House Washing in Hot Springs, AR
North-facing walls and shaded eaves on heavily treed lots collect mildew and cobwebs year-round, and a full house wash resets the whole exterior before the growth spreads back across the siding.
House washing is a soft wash, not pressure washing. A full exterior gets cleaned with low pressure (roughly garden-hose force) and a chemistry that does the actual work: a sodium hypochlorite solution mixed with a surfactant, applied through a soft-wash pump, left to dwell, then rinsed. The green, gray, and black staining on siding is living organic growth — algae, mildew, and lichen — and high pressure only blasts the surface clean while driving water behind panels and lap joints. The cleaning agent kills the growth at the root, so it doesn’t grow back in weeks.
Surface matters. Vinyl handles soft wash easily but needs a low-to-high overlap rinse to avoid streaking. Brick is porous and holds mildew in the mortar, so it wants more dwell time. Hardie and fiber-cement clean well but the painted finish can chalk, so dilution is dialed back. Stucco and EIFS are the most fragile — too much pressure cracks the finish, so these are strictly low-pressure work.
In Central Arkansas the north-facing walls and shaded sides grow the most because they stay damp, and spring pollen leaves a yellow film that bonds to the surface. Most homes here benefit from a wash every 12 to 18 months; heavily shaded or tree-lined lots closer to annually.
Plant prep is non-negotiable. Beds get pre-wet, sometimes tarped, and rinsed again after — the same cleaner that kills algae will burn foliage if it’s left to sit dry on leaves.
House Washing in Hot Springs & Garland County
Hot Springs is the seat of Garland County, set in the Ouachita Mountains about an hour southwest of our Conway shop. It is a tourism town built around Hot Springs National Park and Bathhouse Row, and that mix of older historic structures downtown and newer lakefront construction shapes what we run into on exterior jobs.
The big factor here is water. Lake Hamilton and Lake Catherine ring the area with thousands of homes on the shoreline, and lakefront and dock-adjacent properties hold humidity that feeds heavy mildew and green algae growth on north-facing siding, eaves, and shaded retaining walls. The surrounding Ouachita pine forest drops sap, needles, and a thick yellow pollen load every spring that clogs gutters and stains painted surfaces.
Neighborhoods like Lake Hamilton, the Mountain Pine and Piney corridors, and the older homes around Park Avenue and Central Avenue each bring their own issues. The hilly, heavily wooded lots mean shaded roofs stay damp and grow black streaking (Gloeocapsa magma) faster than open-lot homes elsewhere in Central Arkansas. Hard well water on some properties also leaves mineral scale on glass and concrete. Hot, humid summers and steady spring rain keep organic growth active most of the year, so exterior surfaces here need attention more often than drier parts of the state.
Yes, we serve Hot Springs and the surrounding Garland County lake communities. Since we are based in Conway, about an hour northeast, we cover Hot Springs on routed trips through the area rather than literal same-day calls. Service is reliable, but plan to schedule ahead so we can group your job into a route and give you a firm window. Call 501-289-5623 to get on the schedule and we will set a date that works.
Why Choose American Services AR for House Washing in Hot Springs?
American Services AR has run soft-wash equipment on Central Arkansas homes since 2010, and the method is built around the surface, not a one-size hose. We dilute the cleaning solution to the siding — lighter on Hardie and stucco, longer dwell on brick — and rinse top-down to prevent streaking. Beds and shrubs are pre-wet and rinsed on every job so nothing gets burned. We’re locally owned and carry liability insurance, so the crew on your property is the company that answers the phone. No subcontracted day labor, no franchise script. The result is uniform clean siding with the algae killed at the root, not a temporary surface rinse that returns by the next rainy month.
House Washing Pricing in Hot Springs, AR
Price depends on square footage, number of stories, siding type, and how heavy the growth is, with a roughly $300 minimum on smaller jobs — call 501-289-5623 for a free, no-obligation quote.
Service Area — House Washing Near Hot Springs
We provide house washing in Hot Springs and nearby communities including Hot Springs Village, Benton, Malvern. Explore our other Hot Springs services: House Washing.
House Washing in Hot Springs, AR — Frequently Asked Questions
Will house washing damage my siding or landscaping?
Not when it's done as a soft wash. We use low pressure — about the force of a garden hose — so there's no risk of cracking stucco, etching paint, or forcing water behind vinyl. Plants are the real concern, so we pre-wet every bed before we start and rinse it again when we finish. The cleaning solution only harms foliage if it's allowed to dry on leaves, which is exactly what the pre-wet and rinse prevent.
Why not just pressure wash the house? It seems faster.
High pressure on siding does more harm than good. It can drive water behind panels and into lap joints where it causes rot and mold, strip oxidized paint, and gouge softer surfaces like Hardie and stucco. It also only knocks growth off the surface — the algae and mildew roots stay, so the staining returns within weeks. Soft washing kills the growth with chemistry instead of force, so the clean lasts far longer and the siding stays intact.
How often should I have my house washed?
Most Central Arkansas homes do well on a 12-to-18-month cycle. If your house sits under tree cover or has heavily shaded north-facing walls that stay damp, closer to once a year is better because that's where algae grows fastest. Spring pollen also builds a film that's worth removing annually. If you're seeing green or black streaks creeping back, that's the growth telling you it's time.
What's the difference in how you clean brick versus vinyl or Hardie?
Brick is porous and traps mildew in the mortar joints, so it gets a stronger solution and longer dwell time to reach growth the surface won't show. Vinyl cleans quickly but needs a careful overlapping rinse to avoid streak lines. Hardie and fiber-cement have a painted finish that can chalk, so we back off the dilution. Stucco and EIFS are the most delicate and are washed at the lowest pressure to protect the finish. Matching the approach to the surface is the whole point.
Do you actually serve Hot Springs, or just Conway?
We serve Hot Springs and the Garland County lake communities regularly. Our shop is in Conway, about an hour northeast, so we cover Hot Springs on routed trips through the area rather than same-day. Service is reliable as long as you schedule ahead; call 501-289-5623 and we will set a firm window.
Why does my Hot Springs home grow mildew and roof streaking faster than homes elsewhere?
The combination of lake humidity, heavy pine canopy, and shaded wooded lots keeps your exterior surfaces damp far longer than open lots. That moisture feeds green algae on siding and black Gloeocapsa magma streaking on roofs, which is why lakefront and tree-covered properties here need cleaning more often than drier parts of Central Arkansas.
Get a Free House Washing Estimate in Hot Springs, AR
We serve Hot Springs regularly on our Central Arkansas routes. Call or text (501) 289-5623 for a free house washing estimate and we will get you on the next run to Hot Springs.