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Clean Pro says more than 4 in 10 Ohio River Valley quote requesters waited over a year for gutter cleaning

May 18, 2026
Clean Pro says more than 4 in 10 Ohio River Valley quote requesters waited over a year for gutter cleaning

By AI, Created 4:18 PM UTC, May 18, 2026, /AGP/ – Clean Pro Gutter Cleaning’s early-2026 quote-request data from Cincinnati, Louisville and Lexington found 43.5% of respondents had gone more than a year since their last gutter cleaning. The company says the pattern points to homeowners waiting until drainage systems are already under strain as spring storm risks rise across the Ohio Valley.

Why it matters: - Clean Pro’s data points to a maintenance gap in a region facing spring flooding and severe-weather risk. - The findings suggest many homeowners are only seeking gutter service after prolonged exposure to debris and storm cycles. - The analysis ties private home drainage to broader stormwater readiness in the Ohio River Valley corridor.

What happened: - Clean Pro Gutter Cleaning reviewed early-2026 residential quote requests from Cincinnati, Louisville and Lexington through May 18, 2026. - Among residential quote requesters who answered the cleaning-history question, 43.5% said more than one year had passed since their last gutter cleaning. - 92.9% said at least six months had passed since their last cleaning. - 67.1% wanted service as soon as possible or within two weeks. - 89.4% of residential quote requesters who answered the timing question wanted service within a month. - Clean Pro said the figures reflect homeowner quote requests, not a general population survey.

The details: - Cincinnati showed the highest per-city share of respondents reporting more than one year since last cleaning. - In Cincinnati, 45.5% of residential quote requesters with cleaning-history responses said more than one year had passed since their last cleaning. - In Cincinnati, 68.2% wanted service as soon as possible or within two weeks. - In Louisville, 42.3% of residential quote requesters with cleaning-history responses said more than one year had passed since their last cleaning. - In Louisville, 57.7% wanted service as soon as possible or within two weeks. - In Lexington, about 40% reported more than one year since last cleaning. - In Lexington, about 80% wanted service as soon as possible or within two weeks. - Clean Pro said Lexington’s respondent count was more limited, so the timing figure should be read directionally. - Clean Pro said the corridor-wide figures are the more stable directional signal. - The company said the timing figures come from corridor quote requesters who answered the requested-service-timing question. - The company said the data shows service-request behavior rather than a claim about every homeowner in the region. - Homeowners can review Louisville service availability through Clean Pro’s local page. - Homeowners can confirm details on Clean Pro’s Lexington page. - The source text also includes Clean Pro’s main website at more information.

Between the lines: - The National Weather Service’s 2026 National Hydrologic Assessment, released March 19, said minor flooding was expected in the Ohio Valley into spring and moderate flooding was possible across parts of the region through the season. - The National Weather Service office in Louisville documented an April 27-29 severe-weather event across southern Indiana and central Kentucky that produced tornadoes, straight-line wind damage and flash flooding. - In April 2025, the Metropolitan Sewer District of Greater Cincinnati included “Clean your gutters” in a pre-storm preparedness PDF for residents. - On April 7, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear’s administration announced funding availability for local governments to boost stormwater infrastructure and reduce flooding risk. - Lexington’s stormwater guidance describes runoff moving through storm sewers, catch basins, ditches, detention basins and green infrastructure. - Clean Pro framed the public-infrastructure context as a reminder that homeowner-level drainage still matters at the roof edge. - The company said gutter cleaning does not prevent flooding, storm damage, sewer backups or water damage.

What’s next: - Clean Pro said the pattern should be read as a warning that many homeowners in the Cincinnati-Louisville-Lexington corridor are reaching out after extended maintenance gaps. - Jonathan D. Byrd I said summer storms make roof-edge drainage maintenance harder to ignore. - The company expects homeowner attention to gutters and downspouts to remain relevant as storm season progresses.

The bottom line: - Clean Pro’s data suggests a lot of Ohio River Valley homeowners are waiting too long to clean gutters, then seeking service when the need has already become urgent.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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