Fast, Reliable Duct Repair & Sealing Across South Pasadena
If your South Pasadena home has uneven temperatures, rooms that never cool down, or energy bills that climb every summer, leaking or damaged ductwork is usually the reason — and it’s fixable. Our Duct Repair & Sealing team serves South Pasadena directly from Pasadena, which means we can typically reach your home the same day you call. Benjamin Green, owner and lead technician, personally handles every job — not a subcontracted crew. Call us at (626) 548-6445 for a free estimate. We know South Pasadena’s housing stock, and that knowledge matters the moment we open an attic hatch.

Why Pro Air Duct Care Pasadena Is South Pasadena’s Preferred Duct Repair & Sealing Company
We’ve been inside hundreds of South Pasadena homes over 21 years — the pre-war Craftsmans along Meridian Avenue, the Spanish Colonial Revivals near Mission Street, the smaller bungalows tucked into the 91030 zip code — and we understand the ductwork problems specific to this community in a way that a generalist HVAC contractor simply doesn’t. That field knowledge translates into accurate diagnosis on the first visit, not a return trip after the wrong repair.
Our 432 verified customer reviews average 4.9 out of 5 stars. That kind of volume and consistency doesn’t come from lucky streaks — it comes from doing the same specialized work, correctly, in the same neighborhoods, year after year. South Pasadena homeowners who’ve trusted us return because Benjamin is on the job himself, every time, with professional-grade Nikro and Guardsman equipment — not rental-unit machines hauled in by whoever was available that morning.
Our Duct Repair & Sealing Services in South Pasadena
Mastic Sealant Application
Mastic sealant is the right solution for South Pasadena homes, and we’ll explain exactly why in the FAQ below — but the short version is that it stays flexible through the temperature swings and pressure cycling that foil tape cannot survive in this climate. We apply mastic by brush at every flex-to-metal junction, every collar fitting, and every seam where air loss is measured — not estimated. In South Pasadena’s older retrofitted systems, these junction points are often where the original installer cut corners, and mastic is how we make them permanent.
Flex Duct Repair
Compressed and kinked flexible duct runs are the single most common airflow problem we find in South Pasadena’s Craftsman and balloon-frame homes. The knee-wall attics in these structures were never designed for ductwork — they’re tight, angled, and force flex duct into sharp bends that collapse the inner liner over time, cutting airflow to rear bedrooms sometimes by 25–35%. We re-route, re-couple with draw-band collars, and restore the duct to a run geometry that actually delivers conditioned air where it needs to go.
Metal Duct Repair
The original galvanized sheet-metal trunk lines in South Pasadena’s 1960s–70s central-air retrofits develop rust-through perforations at seams where condensation collects — a direct result of the temperature inversions that trap moisture in the San Gabriel Valley. These perforations allow fine particulate-laden air from the smog layer to re-enter the supply stream, bypassing the filter entirely. We identify breach points with pressure testing, patch metal-to-metal with sealed sheet stock, and restore system integrity without unnecessary replacement of sections that are still structurally sound.
Duct Insulation
Uninsulated or under-insulated duct runs in South Pasadena’s attic spaces lose significant conditioned air to heat gain in summer — particularly in south-facing attics that can reach 140°F by mid-afternoon. We wrap exposed metal trunk lines and flex duct runs with properly rated insulation, which also reduces condensation-driven corrosion on the older galvanized sections common to homes built before 1970. Correct insulation is also a prerequisite before any asbestos-assessed sections can be re-wrapped safely, and we coordinate that process in sequence.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in South Pasadena
We carry Guardsman mastic sealant and compatible accessories on every service vehicle, which means South Pasadena jobs don’t wait on a parts order. For inspection and mechanical access work in tight attic runs, we use Nikro tooling — the same equipment commercial contractors use, not the consumer-grade alternatives. Where air quality verification is part of the scope, Aprilaire monitoring equipment gives us measurable before-and-after data rather than a visual guess. South Pasadena homeowners get professional-grade results because we arrived with professional-grade tools.
Common Duct Repair & Sealing Problems We See in South Pasadena Homes
- Kinked and collapsed flex duct in knee-wall attic cavities: South Pasadena’s Craftsman homes have some of the tightest attic geometry in LA County — balloon-frame construction with low knee walls forces flex duct into bends sharp enough to partially collapse the inner liner. The result is chronic low airflow to rear and upper rooms, often misdiagnosed as a thermostat or equipment problem when the actual breach is six feet into an attic no one has inspected in a decade.
- Rust-through perforations in 1960s–70s galvanized trunk lines: Central-air retrofits in South Pasadena’s post-war renovation era used galvanized sheet-metal trunk lines that are now 50–60 years old. The temperature-inversion climate of the inland San Gabriel Valley creates recurring condensation on these lines, and seam rust-through is common — allowing unfiltered, particulate-laden air to enter the supply stream between the equipment and your living space.
- Seal degradation at flex-to-metal junctions after Santa Ana events: Post-Santa Ana wind events drive elevated dust and debris loads into duct systems through micro-gaps along eastern-facing blocks. Each pressure cycle accelerates deterioration at flex-to-metal collars, especially on older systems where foil tape — not mastic — was used at original installation. These junctions fail progressively, not all at once, which is why homeowners often notice a slow, seasonal decline in room-to-room comfort.
- Asbestos-wrapped trunk lines requiring assessment before repair: South Pasadena technicians encounter this more often than in any neighboring city. Galvanized trunk lines installed during 1960s–70s retrofits were commonly wrapped with asbestos-containing duct insulation — a material still in place in many homes along the historic corridors. Before any mechanical repair or sealing work begins on those sections, an asbestos assessment is triggered. This is not a standard step in newer housing stock in Alhambra or San Gabriel, but it is a responsible protocol in South Pasadena’s pre-war building inventory.
The South Pasadena Asbestos Assessment Protocol — What You Need to Know
This deserves its own section because it surprises most South Pasadena homeowners. The pre-war Craftsman and Spanish Colonial Revival homes along Meridian Avenue and Mission Street — many listed in historic districts or on the National Register — were retrofitted with central air in the 1960s and 70s. The sheet-metal trunk lines installed during those retrofits were often wrapped with asbestos-containing insulation materials that were standard practice at the time. That wrap can still be present, undisturbed and intact, inside attics and wall chases where no one has looked since the Carter administration.
Before any mechanical duct repair or sealing work begins on a system with that era of installation, our protocol triggers an asbestos assessment. We do not skip this step to move faster. If the wrap tests negative — as it did on a 1928 Craftsman near Meridian Avenue where we recently resolved a 28% airflow loss from a disconnected flex duct segment — we proceed with Nikro inspection tooling, re-couple the duct, and seal every joint with mastic. If the wrap tests positive, we coordinate the appropriate remediation sequence before our work begins. This is a genuinely different job than duct repair in the newer tract housing of neighboring Alhambra, and we treat it that way.

Important safety note: Asbestos-containing duct wrap must never be disturbed, cut, or removed by an unqualified person. Airborne asbestos fibers pose a serious health risk. If your South Pasadena home has ductwork from a 1960s–70s installation, do not attempt DIY repairs on the metal trunk lines — call a trained professional who knows how to assess the material before touching it.
Pricing for Duct Repair & Sealing in South Pasadena, CA
South Pasadena duct repair work is priced on scope, not a flat-rate guess. That said, here are the actual ranges for this market:
- Mastic sealant application (full system): $280–$520 depending on accessible joint count and system size
- Flex duct repair or re-routing (per segment): $150–$320 per run, with knee-wall access jobs typically at the higher end
- Metal trunk line patching (per breach zone): $180–$380, with additional cost if asbestos assessment is triggered first
- Duct insulation (per linear foot of exposed trunk): $4–$9 per linear foot installed
- Air leak repair (flex-to-metal collars and elbow fittings): $120–$260 for targeted junction sealing
The factors that push South Pasadena jobs toward the higher end are attic accessibility, system age, asbestos assessment requirements, and the number of non-standard duct runs through original plaster chases or tight knee walls. Every estimate is free — call (626) 548-6445 and Benjamin will give you a straight number before any work begins.
We Also Serve Cities Near South Pasadena
In addition to South Pasadena, our duct repair and sealing work covers the surrounding communities: Pasadena, where our main base sits; Alhambra to the south; San Marino to the east along Huntington Drive; and San Gabriel further into the valley. Same technician, same equipment, same diagnostic standard across every city we serve.
Serving South Pasadena, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the South Pasadena area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Duct Repair & Sealing in South Pasadena
Yes — if your ductwork was retrofitted or modified during the 1960s or 1970s, an asbestos assessment is required before we begin any mechanical repair on the metal trunk lines. This applies specifically to galvanized duct systems in South Pasadena’s pre-war housing stock, where asbestos-containing duct wrap was a standard installation material during that era. The assessment determines whether the existing insulation wrap is hazardous, and our work sequence is designed to protect both the home’s occupants and our technicians. We will never skip that step to get to the repair faster. Call (626) 548-6445 to talk through your home’s specific installation year and what the assessment involves.
Duct cleaning removes debris but does not fix the geometry problem — and in South Pasadena’s Craftsman homes, geometry is almost always the culprit. Flex duct runs threaded through knee-wall attics develop sharp bends and partial liner collapse over time, which restricts airflow to rear bedrooms far more than debris accumulation does. A 25–35% airflow loss from a single kinked segment is common. The fix is re-routing or re-coupling that flex run with proper draw-band collars and re-sealing all junctions with mastic — not a second cleaning pass. If your rear rooms stayed warm after cleaning, call us at (626) 548-6445 for a pressure-based diagnostic visit.
Mastic sealant is a brush-applied, semi-flexible compound that cures to a permanent, airtight bond at duct seams and collar connections. Foil tape — the most common alternative — has a pressure-sensitive adhesive that dries out, loses tack, and peels away from metal and flex duct surfaces within a few years, especially in attics that cycle between South Pasadena’s cool winter inversions and summer heat extremes. Santa Ana pressure events accelerate that failure further. Mastic stays bonded through those cycles because it isn’t adhesive-based — it mechanically bridges the gap and cures in place. For South Pasadena’s older systems with irregular seam geometry, there is no equivalent substitute.
Santa Ana events drive elevated volumes of fine debris into homes through micro-gaps and existing seal failures, and the pressure differentials involved create a pumping action at flex-to-metal junctions that accelerates adhesive-based seal degradation. South Pasadena’s eastern-facing blocks — particularly those without significant windbreak — see this more intensely than neighboring communities shielded by terrain. Each wind event works the existing seal gaps slightly wider. Over two or three seasons, junctions that were marginal become full disconnections. Post-Santa Ana is actually one of the better times to schedule a duct inspection in South Pasadena because the failure pattern is predictable and the breach points are measurable. Call (626) 548-6445 after any significant wind event for a pressure diagnostic.
Yes — we work in South Pasadena’s historic homes regularly, and protecting original plaster and period finishes is part of the job, not an afterthought. In most cases, duct repairs inside plaster chases are performed from above, through the attic, or from below without opening wall surfaces at all. Where access is genuinely necessary, we use the smallest possible opening, and we do not make that call until the full route is mapped with inspection tooling. South Pasadena has more historically protected interiors per block than almost any other residential community in LA County — that context shapes how we plan every job here. Call (626) 548-6445 to describe your specific layout before booking.
Written by Benjamin Green, Owner & Lead Technician at Pro Air Duct Care Pasadena, serving South Pasadena since 2004.