Doctor Vent provides association-wide dryer vent cleaning for HOAs, condominium associations and townhome communities across Indiana. We work with community association managers, boards and management companies to deliver the documentation, pricing consistency and owner communication that association governance requires.
Why Associations Schedule Community-Wide Cleaning
In most condominium and townhome governing documents, the dryer duct passes through common elements — wall cavities, chases and roof structures the association is responsible for. A lint fire that starts in one owner’s duct becomes an association problem the moment it reaches shared structure.
A community-wide programme also solves the consistency problem. When cleaning is left to individual owners, some do it, most do not, and the association’s fire risk is set by the least diligent unit.
Indiana Fire Code
Indiana Fire Code based on the IFC applies statewide. NFPA 211 requires dryer exhaust systems to be inspected at least annually and cleaned as necessary. Locally, cold winters drive continuous dryer use in multifamily laundry rooms.
Indiana Markets We Serve
Board-Ready Proposals and Reporting
Our proposals are written for board packets: fixed per-door pricing, clear scope, insurance certificates and references included, ready to table at your next meeting. After completion your board receives a report suitable for the minutes — doors completed, deficiencies found with photographs, and the compliance certificate for the association’s official records.
Owner Communication Handled
We provide notice templates for your management company or board, offer scheduling windows accommodating owner-occupants and tenants alike, and run a documented re-attempt process for units we cannot access on the first pass. Access rates on our association programmes typically exceed 90% on the first round.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the duct the association’s responsibility or the owner’s?
Read your declaration and CC&Rs, but in most condominium and townhome documents the duct run passing through walls, chases and the roof is a common element maintained by the association. The dryer and its flexible transition hose are owner property. Where the duct is a common element, the association’s duty to maintain it is not optional.
How much does HOA dryer vent cleaning cost per door in Indiana?
Typically $18–35 per door. Townhome communities with ground-level wall terminations sit at the low end; high-rise condominiums with rooftop risers at the top, because those require roof access and vertical-run equipment. A 150-door community budgets roughly $2,700–5,250.
Operating budget or reserves?
Operating, in almost every case. Dryer vent cleaning is recurring maintenance rather than component replacement, so most reserve studies exclude it and boards fund it from the annual R&M line. Remediation of damaged duct discovered during cleaning may be treated differently.
Why not leave it to individual owners?
Because it does not work. A minority arrange it and most do not, so the building’s fire risk is set by the least diligent unit — and the association ends up with no record. In shared-riser buildings, one blocked duct restricts an entire vertical stack.
See also: Commercial service in Indiana | Apartment programmes in Indiana | Cost guide
Markets We Serve in Indiana
Commercial service in Indiana | Air duct cleaning in Indiana