Roswell sits under one of the heaviest tree canopies in North Atlanta, so when the pollen count climbs and everything turns yellow, more of it lands on your home than almost anywhere nearby. A quick wipe-down just moves it around. Here is the clean that actually pulls pollen and dust out.
You already know the yellow film. From late February through May, oak and pine pollen coats cars, porches, and windowsills, and the wooded, established streets around the historic district catch more of it than most. Every time a door opens, some rides inside. Once it settles, it works into the carpet, the blinds, the baseboards, and the vent covers, and then your HVAC pushes it back into the air every single time it runs. For anyone in the house with allergies or asthma, that is the difference between a rough spring and a miserable one.
The fix is not complicated, but it has to be thorough, because the usual reaction makes it worse. Dry-dusting just launches the pollen back into the air to resettle an hour later, and a vacuum without a sealed HEPA filter blows the fine stuff right back out the exhaust. What works is damp-dusting every hard surface so pollen sticks to the cloth, HEPA-vacuuming floors and upholstery so nothing gets recirculated, and clearing the reservoirs most people skip: the blinds, sills, baseboards, ceiling fans, and vent covers where weeks of pollen quietly pile up.
Roswell carries about as much mature tree cover as anywhere in North Atlanta, and more trees overhead means more pollen coming down. The historic district, Canton Street, and family neighborhoods like Martins Landing all sit under it. On top of that, Roswell's older homes tend to hold more of what lands: more carpet, more fabric, and more blinds than a newer build, all of it giving pollen and dust something to cling to. That combination, the heaviest canopy plus the most surfaces to trap it, is why a real deep reset does more work here than a quick seasonal tidy ever could.
A one-time deep clean from $180 clears the built-up load, ideally late March into April as the count peaks. Our full allergy cleaning guide covers the method, and most families hold the line after with recurring visits from $140 a visit.
The mature tree canopy over Roswell is about as heavy as it gets in North Atlanta, and more trees overhead means more oak and pine pollen landing on the roof and blowing through open doors. The historic district and the wooded, established streets sit right under it. That does not change the method, but it does mean the reservoirs in your home fill faster, so a thorough deep clean pays off more here than in a sparser neighborhood.
Generally yes. Older Roswell homes tend to have more carpet, more fabric, and more blinds, and all of that gives pollen and dust more to cling to than the harder surfaces in a newer build. It settles into the carpet, the baseboards, and the vent covers, then the HVAC pushes it back into the air every time it runs. Clearing those reservoirs is exactly what an allergy deep clean is for.
No. We HEPA-vacuum the vent covers and register boots so less settled pollen and dust gets pulled into the system, but filter changes and duct cleaning are handled separately by an HVAC tech.
Yes. We wipe interior windows, sills, tracks, and blinds, which is where a lot of pollen settles in a tree-shaded Roswell home. Exterior window washing is not part of our cleaning.
More of the situations we get called for around Roswell. See them all in the Cleaning Help library.
The full guide to pulling pollen out of the home, not around.
Cleaning for allergies →Wooded, established lots that hold the most pollen.
Roswell service area →Wooded North Fulton lots and heavy spring tree pollen.
Allergy clean in Alpharetta →Rural surroundings and heavy tree cover drive dust and pollen.
Allergy clean in Milton →Book a deep clean before the count peaks, then keep the pollen down with recurring visits. Tell us who in the house reacts and we will keep the products low-odor.
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