The pressure washer at the hardware store costs $50 to rent for a day, or $400 to buy outright. Hiring a pro to wash your house costs $300 to $600. So the math seems simple: do it yourself, save the money. Until you read the part where someone strips the paint off their siding, drives water behind the trim, or shreds a shingle roof from below.

Here’s an honest breakdown of when DIY pressure washing is a fine call, when professional pressure washing is worth the money, and how to do it yourself safely if you go that route.

When DIY pressure washing makes sense

If the surface is hard, flat, and forgiving, you can probably handle it yourself.

  • Concrete driveways and walkways. Concrete is durable and the technique is straightforward. The biggest mistake is stripe marks from holding the wand at the wrong distance, but that’s a cosmetic issue, not damage.
  • Patios and pavers. Same idea, with a lighter touch on the joint sand.
  • Fences (with care). Wood, vinyl, and metal fences can be DIYed if you keep the pressure moderate and the tip moving.
  • Decks (carefully). A deck can be washed before staining. Use a fan tip and stay 12 to 18 inches off the surface, with the wand moving constantly.
  • Outdoor furniture, garbage cans, and yard equipment. Easy wins, no risk.

These are jobs where the worst-case scenario is “you do an okay job and it still looks better than it did.” That’s a fine DIY outcome.

When you should hire a professional

Hire a pro for anything where the worst-case scenario is “you damage the house.”

Roof cleaning

Pressure washing a shingle roof strips granules and voids most manufacturer warranties. Roofs need soft wash, which requires the right cleaning solution and the right delivery equipment. A pressure washer set to “low” still does damage on a roof. This is the easiest call: don’t DIY this. (See How Roof Cleaning Works for the soft wash process.)

House siding

The risk isn’t the visible damage. It’s the water you don’t see. High pressure forces water behind the siding, into wall cavities, around window frames, and under flashing. The siding looks fine when you finish. Two months later you have a leak, mold, or rotted sheathing. House washing should be done with the right pressure and the right cleaning solution, which is what professional house washing uses.

Stucco and EIFS

Pressure washing stucco can crack it or strip the finish coat. Once it’s cracked, water gets behind it and the repair is expensive. Soft wash only.

Tall surfaces or two-story homes

Working a pressure washer from a ladder is a real hazard. The wand kicks back when the trigger pulls. People fall. Pros work from the ground using extended wands or telescoping equipment, which is faster and safer.

Anything painted, stained, or with a finish

Painted decks, painted railings, exterior trim, stained doors: pressure washing can lift or strip these finishes in a single pass. If you’re not 100% sure what’s safe, treat it as not safe and hire out.

Big jobs and dirty jobs

A whole driveway that’s been growing algae for five years, or a deck with years of mildew, takes a long time to do right. The rental + your weekend is sometimes more expensive than the quote was.

The real DIY costs

Renting a pressure washer is the easy part. Here’s what people forget to count:

  • Rental: $50 to $90 for the day
  • Fuel (most rentals are gas-powered): $10 to $20
  • Cleaning solution if you don’t already have it: $20 to $40
  • Tip set if the rental doesn’t include one: $20
  • Stiff-bristle brush, surface cleaner attachment, or extension wand if needed: $30 to $100 each
  • Your time: realistically 4 to 8 hours for a full house exterior plus driveway
  • The drive to and from the rental shop: another hour

If you already own a pressure washer, the math is better. If you’re renting just for this job, the gap between DIY and pro narrows fast.

How to DIY pressure wash safely (if you’re going to)

Start with the right pressure for the surface

  • Concrete and brick: 2,500 to 3,000 PSI
  • Wood deck: 1,200 to 1,500 PSI with a fan tip, never the 0-degree tip
  • Painted surfaces: 1,200 PSI or less, and test in an inconspicuous spot first
  • Vinyl fence: 1,500 PSI max, fan tip, 18 inches away minimum
  • Siding: don’t, hire it out

Use the right tip

Tips are color-coded by spray angle. Wider angle equals lower pressure on the surface.

  • Red (0°): pinpoint, dangerous, almost never the right choice for cleaning. Cuts the surface.
  • Yellow (15°): heavy duty for concrete and brick.
  • Green (25°): most common all-purpose tip.
  • White (40°): wide fan for delicate surfaces.
  • Black (65°): low pressure for applying cleaning solution.

Keep the wand moving

Hold the tip about 12 inches from the surface and sweep in long, overlapping strokes parallel to the surface. Never linger in one spot. Never hold it perpendicular to wood.

Wear safety gear

Closed-toe shoes (the spray will cut through sneakers), eye protection, and long pants. Never aim a pressure washer at a person, a pet, or yourself. The injuries from pressure washer accidents are serious; emergency rooms see them every weekend.

Test before you commit

Pick a hidden spot on whatever you’re cleaning and test for 10 seconds. Look at the result. If you see lifting, etching, or color change, stop and reconsider the tip, distance, or pressure.

The honest comparison

Job DIY? Why
Driveway Yes Forgiving surface, straightforward technique
Patio Yes Same idea, watch the joint sand
Wood deck Maybe Use a fan tip, keep moving, low pressure
Vinyl fence Maybe Soft wash is better for algae stains
House siding No Water intrusion risk, soft wash territory
Roof No Strips granules, voids warranty
Stucco No Cracks, water gets behind the finish
Two-story anything No Ladder + pressure washer = injury risk

Common questions

Can I use a pressure washer on my house just on low?

The pressure at the nozzle isn’t the only variable. Tip angle and distance matter just as much. Even at low PSI, the wrong tip held too close can damage siding. Soft washing is a different process, not just a different pressure setting.

What about electric pressure washers?

Lighter-duty (1,500 to 2,000 PSI) and quieter than gas. Fine for driveways and patios. Underpowered for big jobs. Same surface rules apply: hard surfaces yes, finished surfaces no.

I rented a pressure washer and now my driveway has stripes. How do I fix it?

Re-wash the whole driveway with consistent technique, or get a professional surface cleaner pass over the top. The stripes happen when you hold the wand at different distances or move at different speeds. A surface cleaner attachment fixes the inconsistency.

Is renting cheaper than hiring a pro?

For a driveway, yes. For a whole-house job, usually not by much. By the time you add rental, fuel, solution, and the time, you’re often within $100 of what a pro would charge to do a better job.

When in doubt, get a free quote first

You can rent the machine after you see the number. Wicked Clean LLC provides free quotes on pressure washing and soft washing across Hartford County, CT. Knowing the pro price lets you make the DIY-or-not call with real numbers. Call (860) 748-8655 or request a free quote.