Soft Washing vs. Pressure Washing: Which Does Your Home Need?
Pressure washing and soft washing are often used interchangeably, but they're different techniques suited to different surfaces. Using the wrong method damages surfaces and costs you money. Here's what you need to know before booking any exterior cleaning service in Ohio.
What Pressure Washing Is
Applied incorrectly — wrong PSI, wrong angle, wrong distance — pressure washing damages surfaces that can't take that force. This is one of the most common exterior cleaning mistakes.
- Concrete driveways, sidewalks, and patios
- Brick and stone masonry
- Metal fencing and equipment
- Concrete block walls
What Soft Washing Is
Soft washing uses very low water pressure (60–200 PSI — roughly garden hose pressure) combined with biodegradable cleaning solutions. The chemicals do the cleaning work, not the pressure. A gentle rinse then removes the treated biological growth and cleaning solution.
Soft washing kills mold, mildew, algae, and bacteria at the source rather than just blasting them off the surface. This means the surface stays cleaner longer — biological growth returns much slower than after pressure washing alone.
Soft washing is the correct method for surfaces damaged by high pressure:
- Vinyl siding, wood siding, and stucco
- Asphalt shingles and roofing
- Painted surfaces
- Wood decks and fences
- Gutters and fascia
- EIFS and synthetic stucco
Why the Wrong Method Causes Real Damage
Using pressure washing on surfaces that require soft washing is one of the most common homeowner and inexperienced contractor mistakes:
- Vinyl siding: high pressure forces water behind panels, causing mold growth inside the wall cavity — the opposite of what you wanted
- Asphalt shingles: pressure washing strips granules from the shingle surface, accelerating aging and voiding manufacturer warranties
- Wood decks: excessive PSI raises the wood grain, making it rough and more prone to absorbing water
- Painted surfaces: high pressure peels paint, especially older paint with any adhesion issues
Which Method for Which Surface
| Surface | Correct Method | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Concrete driveway | Pressure washing | Hard surface handles high PSI |
| Vinyl siding | Soft washing | High pressure forces water behind panels |
| Wood deck | Low-pressure soft wash | High PSI raises grain and damages surface |
| Asphalt shingles | Soft washing ONLY | Pressure strips granules, voids warranty |
| Brick exterior | Pressure washing | Dense masonry handles the force |
| Gutters and fascia | Soft washing | Painted aluminum, fragile attachment points |
| Stucco / EIFS | Soft washing | Easily damaged by high pressure |
How We Assess Your Property
When we arrive, we assess every surface before starting. Different areas of the same property often need different approaches — a concrete driveway gets pressure washed while the vinyl siding above it gets soft washed.
We carry equipment for both methods and use biodegradable cleaning solutions safe for landscaping, pets, and the Little Miami River watershed.
