A pressure washer set to the wrong PSI will leave permanent etch marks in concrete that no amount of resealing can remove. The marks look like swirls or zebra striping where the concrete surface was eroded by water pressure that exceeded what the surface could handle. Once etched, the concrete is permanently rougher in those areas, and the difference is visible from across the driveway.
Knowing how to pressure wash a driveway means knowing what PSI to use, when to add detergent, and how to avoid the mistakes that turn a good clean into a permanent scar.
Rent or Buy: The 3-Driveway Rule
If you will pressure wash 3 or more times in the next 5 years (your driveway, the patio, the deck, the siding), buying a pressure washer is the better economic choice. A residential 2,800 to 3,200 PSI gas pressure washer costs $300 to $500 and lasts 7 to 10 years with basic maintenance. A rental costs $80 to $120 per day, which means three rentals exceed the cost of buying.
If you will only do this once every few years and have no other pressure washing projects, rent. Home Depot and Lowe’s both rent gas pressure washers at the lower end of the price range, and a single driveway clean takes 3 to 4 hours of machine time. One rental day is enough.
PSI Rules by Surface
Concrete driveway: 3,000 PSI maximum. Anything higher etches the surface. Use a 25-degree spray nozzle (the green one on most washers) or a surface cleaner attachment that distributes the pressure across a wider area. Hold the nozzle 12 to 18 inches from the surface, never less than 12 inches.
Wood deck or fence: 1,200 to 1,500 PSI maximum. Higher pressure tears wood fibers and produces a fuzzy, rough surface that requires sanding. Use a 40-degree spray nozzle (the white one). Hold 18 to 24 inches from the wood. The fence post repair guide covers the common damage from previous over-pressure washing on wood.
Vinyl siding: 1,500 to 2,000 PSI. Use a 40-degree nozzle. Hold the wand at the same height as the surface. Never spray upward at siding because water gets behind the panels.
Brick or stone: 2,500 to 3,000 PSI. The surface is durable enough but mortar joints are not. Keep the spray angled across the surface rather than directly into joints, which can erode old mortar.
Soap or Just Water
For a driveway that has not been cleaned in years and has accumulated oil stains, mildew, or general dirt, a pressure washer detergent specifically rated for concrete produces dramatically better results than water alone. Apply the detergent at low pressure with the soap nozzle, let it dwell for 5 to 10 minutes (not letting it dry, since wetting it again if it starts to dry keeps it active), then switch to the rinse nozzle and remove with high pressure.
For a driveway that gets pressure washed annually, water alone is sufficient. The detergent step is only needed when starting from a heavy buildup. The maintenance washes between are just water.
Step-by-Step Driveway Clean
Start at the highest point of the driveway and work toward the street so dirty water flows away from cleaned sections. Spray in slow, overlapping passes. A typical pass is 4 feet long and 18 inches wide, with the next pass overlapping by 2 to 3 inches. Move the wand at a consistent rate. Stopping in one spot for more than a second concentrates the pressure and risks etching.
For oil stains specifically, apply a concrete degreaser before pressure washing and scrub with a stiff brush. The degreaser breaks down the oil so the pressure washer can lift it. Without this step, the pressure washer drives the oil deeper into the concrete pores rather than removing it.
How to Avoid Etch Marks
The most common cause of etching is holding the wand too close to the surface. The 12-to-18-inch rule is not optional. The second most common cause is using a 0-degree (red) spray nozzle, which is for stripping paint and rust, not cleaning. Never use the 0-degree nozzle on concrete. The third cause is staying in one spot for too long. Keep moving.
When to Seal After Washing
A driveway that has just been pressure washed is at its cleanest and most absorbent, which makes it the ideal time to apply a concrete sealer. Wait 48 hours for the concrete to dry completely, then apply sealer per the driveway sealing guide. The combination of clean and sealed produces a driveway that stays looking new for 3 to 5 years rather than dirtying again within months.
Pressure washers and concrete sealer are available on Amazon. The full outdoor maintenance framework is in The Broke Mom Home Reset ($17).
How Long the Clean Lasts
An unsealed concrete driveway that has been pressure washed will start to look dirty again within 4 to 6 months in a typical climate. Tree pollen, road dust, oil drips, and weather all reapply quickly to bare concrete. A sealed driveway holds its clean look for 2 to 3 years before any visible buildup returns.
The math on sealing favors anyone who plans to stay in the house. Pressure washing every year is 4 to 6 hours of weekend labor plus the rental or wear on your machine. Pressure washing every 3 years (because the seal is doing the work between) cuts that labor to a third. Sealer for a typical driveway costs $80 to $120 and produces this benefit for the life of the seal.
