Dryer vents are the kind of thing you don't think about until the laundry takes three cycles to dry or the room smells faintly of smoke. Set a recurring reminder and skip the guessing about when you last did it.
Done in seconds. No sign-up required.
The risk doesn't feel real until it suddenly does.
home dryer fires reported in the U.S. every year, with 7 deaths and 344 injuries annually
U.S. Fire Administration / NFPA
of those dryer fires are directly caused by failure to clean lint from the vent system
NFPA clothes dryer and washer fires report
in property damage annually from clothes dryer fires across the U.S.
U.S. Fire Administration
The interval is the problem. Once a year is just long enough to fall completely out of memory. You might think about it after a load that took two cycles to dry, then forget the next morning. By the time you remember again, six months have passed and you're not sure if it's been one year or two.
Most dryers don't help. Older models have no warning indicator at all. The few newer Whirlpool and Samsung machines with a Check Vent sensor only fire after significant buildup has already accumulated. The lint trap is a distraction: emptying it after every load catches about 60% of the lint, while the rest steadily builds up in the duct behind the dryer where you can't see it.
A recurring email reminder is the smallest possible system that solves this. Pick a date, get notified before you're due, mark it done when the vent is clean. That's it.
The best date to set is roughly two weeks before the anniversary of your last cleaning. That gives you time to either book a professional or pick up a brush kit before lint accumulation becomes a problem.
Most people anchor on a season — spring cleaning, or the start of winter when the dryer runs more. Pick the date you'll actually do it.
A clear notification before the date, not a buried calendar alert that fires once and disappears. Includes optional advance warning.
If you don't mark the task complete, more reminders arrive. The annual cleaning doesn't quietly slip another year because you got busy.
Worse than slow drying. Sometimes much worse.
Lint is highly flammable. Heat plus restricted airflow plus packed lint is how dryer fires start, and it's the leading specific cause of dryer fires nationally.
See the full consequences →A restricted vent traps moist air. The dryer runs longer, uses more energy, and wears out faster. Most people accept this as normal long before they investigate the vent.
Warning signs to watch for →Overheating destroys heating elements, thermal fuses, and motor bearings. Routine cleaning costs a fraction of replacing a dryer or repairing one that's been baked from the inside.
Cost comparison →The deeper questions, answered in their own pages.
Once a year is the standard recommendation for most households. Families with heavy laundry use, pets, or long vent runs should clean every six months. Anything past 18 months without a cleaning starts pushing into fire-risk territory.
Annual tasks fall outside daily awareness. You think of it in spring, forget by summer, remember again next winter when clothes take too long to dry. A scheduled email arrives on the date you picked and follows up if you don't mark it done, so it doesn't quietly disappear.
Some newer Whirlpool and Samsung models have a Check Vent indicator light, but most dryers do not. Even models that have one only trigger when the vent is already significantly clogged. By that point, fire risk is already elevated and drying efficiency has dropped.
One missed year is usually recoverable if you clean it as soon as you remember. Two or more missed years means heavy lint accumulation in the vent run, reduced dryer lifespan, higher energy bills, and meaningfully higher fire risk. The U.S. Fire Administration links nearly 14,000 home dryer fires a year to lint buildup.
No. The lint trap catches about 60% of lint. The rest builds up in the vent duct over time, especially at bends and the outside cap. That deeper buildup is what causes overheating and fires, and the lint trap doesn't help with it.
Short vent runs in single-family homes are reasonable DIY jobs with a brush kit and a shop vac. Long runs, second-story laundry rooms, or vents that exit through the roof are usually worth hiring out. Professional cleaning runs $100–$170 on average.
Free, no account, takes 30 seconds. You'll get an email when it's time to clean, and follow-ups until you've actually done it.
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