
Side-by-side comparison of the two main commercial carpet cleaning methods. The right method depends on traffic patterns, occupancy, drying constraints, and cleaning cycle.
Quick answer
Hot-water extraction (sometimes called steam cleaning) is the deep clean that removes embedded soil. Use it annually or every 18 months. Dry time: 4 to 12 hours. Encapsulation (low-moisture cleaning) is the maintenance refresh that keeps carpets looking good between deep cleans. Use it quarterly. Dry time: 1 to 2 hours. Most commercial offices benefit from a combined cycle: encapsulation quarterly + extraction annually.
Hot-water extraction explained
Hot water mixed with cleaning detergent is injected into the carpet at high pressure, agitating embedded soil, then immediately vacuumed back out along with the soil. The carpet ends up genuinely clean down to the backing. The trade-off is dry time: depending on humidity, airflow, and carpet density, the carpet stays damp for 4 to 12 hours after the extraction.
Encapsulation explained
A polymer cleaning solution is applied to the carpet and brushed in with a counter-rotating cylindrical machine. The polymer crystallizes around soil particles, drying to a brittle crystal that subsequent vacuuming removes. Total dry time is 1 to 2 hours. The carpet is back in service the same day.
Side-by-side comparison
| Dimension | Hot-Water Extraction | Encapsulation |
|---|---|---|
| Cleaning depth | Deep (down to backing) | Surface refresh |
| Dry time | 4 to 12 hours | 1 to 2 hours |
| Best for | Annual deep clean | Quarterly maintenance between deep cleans |
| Typical CT/RI cost | $0.20 to $0.40 per sq ft | $0.15 to $0.30 per sq ft |
| Best occupancy fit | Off-hours, weekends, scheduled closures | Occupied spaces with same-day reopening |
| Soil removal capacity | High (embedded soil) | Moderate (surface and traffic-lane soil) |
| Risk of over-wetting | Some risk if not properly extracted | None |
| Carpet warranty compatibility | Required by most carpet manufacturers annually | Supplements but does not replace extraction |
When to use hot-water extraction
- Annual deep clean (most carpet manufacturers require this for warranty)
- Heavily soiled carpets that have not been deep-cleaned in 12+ months
- Post-incident cleanup (spills, food, pet, biological)
- Pre-move-in or pre-listing for commercial real estate
- Any time the carpet looks visibly dingy beyond surface refresh
When to use encapsulation
- Quarterly maintenance between annual extractions
- High-traffic lanes that need refreshing without taking the space out of service
- Multi-tenant offices where coordinating downtime is impractical
- Healthcare and 24/7 facilities where shutdowns are not feasible
- Same-day deep clean before a tour or visit
The combined cycle most commercial offices use
One hot-water extraction annually (typically scheduled around a long weekend or holiday), plus encapsulation cleaning every 3 months in between. This pattern keeps carpets looking professional year-round, satisfies most carpet warranty requirements, and minimizes operational disruption.
Cost comparison over 12 months
For a 5,000 sq ft office: annual extraction ($1,000-$2,000) plus three encapsulation cleanings ($750-$1,500 each, totaling $2,250-$4,500) = $3,250-$6,500 per year. Pure annual extraction alone runs $1,000-$2,000 but the carpet looks worn between cleanings. The combined cycle costs more but extends carpet life by 2-4 years.
Helpful resources
- Commercial Carpet Cleaning Services
- Cost Calculator
- Pricing Cheat Sheet
- Commercial Cleaning Glossary
Need a carpet cleaning recommendation for your facility? Call (860) 373-2525 or request a free walkthrough.