 | Prevents torn screens and bent frames |
| Wood fence | Soft wash | Under 500 | Prevents fiber damage and splintering |
| Wood/composite deck | Soft wash | Under 500 | Prevents grain damage and surface roughening |
| Painted surfaces | Soft wash | Under 500 | Prevents paint stripping |
Red Flags When Hiring a Cleaning Company
Not every company in Jacksonville understands the distinction or has the equipment for both methods. Watch for these warning signs:
- “We pressure wash everything.” If a company offers to pressure wash your house, roof, or screens, they are telling you they will use the wrong method on those surfaces. Walk away.
- One piece of equipment for all services. Soft washing requires different equipment than pressure washing — different pump, different nozzles, different plumbing for chemical injection. A company that shows up with only a pressure washer cannot properly soft wash.
- No mention of cleaning solutions. Soft washing depends on chemical treatment. If the company does not discuss their cleaning solution, application process, and dwell time, they are likely just rinsing with low pressure — which does not kill biological organisms at the root.
- No landscaping protection plan. Professional soft wash solutions will damage plants if allowed to drip onto landscaping without mitigation. Companies that do not pre-wet, tarp, or post-rinse landscaping are cutting corners.
The FCPE Approach: Right Method, Every Surface
At First Coast Property Experts, every service uses the correct method for the surface being cleaned. We do not offer a one-size-fits-all approach because surfaces are not one-size-fits-all.
- House washing — soft wash, every time
- Roof cleaning — soft wash, every time
- Driveway and walkway cleaning — pressure wash with surface cleaners
- Pool deck cleaning — pressure wash (concrete) or soft wash (travertine/sensitive materials)
- Paver cleaning — pressure wash with appropriate PSI settings
- Screen enclosure cleaning — soft wash at ultra-low pressure
- Fence cleaning — soft wash for wood, appropriate method matched to material
We serve homeowners across St. Johns County, Duval County, and Nassau County.
Call (904) 466-1622 or request a free estimate online for a quote on any exterior cleaning service.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between pressure washing and soft washing?
Pressure washing uses high-pressure water (3,000-4,000 PSI) to mechanically remove contaminants from hard surfaces. Soft washing uses low-pressure water (under 500 PSI) with biodegradable cleaning solutions that chemically kill mold, mildew, and algae. Each method is designed for specific surface types.
Can you pressure wash a house?
No. House siding — vinyl, stucco, painted wood, Hardie board, brick veneer, EIFS — should always be soft washed. Pressure washing siding forces water behind panels, etches stucco, strips paint, and can cause severe moisture intrusion in EIFS systems.
What surfaces should be pressure washed?
Concrete driveways, concrete and brick walkways, concrete pool decks, brick and concrete pavers, garage floors, and stone retaining walls. These dense hardscape surfaces can withstand 3,000+ PSI and require mechanical force to remove embedded staining.
Does soft washing last longer than pressure washing?
On surfaces where soft washing is the correct method (siding, roofs, screens), yes. Soft washing kills biological organisms at the root, which slows regrowth significantly. Pressure washing only removes surface growth, so organisms grow back faster because the root structure remains intact.
How much does pressure washing and soft washing cost in Jacksonville?
A driveway pressure wash runs $125 to $375. A house soft wash runs $295 to $725. A roof soft wash runs $350 to $650. Full exterior packages combining multiple surfaces range from $800 to $2,000+. Pricing depends on surface area, condition, and accessibility.