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K M. Kerr
K M. Kerr

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Pressure Washers for Home Renovation: What 15 Years of Painting Taught Me

Pressure Washers for Home Renovation: What 15 Years of Painting Taught Me

I've run a painting and renovation business for over 15 years. Every spring, without fail, I get calls from homeowners who tried to pressure wash their own siding or deck and either damaged the surface or bought a machine that couldn't handle the job.

Here's everything I wish homeowners knew before buying a pressure washer.

The Two Numbers That Actually Matter

Most buyers fixate on PSI (pounds per square inch). That's only half the story. The real productivity metric is GPM — gallons per minute. A 1.2 GPM unit at 3000 PSI will clean slower than a 2.0 GPM unit at 2000 PSI. GPM determines how fast water moves dirt off the surface. For anything larger than patio furniture, aim for at least 1.8 GPM.

For PSI: 2000-3000 is the sweet spot for residential work. Above 3000 and you risk gouging wood, stripping paint, and etching concrete if you're not careful.

Electric vs Gas: Pick Based on Your Job

Electric pressure washers are the right choice for most homeowners. They're lighter (20-30 lbs), quieter, and require zero engine maintenance. The Sun Joe SPX3000 is the one I recommend most — 2030 PSI, 1.76 GPM, and it comes with five quick-connect tips including a turbo nozzle. At around $150, it handles decks, siding, patio furniture, and cars without breaking a sweat.

Gas pressure washers give you more power and mobility. No cord means you can work anywhere on the property. The Simpson MegaShot MSH3125 (3200 PSI, 2.5 GPM) with a Honda engine is what I run on job sites. It'll strip years of grime off a driveway in an afternoon. The Ryobi RY142300 is a solid mid-range electric option if you want more power than the Sun Joe but don't want to deal with gas.

Features Worth Paying For

Quick-connect tips. You want standard 1/4" quick-connect fittings. Cheap units use proprietary nozzles that leak and can't be upgraded. A turbo nozzle (rotary 0-degree) is worth its weight in gold for concrete — it cleans 3x faster than a fan tip.

Hose length. Most homeowner units come with a 20-25 ft hose. That's barely enough. Budget for a 50 ft replacement hose — it saves you from dragging the machine every two minutes.

Detergent tank. If you're cleaning siding with mold or mildew, an onboard detergent tank saves you from using a separate pump sprayer. The Sun Joe SPX3000 has dual tanks — one for soap, one for rinse.

The Bottom Line

For seasonal home use — decks, siding, fences, cars — a $150-200 electric unit is all you need. If you have a large property, heavy moss, or a long driveway, step up to a $300-400 gas unit. Either way, buy a turbo nozzle and a longer hose on day one. Those two accessories make more difference than 500 extra PSI ever will.


Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. These are products I've used professionally and recommend based on real job site experience.

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