What an eavestrough clean actually includes.

A real clean is more than scooping the leaves you can see from the ground. Here is exactly what every step covers, how a visit goes, and when to book it in St. Catharines and across Niagara.

Wondering what a proper gutter clean involves in St. Catharines? Here it is, start to finish.

Plenty of homeowners have paid for a cleaning that was a quick scoop of the front gutter and a wave from the driveway. That is not a clean, and it is why the back runs overflow a month later. Here is the version that actually keeps the water moving.

What every clean includes

  • Every length, by hand. Front, back, and the awkward runs over the garage and porch. Hand-clearing reaches what a leaf-blower-from-the-roof skips.
  • Downspouts flushed and tested. Water is run through each drop and the elbows are cleared. Most real clogs hide at the elbow where the gutter drop meets the wall, not in the open gutter run.
  • A full system check. Loose hangers, separated seams, lengths that are holding water, and any spot where the fascia is staying wet. A small problem caught here costs far less than a rotted soffit.
  • Debris bagged and gone. The wet leaf pile leaves with the crew, not in your flowerbed.
  • Before-and-after photos. A proper clean includes showing each section cleared, so you can verify the work without climbing a ladder.

How a visit goes

A well-run job begins with a flat price based on the home size and storey count before the crew arrives. On the day, the full roofline is worked, the drainage is tested, any findings are flagged, and the job is confirmed complete. Most single-family homes take well under two hours.

Two-storey and Glenridge-slope access: Steep roofs, third-storey runs, and homes on the Glenridge escarpment edge take more setup, and the price reflects that up front. Proper ladders, stabilizers, and fall protection are not optional on this work, and a WSIB-covered crew is the right choice for anything above a single storey.

When to book it in St. Catharines

Two windows matter for most St. Catharines homes. The spring clean clears the maple keys and winter grit, ideally May into June after the helicopter seeds finish dropping. The fall clean is the important one: timing it for after the leaves finish coming down, usually mid-to-late November, is the trick. Book the late-fall slot early, because everyone in the city wants the same two or three weeks. On a twice-a-year plan, both dates are held without the scramble.

Erie-facing and open-lot properties

On open Erie-facing lots in south Niagara, the same timing applies but the debris source is different: Lake Erie prevailing westerly winds deliver organic debris to every eavestrough on the south-facing roofline regardless of whether there is a single tree on the property. Twice-a-year cleaning is the standard for these homes by wind load alone, not tree cover. A late-October clean is the critical one here: wet debris packed in the gutter before the first freeze becomes ice at the gutter lip, which backs meltwater up under the first shingle course over the winter.

See illustrative 2026 flat-rate ranges on the cost page or common questions on the FAQ.

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