Rust & Irrigation Stain Removal on the Gulf Coast, AL

Orange rust runs from sprinklers and well water will not pressure off. Here is the treatment that actually removes them.

If you have well water or irrigation on the Gulf Coast, you know the orange. Sprinklers throw mineral-heavy water onto the driveway, the walk, and the bottom few feet of the house, and over time it leaves rust-colored fans and runs that no amount of scrubbing or pressure will budge.

That is because rust is a chemical stain, not a layer of dirt. Blasting it with a pressure washer just etches the concrete around it and leaves the orange behind. It takes a dedicated rust remover that reacts with the stain and lifts it out, applied and rinsed correctly so it does not damage the surrounding surface or plants.

Get a Free Quote

Orange rust runs from your sprinklers? We treat them, not just blast them.

Orange irrigation rust stains on a concrete driveway before treatment
Sprinkler and well-water rust is a chemical stain, which is why pressure alone never removes it.

Where Rust Stains Come From Here

Each one needs the right product and dwell time. We identify the source first, because a fertilizer stain and an irrigation stain do not always come off the same way.

Concrete driveway after rust stain treatment on the Gulf Coast
The same concrete after a proper rust treatment, the orange lifted out instead of etched around.

Why It Has to Be Done Carefully

Rust removers are effective but reactive, so they have to be controlled. Done wrong they can lighten the surrounding concrete or burn nearby plants. We protect landscaping, apply the treatment evenly, and neutralize and rinse so you get an even result with no halo around where the stain was.

Get a Free Quote

Serving Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, Foley, and all of Baldwin County.

Technician applying rust treatment to a stained walkway in Gulf Shores
Even application and a careful rinse are what leave a clean result with no halo.

Stop It From Coming Back

Once the stain is gone, a few small changes keep it gone, like adjusting sprinkler heads off the concrete and siding, or adding a rust inhibitor to an irrigation system on bad well water. We will point out what is causing yours while we are on site.

Clean rust-free driveway and walkway on a Gulf Coast home
A clean, rust-free entry, with a few tips to keep the sprinklers from undoing it.
Get a Free Quote

Get a free rust stain removal quote, (251) 978-5503.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why will not my pressure washer remove the rust?

Rust is a chemical stain that has reacted with the concrete, not a layer of dirt sitting on top. Pressure just etches the surface around it and leaves the orange behind. It takes a dedicated rust remover that lifts the stain out.

Will the treatment hurt my plants or concrete?

Not when it is controlled. Rust removers are reactive, so we protect landscaping, apply evenly, and neutralize and rinse. Done carefully there is no halo on the concrete and no burn on the plants.

Can you remove battery acid or fertilizer stains too?

Yes. Battery acid, fertilizer iron, and irrigation rust are different stains that need different products and dwell times. We identify the source first so we treat it the right way.

How do I keep the rust from coming back?

Adjust sprinkler heads so they are not throwing well water onto concrete and siding, move metal furniture and planters, and on bad well water consider a rust inhibitor on the irrigation system. We will point out the cause while we are on site.

What areas do you serve?

Baldwin Preaux Wash serves Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, Foley, the Eastern Shore, and the rest of Baldwin County, plus Mobile. Call (251) 978-5503 for a free quote.