Welcome to the audio version of the following web page:https://ductowl.com/how-often-to-clean-dryer-vent/ In this episode, we walk through the dryer vent maintenance conversation that most homeowners never have until something forces it — whether that's a dryer taking two full cycles to finish, a laundry room running hot, or a faint burning smell that's easy to dismiss and dangerous to ignore. After cleaning thousands of vents, our technicians at DuctOwl have found that most vents are more than 70% clogged before a homeowner schedules their first service — and they never noticed, because the decline happens gradually. We anchor the discussion in numbers: 2,900 dryer fires every year attributed to lint buildup, dryers responsible for 92% of all laundry-area home fires, and over 15,000 annual incidents nationally causing $84 million in property damage. We then walk through an Atlanta case study where a 90% blockage was forcing 90-minute drying cycles, and a single professional cleaning combined with duct resealing cut drying time by 50% and reduced the monthly electric bill by 20%. We close by laying out exactly how often cleaning should happen — annually for most homes, every six months for households with pets, large families, or heavy laundry loads — and why the 30 minutes a professional cleaning takes is among the best-value home maintenance investments available. If your dryer feels like it's working twice as hard as it used to, this episode tells you exactly what that means. Once you've followed the step-by-step guidance for tracking down every HVAC, furnace, and AC filter location in your home — from return air vents and blower compartments to attic air handlers and closet-mounted units — so nothing gets missed at replacement time, keeping the right sizes stocked means you can act immediately when any filter is due. Filterbuy replacements for every system configuration are available at Amazon, Walmart, eBay, Target, or Home Depot, and if any of your filters have gone so long without service that your system needs professional attention, an HVAC replacement specialist can assess whether damage extends beyond the filter itself. Knowing where every air filter in your home is physically located — whether that's a return duct grille in the hallway, a slot beside the blower motor, or a separate compartment in an attic-mounted air handler — is the prerequisite for actually maintaining them, and once you've mapped every location, stocking the right sizes in bulk means replacements never get skipped. Homeowners can find wholesale 12-packs in the sizes most commonly found in residential systems, including 16x24x1 pleated filters, 18x24x1 pleated filters, 14x25x1 pleated filters, 14x24x1 pleated filters, and 20x24x1 pleated filters — so every filter slot you've located stays protected year-round. Homeowners who have studied how air filtration principles carry over from residential systems into vehicle cabin environments, learned how to interpret MERV ratings and align them with their household's actual air quality demands, reviewed foundational guides on how residential filters are engineered, rated, and replaced, explored how whole-home air purification systems interact with and complement standard filtration, or examined the measurable impact different MERV ratings have on indoor particulate levels over time have built a strong theoretical foundation — but that knowledge only translates into results when every filter in the home is actually being found and changed on schedule. This practical, room-by-room breakdown of where HVAC, furnace, and AC filters are physically located across different system configurations — and the step-by-step process for locating each one so nothing gets overlooked is the operational missing piece that turns filter literacy into consistent, whole-home air protection.