The $3,500 build, for pressure washing businesses

A Pressure Washing Website That Proves the Work

One custom build: 40-plus pages covering house washing, driveway and concrete cleaning, roof soft wash, and deck restoration across every neighborhood you cover, with before-and-after galleries, package pricing, online booking, and instant callback wired in. You pay $3,500 one time and own the finished site the way you own your rig and surface cleaner: domain included, with no subscription to sign.

One-time payment · no subscription required · you own everything at launch

The Difference Between You and the Rented-Machine Guy

When a homeowner sees green streaks down their siding or black stains on the driveway, they reach for their phone. They type house washing near me into Google, or they ask ChatGPT who does soft washing without stripping the paint. Nobody can buy those AI recommendations. The engines read whatever pages actually exist, and a site full of real answers about soft washing, surface cleaning, and package pricing gives them something to cite. If all you have is a logo, a phone number, and one photo of a wand hitting a driveway, there is nothing to cite and nothing to separate you from the guy with a rented machine.

Think about what a homeowner actually asks before booking. What does house washing cost. Is soft washing safe for a shingle roof. Can you do the driveway and the walkway in one visit. How is a real company different from a teenager with a borrowed machine and a ladder. A single page with a stock photo of someone else's sparkling driveway answers none of that, so the homeowner keeps scrolling until a company spells out its washes and prices in plain English.

Pressure washing is bought on proof more than almost any trade: the whole sales pitch fits in one photo, half dirty and half clean. A homeowner staring at a house-and-driveway package that commonly runs around $600 wants to watch a black driveway turn gray and streaked siding go clean before they commit. The operator whose site shows real before-and-after shots from local homes, names the neighborhoods worked, and lists package pricing looks like a business, not a side hustle. That operator is far more likely to earn the call, because the driveway shots settled the doubt before the phone ever rang.

What your 40+ pages would be

01

Service pages for every kind of wash

One page each for house washing and soft washing, driveway and concrete cleaning, roof soft wash, deck cleaning and restoration, fence washing, paver and patio cleaning, and gutter brightening. Each is written around what that customer is searching, so the roof soft wash page draws roof searchers instead of competing with your driveway page for the same click.

02

A page for every neighborhood you cover

You run tight routes, but searches happen subdivision by subdivision: house washing in one development, driveway cleaning in the next. We build a dedicated page for each town and neighborhood you serve, so a homeowner searching their own area sees a company that works their streets, not an operator driving in cold from an hour away.

03

Cost and question pages

Pages that answer what homeowners type before they book: what house washing commonly costs, how much driveway pressure washing runs, whether soft washing is safe for a roof, and what a house-and-driveway package includes. These are the searches happening across your area every spring, and almost no operator bothers to answer them.

04

Trigger pages for the reason they are calling now

Pressure washing rarely starts with an emergency, but it starts with a trigger: an HOA letter about mildew on the siding, a house going on the market next week, green algae blooming after a wet spring, or a graduation party in ten days. Each trigger gets its own page written for that exact moment, with booking built to lock in a slot before the deadline.

05

Proof pages that do the selling

This is where a wash is booked or passed over: before-and-after galleries sorted by service, real jobs from homes in your own towns, your reviews pulled into pages homeowners actually read, proof that you soft wash instead of blasting shingles, and the story of the family behind the truck. The photos do the convincing a stock image cannot.

Built to Book the Route, Not Just Ring the Phone

Pressure washing is a route business: the money is in booking three houses on the same street the same morning, not chasing one job across the county. The site is built for that. Online booking asks for the address up front and lets you fill a day by neighborhood, and instant callback captures a homeowner's number the moment they reach out on a busy spring Saturday, so a quote request during peak season gives you a real shot at the job instead of a missed voicemail.

The before-and-after gallery is the workhorse. Every finished job feeds it, sorted by house wash, driveway, and roof, so a homeowner sees your work on a home like theirs before they call. The reviews engine texts a review request the day after each wash while the clean siding still turns heads, so a steady stream of Google reviews can build through the busy months. Package pricing pages let a homeowner size up a house-and-driveway combo without waiting on a callback.

The Math on a $3,500 Build

Run the numbers against your own routes. A single house wash commonly runs around $350, and a house-and-driveway package commonly lands higher. If your average wash is worth about $350, the $3,500 build is covered after 10 washes, commonly a strong route week in peak season. Line up a couple of package jobs and it pays for itself well before the season peaks. That is the entire calculation, and unlike the fuel and soap you burn on every route, you pay it once.

Compare that to paid ads. Clicks on house washing near me bill your card all spring, and once you pause the campaign after the rush, the calls tend to dry up with it. Pages work differently: a page answering what house washing costs in your town keeps pulling searchers wash season after wash season with no meter running. One honest note on timing: fresh pages commonly need two to four months to find their footing, roughly the stretch between a winter build and the first green streaks of spring, so the smart move is to build in the off-season.

Straight answers.

Why is this $3,500 when agencies quote me $8,000 or want $500 a month forever?

Agencies commonly quote two or three times this figure for the same site, then bolt on a monthly retainer so the bill rarely stops. We build from a page structure already proven on house washing, driveway, and roof soft wash jobs, which is how a custom 40-plus page site covering all your services lands at $3,500 flat. There is no subscription bolted on and no login held hostage: once it is finished, we hand you the logins, the files, and the domain. You bought the equipment, you own the trailer. If down the road you want us to keep adding pages, that is a separate deal, not a requirement.

I already have a domain and a Facebook page full of before-and-after photos. Do I lose those?

No, and you should not want to. A domain that has ridden on your trailer wrap and yard signs through a few wash seasons has real history behind it, so we build the new site on that same domain instead of starting from zero. Your Facebook before-and-after photos are gold: send them over and we load the strongest ones straight into the galleries, sorted by service, so the proof you already earned goes to work on the new site. If you do not have a domain yet, we register a fresh one in your name, not ours, and it stays yours.

How fast does this pay off? Spring is when my phone should be ringing.

Straight answer: the site is commonly live within a few weeks, but fresh pages usually need two to four months to gain ground in search, and busy suburbs full of competing wash rigs can take longer. Anyone promising a pressure washing company a flood of bookings in week one is selling smoke. That timing is exactly why we push owners to build in the winter lull, so the town pages and cost pages have a couple of months to mature before the spring green-algae rush and the pre-summer party bookings arrive. Build it in season and you are paying to catch up.

Once it is built, can I run it myself, or am I locked into paying you every month?

You are not locked into anything. The whole point is that you own it: the design, the 40-plus pages, the galleries, and the domain all sit in your name, and you can add a new before-and-after set or a fresh review from your phone between jobs. Plenty of pressure washing owners run it solo after handover and never owe us another dollar. Some would rather be out running the machine than writing a new town page every winter, so they keep us on a small monthly plan to add pages and keep the site fresh. That is an option, not a leash, and you decide after you already hold the keys.

One build. Yours forever.

Custom design for your pressure washing business, 40+ pages built for how your customers search, and the infrastructure to catch every call.

One-time payment · kickoff this week · launched in about four weeks