Kansas City, KS · 2026 cost guide

How much does gutter cleaning cost in Kansas City?

In Kansas City, gutter cleaning costs about $110$320 in 2026 for a single-story home with about 200 linear feet of gutter — roughly $0.63–$1.8 per linear foot. That’s in line with the Kansas average.

Estimate your Kansas City project with the Gutter Calculator

Kansas City cost breakdown

Kansas City typical range$110$320
Kansas City per linear foot$0.63–$1.8
Kansas state average$110$310
Versus Kansas averagein line with average

What’s different about Kansas City

Kansas City's Kansas side shares a larger metro labor market, with severe-storm hail exposure favoring wind- and impact-resistant materials.

  • Severe-storm exposure favors impact-resistant materials.

How the cost is built

Gutter-cleaning cost depends on home height, roof pitch, total gutter length, and how much debris has built up. Two-story and three-story homes cost more for the added ladder work and safety setup, and add-ons like downspout flushing or minor repairs raise the price.

Frequently asked questions

How much does gutter cleaning cost in Kansas City?

In Kansas City, gutter cleaning costs about $110 to $320 in 2026 for a single-story home with about 200 linear feet of gutter — roughly 0.63–1.8 per linear foot. That's in line with the Kansas average, reflecting local labor and permit costs.

What affects the cost of gutter cleaning in Kansas City?

Kansas City's Kansas side shares a larger metro labor market, with severe-storm hail exposure favoring wind- and impact-resistant materials. Severe-storm exposure favors impact-resistant materials.

How can I get an accurate gutter cleaning estimate in Kansas City?

Use the free Gutter Calculator to plug in your real measurements, then collect two or three local Kansas City quotes to compare. Prices vary by neighborhood, access, and project complexity.

Gutter cleaning cost in other Kansas metros

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Related calculators

The Kansas City figure scales the Kansas cost range by a local metro index, then adjusts for the city’s labor market and climate. A 2026 planning estimate, not a quote — get local bids. See our methodology.