Multi-Unit & Commercial Programs
Documented vent service for apartments, condos, salons, and laundromats.
Learn moreThe cheapest time to get a dryer vent right is before the drywall goes up. We work with builders and GCs to route the shortest legal run, install smooth rigid metal duct with protected penetrations, and set a proper exterior termination — all per IRC M1502 and the dryer manufacturer's installation manual. Every rough-in is photographed before cover so the inspection record exists even after the walls close. At trim-out we return to connect, test airflow, and hand over documentation the homeowner can keep. Builders get fewer red tags and zero year-one warranty calls about towels that won't dry.
New-construction install is the dryer vent done right the first time: route engineered before framing closes, smooth rigid metal duct with protected penetrations, a properly flashed exterior termination, and documentation photographed before drywall hides the work. Builders usually hand the dryer duct to whichever trade is nearby, which is how new homes end up with thirty-foot attic runs and soffit terminations that fail inspection or, worse, pass and fail the homeowner later. A specialist rough-in costs little at framing stage and buys the builder fewer red tags, and the buyer a laundry room that works from the first load.
A new-construction vent install isn't a matter of opinion — it's held to published national standards. Prime Dryer Vent builds every job to the named codes below and documents it, so the work is provably right for an inspector, an insurer, or a future buyer. These are the universal standards; your city's permit and inspection requirements are confirmed with the local authority before we pull the job.
New dryer exhaust installs must use rigid metal duct within length limits, terminate outdoors away from building openings, and avoid fasteners that protrude into the airstream — the checklist our rough-ins are built on.
Where the specified dryer's manual allows longer runs or requires specific fittings, the manual governs — we design to the actual appliance, not a placeholder.
Codes cited are the established national standards (IRC, UL) that govern this service. The adopted code edition, permit, and inspection requirements vary by city —Prime Dryer Vent verifies them with your local authority having jurisdiction on every job.
We take the floor plan and dryer spec and return a routed vent design with length math and termination placement.
Rigid metal duct is installed and supported, penetrations protected, and the exterior termination set and sealed to the envelope.
The full run is photographed and measured before insulation and drywall, creating a permanent record.
At finish stage we connect the appliance with a listed transition, test airflow under load, and deliver the documentation package.
We've worked on 0+ DFW homes over 15+ years. Every job — small vent cleaning or full rebuild — runs the same way: licensed & insured technicians, written quotes, photo reports, warranty in writing.
Route plans with developed-length math submitted before framing closes, not improvised on site
Pre-drywall photo records that survive long after the walls are painted
Coordination with your schedule — rough-in at framing, connection and airflow test at trim-out
Work matched to both IRC M1502 and the specified dryer's installation manual
Family-owned, licensed & insured, IRC M1502–compliant. We're the team you call when you want it done right the first time — no rotating subcontractors, no upsell pressure, no surprises. Same techs, same trucks, same standard.

For most households, once a year is the right rhythm. Push it earlier if the dryer runs daily, the run is long or has several elbows, you have pets, or the machine is gas-fired. The honest answer is measured, not guessed: if airflow at your termination is strong and drying times are normal, you can wait; if either slips, don't. Our inspections give you that measurement so the schedule fits your house instead of a generic calendar.
No. Dryer vents are the entire company — cleaning, inspection, repair, rerouting, rebuilds, and installs of the dryer exhaust system only. That's a deliberate choice, not a limitation: a crew that works on one system all day gets very good at it, and a visit from us never turns into a pitch for six other services. If your problem is outside the dryer vent, we'll say so plainly and you'll owe us nothing for the opinion.
In the Dallas–Fort Worth metro we can typically respond within about two hours for urgent calls — a fully blocked vent, a burning smell, a gas dryer you're worried about. Routine cleanings and inspections are usually scheduled within a couple of days. Outside DFW, in the Austin, San Antonio, and Houston metros, response depends on route density that week; we'll give you a real window when you call rather than a number we can't keep.
Cleanings start at $99, inspections and diagnostics at $89, and repairs are quoted flat after we've scoped the duct. The published prices are true starting points; what moves them is physical: duct length, elbow count, second-story or roof access, and how compacted the lint is. You approve the exact number before any work starts, and the price we quote is the price you pay. No trip-fee surprises, no truck-side renegotiation.
We measure airflow at your outside hood first, so there's a baseline. Then the full run gets cleaned — rotary brush through the duct while a HEPA vacuum holds it under negative pressure, plus the transition hose behind the machine and the termination hood outside. We re-measure airflow, reset your dryer with proper clearance, and hand you a report with the before/after numbers and photos. Most homes take about an hour, and we leave the laundry room cleaner than we found it.
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Other services in the New Construction & Commercial category.
Flat fee confirmed when you book. Same-week scheduling. A pass/fail verdict within 48 hours.
No airflow, overheating dryer, burning smell, or a vent you're not sure about? We answer 7 AM to midnight and the assessment ends in a written safe-to-use verdict — including a do-not-use notice when the evidence supports one. After-hours dispatch runs subject to crew availability.
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