Why PSI Matters for Concrete
PSI measures how hard water hits the surface. The goal is enough pressure to lift embedded mold and algae without scoring permanent lines into concrete. Jacksonville driveways collect Gloeocapsa magma and black mold in porous concrete over years of humidity. A rinse at 1,500 PSI moves surface dirt but leaves biological stains — why DIY attempts in Mandarin and Ponte Vedra often look patchy.
Recommended PSI by Driveway Condition
Match pressure to what you are cleaning, not just the maximum your machine produces.
- Light dirt and pollen — 1,800 to 2,200 PSI with a 25-degree tip. Enough for routine maintenance on newer concrete in Nocatee or Shearwater.
- Standard mold and algae — 2,500 to 3,000 PSI with a 15-degree tip. The sweet spot for most Jacksonville driveways with black staining.
- Heavy oil stains — 3,000 PSI with a degreasing pre-treatment. Pressure alone does not remove oil; detergent breaks the bond first.
- Aged or damaged concrete — 2,000 to 2,500 PSI maximum. Older driveways in Fleming Island and Orange Park may have spalling or cracks that high pressure worsens.
Fan Tip Selection Matters as Much as PSI
Never use a zero-degree tip on driveways — it etches concrete. Use a 15-degree tip for mold and algae, 25-degree for final rinses. Maintain 8 to 12 inches of distance with overlapping passes. That is why a professional driveway wash in Jacksonville ($149 to $219) often beats a homeowner with a 3,100 PSI machine and wrong nozzle.
When to Call a Professional Instead
If your driveway has never been professionally cleaned, has deep black staining, or is paired with a paver walkway that needs different pressure, hire a pro. Paver driveways require 2,000 to 2,500 PSI maximum to avoid dislodging sand from joints — a mistake that costs hundreds to re-sand.
Soapy Sasquatch handles driveways across Jacksonville starting at $149 for small, $179 for medium, and $219 for large. Published pricing at soapysasquatch.com — call (904) 570-8828 for same-day booking.