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Soft-Wash Guide

Soft Washing vs. Pressure Washing: What's the Difference?

Soft washing uses low pressure (roughly 60–200 PSI, about garden-hose strength) combined with biodegradable cleaning solutions to dissolve and kill organic growth at the root. Pressure washing uses high force (1,500–4,000 PSI) to physically blast contaminants off a surface. The right method depends entirely on the surface: soft wash roofs, siding, wood, and painted surfaces; pressure wash concrete, brick, and stone. Using high pressure on a roof or siding is the single most common — and most damaging — mistake in exterior cleaning.

How each method works

Pressure washing cleans with mechanical force — a high-pressure stream of water physically removes dirt and grime. It's fast and effective on hard, durable surfaces. But that same force damages anything delicate, and it doesn't kill organic growth, so algae and mold regrow quickly from the spores left behind.

Soft washing cleans with chemistry. A surfactant-based solution is applied at low pressure, given time to dwell and kill algae, mold, mildew, and bacteria at the cellular level, then rinsed away. Because the organisms are killed rather than just knocked off, soft-wash results last significantly longer.

Which surfaces need which method

FactorSoft WashingPressure Washing
Pressure~60–200 PSI1,500–4,000 PSI
Cleans bySolution / chemistryMechanical force
Best forRoofs, siding, wood, stucco, screens, fencesConcrete, brick, stone, pavers
Kills algae & moldYes — at the rootNo — knocks it off, regrows fast
Safe on shinglesYes (ARMA-recommended)No — strips granules
Results last2–5 yearsMonths to ~1 year

A quality cleaner uses both — soft washing where force would cause damage, pressure washing where the surface can take it. If a company offers to pressure-wash your roof or siding, that's a red flag.

Why you should never pressure wash a roof or siding

On an asphalt roof, high pressure blasts off the protective granules that shield the shingles from UV — you'll see them collect in the gutters — and shortens the roof's life. The Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA) specifically recommends low-pressure cleaning for asphalt shingles. On siding, high pressure can drive water behind vinyl and lap boards, blow out window caulk, lift paint, and raise wood grain. Soft washing avoids all of it. See our guides on soft washing and asphalt shingles and house washing.

What about DIY?

Renting a pressure washer is where a lot of expensive mistakes start — striped concrete, fuzzed wood, water behind siding, and burned plants from the wrong solution concentration. Soft washing also requires getting the dilution right: too weak and it doesn't kill the growth; too strong and it harms landscaping. The chemistry and the equipment are why a professional result is hard to match with a rental.

FAQ

Common questions

Is soft washing better than pressure washing?

Neither is universally better — they're for different surfaces. Soft washing is right for roofs, siding, wood, and fences, where high pressure causes damage. Pressure washing is right for concrete, brick, and stone. A good cleaner uses both.

Is soft washing more expensive than pressure washing?

Soft washing can cost a bit more because the cleaning solution adds cost beyond just water — but it cleans deeper and the results last far longer because the algae is killed at the root, not just rinsed off.

Can I pressure wash my own house to save money?

It's risky. High pressure on siding can force water behind it, strip paint, and blow out caulk, and the wrong cleaning solution burns plants. Most DIY damage costs more to fix than a professional soft wash would have.

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