If you've been shopping around for exterior cleaning, you've probably seen both terms — "pressure washing" and "soft washing" — and they sound basically the same.
They're not. And using the wrong one on the wrong surface can wreck your home.
Here's the honest breakdown so you know exactly what to ask for.
The Quick Definition
Pressure washing = high-pressure water (1,500-4,000+ PSI) to blast dirt off hard surfaces.
Soft washing = low-pressure water (under 500 PSI) + specialized cleaning solutions that do the actual work of killing algae and mildew.
One uses force. The other uses chemistry. Both have their place — the trick is knowing when to use each.
Pressure Washing: When and Why
Pressure washing uses raw water pressure to scrub away dirt, grime, oil, and stains. The water pressure does most of the cleaning. It works great on:
- Concrete driveways and walkways — they can handle the force
- Brick patios and pavers — durable, no risk of damage
- Stone surfaces
- Metal surfaces
- Heavy-duty industrial cleaning
Pressure washing is fast and effective on hard surfaces. But here's where it goes wrong: people use it on stuff that can't handle the force.
The Disasters of Wrong-Surface Pressure Washing
I've shown up to jobs where the previous DIY attempt did serious damage. Here are the most common ones:
Pressure washing a roof = thousands in damage
High pressure strips the protective granules off asphalt shingles. Without those granules, your shingles fail in 2-3 years instead of 20. It also voids most manufacturer warranties. The black streaks that come back six months later? Algae regrowing because pressure only blasted off the surface — it didn't kill the root cause.
Pressure washing siding = cracks, leaks, and water intrusion
Vinyl siding looks tough but high-PSI water can crack it, break seals, and force water behind the siding — straight into your insulation and wall cavity. Hello mold problem.
Pressure washing a deck = splintered wood
The water pressure rips the soft summer growth out of wood grain, leaving the deck splintered and rougher than before. Looks great immediately. Looks terrible 6 months later.
Pressure washing windows = cracked glass and broken seals
Window seals can't handle direct high-pressure spray. You'll fog up your double-pane windows and shorten their life.
Soft Washing: When and Why
Soft washing flips the model. Instead of force, it relies on cleaning solutions (typically a mix of sodium hypochlorite, surfactants, and algaecides) to do the chemical work. The water is just for applying the solution and rinsing.
The pressure is so low it's similar to a strong garden hose. Soft washing is the only safe method for:
- Roof cleaning — kills algae at the root, no shingle damage
- Vinyl siding — cleans without forcing water behind panels
- Wood siding
- Stucco
- Painted surfaces
- Screens, windows, and delicate trim
Why Soft Washing Lasts Longer
Here's the thing most people don't realize: soft washing keeps surfaces clean longer than pressure washing.
That's because the cleaning solutions actually kill the algae, mildew, and bacteria at a microscopic level. Pressure washing just blasts the surface — but the spores remain, and growth comes back within weeks or months.
A properly soft-washed roof in NJ stays clean for 4-6 years. A pressure-washed roof? Streaks come back within 6-12 months (if pressure didn't damage it first).
The Marrone Approach
We use the right method for the right surface, every time. Soft wash for everything that requires gentle treatment (roof, siding, painted surfaces, decks). Pressure wash only for surfaces that handle it well (concrete, pavers, brick, metal). Mix it wrong and you damage the home — we never take that risk.
How to Tell If a Contractor Knows What They're Doing
Ask them: "Are you going to pressure wash my roof?"
If they say yes — run. That's the #1 sign you've got a contractor who'll cause damage. The only correct answer is: "No, we soft wash roofs."
Other green flags:
- They mention specific PSI ranges for different surfaces
- They use the term "soft wash" and explain the difference
- They mention sodium hypochlorite or algaecide for biological growth
- They're licensed and insured (so if anything goes wrong, you're covered)
So Which Do You Need?
| Surface | Right Method |
|---|---|
| Roof shingles | Soft wash (always) |
| Vinyl siding | Soft wash |
| Wood siding | Soft wash |
| Stucco | Soft wash |
| Wood deck | Low-pressure wash (around 500-1,000 PSI) + appropriate solution |
| Composite deck | Soft wash to low-pressure |
| Concrete driveway | Pressure wash (1,500-3,000 PSI) |
| Brick patio | Pressure wash |
| Pavers | Pressure wash + re-sanding |
| Painted fence | Soft wash |
| Metal fence/railings | Pressure wash (light) |
Bottom Line
If a contractor only owns a pressure washer and pressure washes everything from your driveway to your roof — that's a red flag. Real pros have both setups and know which to use where.
When in doubt: soft wash anything that's part of your home itself (siding, roof, deck, paint). Pressure wash anything that's hardscape (concrete, brick, pavers, stone).
Mixing them up = damage. Getting it right = a clean home that stays clean for years.