House washing, driveways, decks, and more — soft washing done right in Round Robin's home town.
Millsboro homes get dirty in a very Millsboro way. We sit right on the Indian River, close enough to Indian River Bay that the air stays damp for a good part of the year, and that humidity feeds the green algae film you see creeping across vinyl siding all over town. Add in the shade from our wooded lots, a heavy spring pollen season, and all the new construction going up along Route 24 and Route 113, and even a house that's only a few years old can start looking tired.
Round Robin is based right here in Millsboro, so this is the town I know best. I'm the owner, I do the work myself, and I've washed enough local siding, concrete, and decking to know exactly what our climate does to exterior surfaces — and how to clean them without doing damage.
Most Millsboro homes have vinyl siding, and vinyl should never be blasted with high pressure. That's why I use a soft wash approach for house washing: low pressure paired with a cleaning solution that kills the algae and mildew at the source instead of just knocking the surface layer off. The green streaks come off, the siding stays sealed and undamaged, and the clean lasts longer because the growth underneath is actually dead. I soft wash homes up to two stories, including gutters' exterior faces, soffits, and trim.
Concrete is porous, and around Millsboro it soaks up everything — algae in the shady spots, rust stains from irrigation, tire marks, and the general gray grime that builds up season after season. I clean driveways, sidewalks, and walkways with a surface cleaner that delivers even, consistent pressure, so you get a uniform finish instead of the stripey "zebra" look a wand alone leaves behind. It's one of the fastest ways to make a whole property look newer.
Wood decks, composite decking, paver patios, and vinyl fences each need a different touch. Wood gets a gentle low-pressure wash that lifts the gray, weathered layer without furring up the boards. Composite and vinyl get a soft wash to clear mildew from the texture. Pavers get cleaned with care around the joint sand. If your Millsboro deck or fence has gone green or gray, there's a very good chance it can look close to new again.
I wash homes all over town — in-town streets near downtown Millsboro, established properties along the Indian River, and the newer communities that have grown up around us, including Plantation Lakes, Stonewater Creek, and Peninsula Lakes, plus the Route 24 corridor heading out toward Long Neck. If you're anywhere in the Millsboro area, you're in my backyard.
Round Robin is based in Millsboro, so there's no long-distance travel fee built into your price and no waiting weeks for someone to come out from across the county. I'm a solo owner-operator — the person who quotes your job is the person who shows up and does it. Quotes are free, honest, and no-pressure. If something doesn't need washing yet, I'll tell you.
For most homes in Millsboro, every one to two years keeps siding ahead of the algae. Properties near the river, on shaded wooded lots, or with north-facing walls that never fully dry tend to need a soft wash closer to the once-a-year mark. A quick look at your siding will tell me where your home falls.
High pressure isn't — it can crack panels, force water behind the siding, and strip the finish. Soft washing is. Low pressure and the right cleaning solution do the actual work, which is exactly how siding manufacturers recommend vinyl be cleaned. That's the only way I wash houses.
No — as long as I can reach the areas being cleaned and an exterior spigot, you don't need to be there. Plenty of my Millsboro customers come home to a clean house. We'll sort out any gate, pet, or window details before the visit so everything goes smoothly.