1300 000 000

Mudgeeraba, QLD

Coastline Restoration Co. in Mudgeeraba

Hinterland acreage, leafy established streets and bushfire-interface gutters — the inland half of the corridor, where it's mould and leaf litter, not salt.

Coastal home — descriptive placeholder until real photos are supplied

Mudgeeraba sits back off the coast in the Gold Coast hinterland, and the work changes with it. There's no salt to speak of here — instead it's the things that come with trees and humidity: leaf-choked gutters, mould on shaded walls, and acreage homes with long roof runs and tank-fed systems that need a clean catchment.

Mudgeeraba is the inland half of what we do — Gold Coast hinterland, set back from the beaches among the trees and the acreage blocks. The salt that drives the coastal work isn’t a factor here. The drivers are leaf litter, humidity-fed mould, and the gutters on the bush-interface blocks.

The gutter work matters more here than almost anywhere on the coast. Acreage homes backing onto bush collect a heavy leaf load, and a packed gutter is an ember trap in bushfire season. We treat that as a safety job: clear the gutters, check the valleys and downpipes, and give you an honest read on whether the tree cover means one clean a year or two.

A lot of homes out here are tank-fed, which makes the roof a catchment, not just a roof. Leaf litter, lichen and bird mess all end up in the tank if the roof isn’t kept clean. A roof-and-gutter clean before the wet season — plus a look at the first-flush diverter and the gutter mesh — keeps the water you’re drinking clean.

The rest is mould. Humidity and shade mean the south-facing walls and roof pitches grow green, and a soft-wash clears it. On the worst sections we can apply a treatment that slows the regrowth. No salt, no rope access, no towers — just the steady hinterland work of keeping leaf, mould and lichen off the house.

What we see most

Common Mudgeeraba jobs

  • Leaf-choked gutters on acreage homes near the tree line — a genuine bushfire-season concern, not just a tidiness one
  • Mould and lichen on shaded south-side render and roofs where humidity sits
  • Tannin and leaf staining on long driveways under established gums and figs
  • Tank-catchment roofs needing a clean before the wet season fills the tanks
  • Tired Colorbond and tile on older hinterland homes set among the trees

Nearby coverage

We also work

  • Burleigh Heads
  • Currumbin
  • Robina
  • Bonogin

FAQ

Mudgeeraba questions

We're on acreage backing onto bush — how often should the gutters be cleared?

On a bush-interface block, at least once a year, and ideally again before the bushfire season if you're under heavy tree cover. Leaf-packed gutters are an ember trap, so we treat this as a safety job. We clear the gutters, check the valleys and downpipes, and tell you honestly whether the tree load means you need two visits a year instead of one.

Our tank water tastes off — could the roof be the cause?

It can be. A tank-fed roof that's collecting leaf litter, lichen and bird mess will carry that into the tank. A roof and gutter clean, plus checking the first-flush diverter, is the usual fix. We'll clean the catchment and flag anything — like a perished diverter or a gap in the gutter mesh — that's letting debris through.

There's no salt out here — so why is the south side of the house always green?

Humidity and shade. The hinterland holds moisture, and any wall or roof pitch that doesn't get sun grows mould and lichen. A soft-wash clears it, and on the worst-affected sections we can apply a treatment that slows the regrowth so you're not back to green in six months.

Booking in Mudgeeraba?

Call 1300 000 000 or send a quote request. We'll come back with a written number for your block, not a starting price.