Deck Cleaning + Staining — Season Starts Now

Pressure wash first. That’s the whole first half of a deck staining job. You can’t skip it, you can’t shortcut it, and you can’t get good results on a dirty deck no matter how expensive the stain is.

Why the prep matters more than the product

Every stain manufacturer (Behr, Cabot, Sherwin-Williams, Ready Seal, Armstrong-Clark) is unanimous on this: stain adhesion depends on surface cleanliness and the dryness of the wood. A deck that’s been rained on 24 hours ago will not accept stain evenly — you’ll get blotchy penetration that looks worse than bare wood after six months of UV.

The right prep sequence:

  1. Pressure wash with the correct tip and pressure for the wood (usually 40° fan at 500–1,200 PSI for softwoods, with cleaning solution). Too much pressure damages the fibers and makes the finished stain look rough.
  2. Wood brightener if needed — neutralizes the pH after cleaning and opens the grain.
  3. Dry for 24–72 hours depending on ambient humidity. Moisture content below 15% is the target — a $12 moisture meter from the hardware store pays for itself.
  4. Light hand-sand on any rough spots or fuzzed grain from washing.
  5. Stain application — two coats of semi-transparent, or one heavy coat of solid-color.

Why May/June is peak season

Ideal staining weather in central Virginia:

May and June usually deliver 15–20 days that hit all four criteria. July gives you maybe 5–8 — afternoon thunderstorms trash the 48-hour dry window constantly, and humidity routinely tops 85% which kills proper cure. If you wait until July, you’ll either compromise on application conditions or push the job to September (and risk fall weather).

Stain types, plain English

What we do in a staining service

Full scope:

  1. Deep pressure wash with appropriate cleaner (day 1)
  2. Wood brightener application (day 1)
  3. Dry time (48–72 hours)
  4. Light hand-sand of any raised grain (day 3)
  5. Two-coat stain application per manufacturer directions (day 3)
  6. Cure time (24 hours before light foot traffic, 72 hours before heavy furniture)

Total: usually 3–4 days elapsed, with 2 on-site visits.

Pricing

Deck staining runs $350 labor + stain material (roughly $1.25/sq ft for a mid-range semi-transparent, or about $120–$180 for a typical 100-sq-ft deck). Fence staining is $4/linear foot labor + stain. We automatically include the pressure wash in staining quotes — no hidden add-on.

Get your exact number at hibaxum.com/request-quote, and book early — May and June route slots fill by late April.

Deck Cleaning + Staining — Season Starts Now


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