Homeowners association board members carry a specific fiduciary responsibility that most residents don't fully appreciate: maintaining common areas at a standard that preserves property values for every homeowner in the community. It's an obligation that's easy to fulfill in good times and difficult to manage when budgets are tight, vendors are unreliable, or the board faces competing priorities. Exterior cleaning is one area where small investments pay disproportionate dividends — and where neglect compounds quickly into expensive remediation.
This guide is written specifically for HOA board members navigating the pressure washing procurement process, from initial budgeting through vendor selection, scope definition, resident scheduling, and board approval. Whether you manage a 40-unit townhome community or a 300-home master-planned neighborhood in metro Atlanta, the principles here apply directly to your situation.
Understanding HOA Cleaning Priorities
Not all common areas age at the same rate or carry the same liability exposure. Before building a budget or issuing a request for proposal, board members need to triage their community's surfaces by two criteria: visibility to prospective buyers and liability risk to current residents.
Surfaces that score high on both dimensions should anchor your cleaning program:
- Community entryway and monument signage: This is the first thing buyers, guests, and residents see. Stained or algae-covered entry monuments signal deferred maintenance throughout the entire community.
- Parking lots and driveways: Oil stains, organic debris, and faded striping create both a visual and a slip/trip liability exposure. Parking lots are the most-used common area in most HOA communities.
- Pool deck and pool surrounds: Wet surfaces with algae or mildew are one of the highest-risk liability areas in any community. Pool decks should be cleaned monthly during the swimming season, quarterly otherwise.
- Sidewalks and pedestrian paths: Biofilm on shaded concrete becomes a slip hazard that builds incrementally. Monthly sweeping and quarterly pressure washing are appropriate minimums.
- Clubhouse exterior: The clubhouse is the community's most prominent structure. Its exterior condition sets the tone for how the whole community is perceived.
- Dumpster enclosures: Often overlooked, dumpster areas accumulate odor-producing organic material that affects adjacent property and attracts pests. Quarterly cleaning at minimum.
- Perimeter fencing: Vinyl and aluminum fencing accumulates oxidation and mildew staining. Annual soft washing extends fence lifespan by several years compared to untreated surfaces.
Building a Pressure Washing Budget
HOA boards typically operate on annual budgets approved by a vote of the membership, which means cleaning costs need to be forecasted 6–12 months in advance. The choice between per-service pricing and an annual contract has significant budget implications.
Per-service pricing offers flexibility but comes at a cost premium — typically 15–25% more per visit compared to contracted rates. It also creates unpredictability: if the board approves only three cleaning visits but the community needs a fourth after an unusually bad pollen season, there's no budget line to draw from without an emergency expenditure approval.
Annual maintenance contracts lock in per-visit pricing, guarantee service dates, and give the board a predictable number to put in the budget. Most commercial cleaning contractors will offer 10–20% discounts for annual agreements that commit to four or more service visits per year. For a typical Atlanta-area HOA community with 100 homes and standard common areas, annual contract pricing for quarterly cleaning of all common surfaces typically ranges from $3,500 to $8,000 per year depending on scope, square footage, and access complexity.
Build a contingency line of 10–15% into the cleaning budget for unscheduled needs: vandalism cleanup, post-storm debris washing, or additional pollen-season passes. Presenting a budget with a built-in contingency demonstrates planning sophistication to the board and avoids the awkward process of requesting supplemental budget approval mid-year.
Vendor Selection Criteria
The HOA cleaning vendor market is fragmented. Anyone with a consumer-grade pressure washer and a truck can advertise commercial services. The board's job is to screen out underqualified vendors before they cause damage to community surfaces or create liability exposure through uninsured accidents.
Minimum requirements for any HOA cleaning vendor should include:
- General liability insurance: Minimum $1 million per occurrence, $2 million aggregate. The HOA must be named as an additional insured on the certificate.
- Workers' compensation coverage: Any vendor with employees must carry workers' comp. If a worker is injured on your property and the vendor lacks coverage, the HOA's insurance may be exposed.
- Commercial auto insurance: Covers vehicle-related incidents during service visits.
- Business license: Verify the vendor holds a valid business license in their operating jurisdiction.
- MBE/DBE certification (where applicable): Many HOA management companies and institutional property owners maintain supplier diversity requirements. Choosing a MBE/DBE certified contractor satisfies those requirements and often streamlines vendor approval through management company procurement systems.
- References from comparable HOA accounts: Request at least three references from HOA or multifamily clients. Ask specifically about scheduling reliability, communication quality, and how the vendor handled damage incidents.
Defining Your Scope of Work
Vague scope equals vague bids, and vague bids lead to disputes. The board should prepare a written scope of work before soliciting quotes. This document should identify every surface to be cleaned by type, approximate dimensions, and cleaning method. Photographs of each area, taken when preparing the scope, serve as a baseline for before/after comparison and protect both parties in the event of a damage dispute.
Scope elements to specify in writing:
- Linear footage of sidewalks and pedestrian paths
- Square footage of parking lot or parking areas
- Number and dimensions of dumpster enclosures
- Pool deck square footage and surface type (concrete, pavers, composite)
- Building facade square footage and cladding type (brick, siding, EIFS, stucco)
- Fencing linear footage and material
- Whether downspouts and gutters are included
- Whether signage and monument cleaning is included
The scope should also clearly state what is excluded — typically individual homeowner driveways, private patios within fenced yards, and roofing surfaces — to prevent scope creep disputes after the work is completed.
Scheduling Around Residents
HOA cleaning projects are logistically different from commercial properties because the people directly affected by scheduling decisions are also your clients — the homeowners. Poor scheduling communication is the single most common source of resident complaints in HOA cleaning projects.
Best practices for resident communication:
- Post notice at least 72 hours in advance of any work affecting vehicle parking or pedestrian access. Email, physical posted notices at entryways, and community app notifications should all be used simultaneously.
- For parking lot cleaning, schedule work in lane-by-lane segments to avoid displacing all vehicles simultaneously. A large parking area can be cleaned in two or three shifts, maintaining partial access throughout.
- Schedule pool deck cleaning during low-use periods — early morning on weekdays is typically the lowest-conflict time.
- Check local noise ordinances. Most Atlanta-area municipalities restrict commercial equipment operation before 7:00 AM and after 9:00 PM. Some communities have even stricter HOA bylaws regarding noise hours.
- Designate a single point of contact on the board for resident questions during cleaning days. Unaddressed questions escalate into complaints quickly.
Getting Board Approval
Board members who understand the value of exterior cleaning sometimes struggle to communicate that value to colleagues focused on keeping assessments low. The case for a cleaning budget is most effectively made with four data points: before/after photography from comparable properties, cost-per-home-per-year analysis, liability exposure reduction, and property value data.
For a 100-home community spending $6,000 annually on exterior cleaning, the per-homeowner cost is $60 per year — less than the HOA dues most residents pay per month. Framed this way, the investment is difficult to argue against. Liability reduction is even more compelling: a single slip-and-fall settlement involving algae-covered pool deck concrete can exceed $50,000 in defense costs and settlement payments — dwarfing the entire annual cleaning budget many times over.
Before/after photos from a test cleaning at one area of the community are an extremely effective tool for board presentations. A visual demonstration of what quarterly cleaning achieves makes the abstract case concrete. Many vendors, including Rare Earth Ltd, will provide a complimentary demonstration cleaning of a small area to support the budget approval process.
Common Mistakes HOA Boards Make
Experience working with HOA accounts across metro Atlanta reveals several recurring mistakes that boards make in the cleaning procurement process:
- Selecting on price alone: The lowest bidder frequently lacks proper insurance, uses residential-grade equipment inadequate for commercial surfaces, or cuts scope to hit a price point. The result is damage claims, re-work costs, and vendor replacement mid-season.
- No written contract: Verbal agreements and email chains are not enforceable service contracts. Every engagement should be governed by a written agreement specifying scope, pricing, scheduling, payment terms, and the process for handling damage claims.
- Skipping insurance verification: Requesting a certificate of insurance is not sufficient; the board must verify that the HOA is named as additional insured and that coverage limits are adequate. A COI from a cancelled policy is worthless.
- No documentation after service: Require before/after photos and a signed completion certificate for every visit. Without documentation, you cannot verify work was performed as specified or demonstrate due diligence in a liability claim.
- Annual re-bidding without cause: Constantly cycling through new vendors wastes time, introduces quality variability, and prevents the development of institutional knowledge about your specific property's surfaces and quirks. If a vendor performs well, the stability of a multi-year agreement benefits both parties.
Working with Rare Earth Ltd
Rare Earth Ltd provides dedicated HOA pressure washing services across metro Atlanta, including communities in Stone Mountain, Decatur, Roswell, Alpharetta, and Marietta. We are MBE/DBE certified, fully insured with certificates available for HOA additional insured naming, and experienced with the scheduling and communication requirements unique to residential communities.
We offer written scope-based proposals, before/after documentation on every visit, and annual maintenance contracts that provide board members with the budget certainty they need. Our team is familiar with the HOA procurement process and can provide the insurance documentation, references, and pricing structure your management company requires for vendor approval.
Contact us at (678) 748-3578 or rareearthcontracting@gmail.com to schedule a property walkthrough and receive a written estimate. We welcome the opportunity to be part of your community's long-term maintenance plan.
HOA Pressure Washing Checklist for Board Members
- Inventory all common area surfaces with photos and dimensions
- Define scope of work in writing before soliciting bids
- Require proof of general liability, workers' comp, and commercial auto insurance
- Verify HOA is named as additional insured on COI
- Request three HOA-specific references and contact them
- Evaluate MBE/DBE certification for supplier diversity compliance
- Compare annual contract pricing vs per-service pricing
- Include 10–15% contingency in annual cleaning budget
- Build resident communication plan before each service
- Require before/after photos and completion certificate for every visit