Stucco Care Guide
What PSI Is Safe for Stucco Without Damaging Your Walls?
The honest answer surprises most homeowners: stucco is cleaned with chemistry and low pressure, not brute force.
Quick answer
Stucco should be cleaned with soft washing, not high pressure. Keep pressure under about 500 PSI, and ideally under 100 PSI at the nozzle, paired with algae-killing detergents. Anything above roughly 1,500 PSI risks etching, chipping, and water intrusion. Low pressure plus the right chemistry cleans safely without scarring the finish.
Key facts
- Safe stucco cleaning uses soft washing under about 500 PSI, often under 100 PSI at the nozzle.
- Never exceed roughly 1,500 PSI on stucco; a 40-degree tip and 18-inch distance are the minimum precautions.
- High pressure causes two main failures: surface etching and water intrusion that leads to mold and rot.
- EIFS synthetic stucco should be soft washed only, never high-pressure cleaned.
- Coastal Orange County stucco grows algae from marine-layer moisture; inland walls collect Santa Ana dust and hard-water spots.
- Pelora Surfaces house soft washing starts from $400 for homes under about 2,000 sq ft, with exact pricing at a free estimate.
If you are standing in the garage staring at a rented pressure washer and wondering what setting is safe for your stucco, here is the short version: the safest number is a low one. Stucco is a porous cement coating, not a driveway. The goal is to dissolve algae and mildew with detergent and rinse it away gently, not to blast it off with force. Get the pressure wrong and you can etch permanent lines into the finish or drive water behind the wall, which is far more expensive to fix than the cleaning ever was.
The safe PSI for stucco, by the numbers
Professionals clean stucco with a method called soft washing. It uses high water volume, cleaning detergents, and very low pressure. The pressure at the wall is typically under 500 PSI, and often under 100 PSI at the nozzle. The detergent does the work; the water just carries it and rinses. Below about 500 PSI there is virtually no risk of etching, chipping, or forcing moisture into the surface.
| Pressure range | What happens on stucco | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Under 500 PSI (soft wash) | Detergent lifts algae and mildew, gentle rinse, no abrasion | Safe and recommended |
| 500 to 1,500 PSI | Cleans, but risk climbs with a narrow tip or close distance | Only in skilled hands |
| Above 1,500 PSI | Etching, chipping, blown-out cracks, water intrusion | Do not do this |
If you insist on using a pressure washer instead of a true soft-wash setup, never exceed roughly 1,500 PSI, use a wide 40-degree tip, and keep the wand 18 or more inches from the wall. But understand the tradeoff: you are managing risk the whole time, and one careless pass leaves a permanent mark.
Why high pressure ruins stucco
Stucco is designed to shed water, not absorb a firehose. Two failure modes matter most. The first is etching, where high pressure carves visible lines and blasts sand and cement off the texture, leaving lighter scars that never fully blend back in. The second, and worse, is water intrusion. Concentrated pressure drives water through hairline cracks and around window seams into the wall cavity, where it feeds mold and rot inside the assembly. That is a remediation bill, not a cleaning bill.
Synthetic stucco, known as EIFS, is even more vulnerable. It sits over foam board, so any water pushed behind it has nowhere to drain. On EIFS, a gentle soft wash is the only method a careful pro will use.
What this means for Orange County stucco
Mediterranean and Spanish-style homes with clay-tile roofs dominate our neighborhoods, and almost all of them wear stucco. The staining problem differs by location. Along the coast in San Clemente, Dana Point, Laguna Beach, Corona del Mar, and Newport, salt air and marine-layer moisture feed algae and mildew on shaded, north-facing walls. That green and black film is organic, which is exactly what detergents kill at the root. Inland in Irvine, Yorba Linda, Anaheim Hills, and Coto de Caza, the bigger culprits are Santa Ana wind dust and hard-water mineral spotting from sprinklers. Both problems respond to low pressure and the right chemistry, not more force. Blasting a shaded coastal wall may knock the surface algae off for a few weeks, but without a detergent that kills the growth, it returns faster than ever.
How the pros soft wash stucco
A proper stucco wash is a chemistry job. At Pelora Surfaces we apply a treatment blend using soft-wash surfactants such as Southeast Softwash and Slo Mo, dwell it so it kills algae and mildew at the root, then rinse at low pressure. For dust and light grime we may fold in a cleaner like Simple Green Oxy Solve. The finish comes out even, with no wand marks and no streaking, and exterior window cleaning is included with every house soft washing visit. Reserve true high-pressure equipment and surface cleaners like Whisper Wash for horizontal concrete, which is what our pressure washing service is built for. The two jobs use opposite tools, which is why one machine rented from the hardware store rarely does both well.
When you can DIY and when to call a pro
We would rather tell you the truth than sell you something you do not need. A small, single-story wall with light dust and no growth is a reasonable DIY job with a pump sprayer, a stucco-safe cleaner, and a garden-hose rinse. No pressure washer required. Call a pro when you see widespread algae or mildew, when the walls are two stories or on a slope, when you have EIFS or visible cracks near windows, or when your HOA in a community like Irvine, Ladera Ranch, or Coto de Caza expects a uniform, professional result. A written workmanship warranty and insured crews matter most on the jobs where a mistake is permanent.
House soft washing typically runs from $400 for homes under about 2,000 square feet, around $700 for 2,000 to 3,500 square feet, and about $1,100 for larger homes, with the exact price set at your free on-site estimate. If your stucco has that shaded coastal green or inland dust haze, the safest and most durable fix is a low-pressure soft wash done right. Reach out for a free estimate, or if you are local to the coast, see how we handle it in San Clemente. We do not just clean it, we transform it.
Frequently asked questions
Can I pressure wash stucco myself?
You can, but for anything more than light dust it is risky. Stucco should be soft washed with detergent under about 500 PSI. If you use a pressure washer, stay under 1,500 PSI, use a 40-degree tip, and keep 18 inches of distance, because one careless pass leaves a permanent scar.
What PSI will damage stucco?
Pressure above roughly 1,500 PSI can etch the finish, chip away texture, and drive water into cracks and wall cavities. Even lower pressures cause damage if a narrow tip is held too close. Staying under about 500 PSI with a soft-wash approach removes that risk almost entirely.
How do professionals clean stucco?
Pros soft wash. They apply algae-killing detergents, let the chemistry dwell so it kills growth at the root, then rinse at very low pressure, often under 100 PSI at the nozzle. This leaves an even finish with no wand marks, streaking, or water intrusion.
Will soft washing remove green algae on my coastal stucco?
Yes. The green and black film common on shaded, north-facing walls near the coast is organic growth. Soft-wash detergents kill it at the root rather than just knocking off the surface, so it stays cleaner far longer than a high-pressure blast would.
Is soft washing safe for EIFS synthetic stucco?
Soft washing is the only method most professionals consider safe for EIFS. Because EIFS sits over foam board with no way to drain, high pressure can trap water behind it. Low-pressure, detergent-based cleaning avoids that intrusion risk entirely.
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