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House Cleaning Service Cost Calculator — 2026 Per-Visit Pricing

Get a realistic 2026 estimate for professional house cleaning by bedrooms, bathrooms, clean type, and frequency — then compare quotes from local cleaning services.

Home Size

Bathrooms

Cleaning Type

Frequency

Add-Ons

Location

Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing

Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing

Did You Know?

House cleaning services cost $120 to $300 per visit in 2026: a standard clean runs $120 to $240, a deep clean $200 to $400, and a move-out clean $250 to $450. Recurring weekly or bi-weekly plans cut 10 to 30 percent off the per-visit price.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

How much does a house cleaning service cost per visit in 2026?

Most US homeowners pay $120 to $300 per visit for professional house cleaning in 2026. A standard routine clean of a typical 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom home runs $120 to $240, a first-time or seasonal deep clean runs $200 to $400, and a move-in or move-out clean runs $250 to $450. Price scales with bedrooms and bathrooms, the level of cleaning, and your local labor market, so a small apartment sits near the floor while a large home getting a deep clean lands at the top.

  • Typical all-in range: $120 to $300 per visit
  • Standard clean (3-bed/2-bath): $120 to $240
  • Deep clean: $200 to $400
  • Move-in / move-out clean: $250 to $450
  • Per square foot: $0.10 to $0.20 standard, up to $0.30 deep
Cleaning TypeTypical Per VisitBest For
Standard clean$120 to $240Routine upkeep
Deep clean$200 to $400First visit / seasonal
Move-out clean$250 to $450Empty home turnover
Per hour (per cleaner)$25 to $50Small or odd jobs
Q

How much can I save with recurring weekly or bi-weekly cleaning?

Recurring service is the single biggest lever on price. Cleaning companies discount the per-visit rate to lock in repeat business: weekly plans typically cut 15 to 30 percent, bi-weekly plans 10 to 20 percent, and monthly plans 5 to 10 percent off the one-time rate. A standard clean quoted at $180 one-time often drops to about $130 to $150 on a bi-weekly schedule, because a home cleaned every two weeks accumulates far less grime than one cleaned once a quarter.

  • Weekly: 15 to 30 percent off the one-time rate
  • Bi-weekly: 10 to 20 percent off
  • Monthly: 5 to 10 percent off
  • One-time: no discount, often a deep-clean surcharge on the first visit
  • Example: $180 one-time drops to about $130 to $150 bi-weekly
Q

What is the difference between a standard clean and a deep clean?

A standard clean is routine surface maintenance — dusting, vacuuming, mopping, wiping counters, and cleaning visible bathroom and kitchen surfaces. A deep clean adds the detail work that builds up over time: baseboards, inside the oven and fridge, behind appliances, grout scrubbing, window tracks, and light fixtures. Deep cleaning runs $200 to $400 versus $120 to $240 for standard because it takes roughly 1.5 to 2 times the labor hours. Most companies require a deep clean or first-time clean before starting a recurring plan.

  • Standard: dust, vacuum, mop, wipe counters and visible surfaces
  • Deep: baseboards, inside oven/fridge, grout, window tracks, fixtures
  • Deep clean takes 1.5 to 2x the labor of a standard clean
  • Standard $120 to $240 vs deep $200 to $400 per visit
  • First recurring visit usually billed as a deep clean
Q

How do bedrooms, bathrooms, and add-ons change the price?

Cleaners price from home size, and bathrooms cost more per room than bedrooms because they take longer. Each added bedroom adds about $25 to $35 to a standard clean, and each added bathroom adds $10 to $40. Add-on tasks are billed on top: inside the fridge or oven, interior windows, or laundry each add roughly $25 to $75. A 2-bedroom home with one bathroom can run under $130, while a 5-bedroom, 4-bathroom home with add-ons easily clears $350 even on a standard clean.

  • Each added bedroom: $25 to $35 (more for deep cleans)
  • Each added bathroom: $10 to $40
  • Inside fridge or oven: $25 to $50 each
  • Interior windows: $30 to $75
  • Laundry / linens: $25 to $50 per load or set
Q

Should I hire an individual cleaner or a cleaning company?

An independent cleaner usually charges $25 to $45 per hour and is the cheapest option, but you carry the risk if they are not insured or do not show up. A cleaning company charges $35 to $60 per cleaner-hour or a flat per-visit rate, and the premium buys insurance, bonding, a backup if someone is sick, and supplies included. For a one-off deep clean or move-out, a company's flat rate and accountability are usually worth it; for ongoing routine cleaning, a trusted individual can save 20 to 30 percent.

  • Independent cleaner: $25 to $45 per hour, cheapest but higher risk
  • Cleaning company: $35 to $60 per cleaner-hour or flat per-visit
  • Companies include insurance, bonding, backup staff, and supplies
  • Individuals can save 20 to 30 percent on routine cleaning
  • For move-outs and deep cleans, a company's flat rate is safer

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Example Calculations

13-bed / 2-bath, standard clean, bi-weekly (Midwest)

Inputs

Bedrooms3 bedrooms
Bathrooms2 bathrooms
Cleaning typeStandard
FrequencyBi-weekly
RegionMidwest

Result

Typical per-visit fee$130 - $175
Monthly (2 visits)$260 - $350
One-time equivalent$160 - $210

A typical 3-bedroom home on a bi-weekly plan earns a 10 to 20 percent discount off the one-time standard rate. Two visits a month keep the home maintained at a predictable monthly cost.

24-bed / 3-bath, deep clean, one-time (West Coast)

Inputs

Bedrooms4 bedrooms
Bathrooms3 bathrooms
Cleaning typeDeep clean
FrequencyOne-time
RegionCalifornia / West Coast

Result

Typical per-visit fee$320 - $450
With inside fridge + oven$370 - $520
Per square foot (~2,400 sq ft)$0.18 - $0.25

A larger home getting a full deep clean in a high-cost market lands near the top of the range. The first clean before any recurring plan is almost always billed as a deep clean.

3Studio / 1-bath, standard clean, weekly (South)

Inputs

BedroomsStudio / 1 bedroom
Bathrooms1 bathroom
Cleaning typeStandard
FrequencyWeekly
RegionSouth

Result

Typical per-visit fee$90 - $130
Monthly (4 visits)$360 - $520
One-time equivalent$120 - $160

A small apartment on a weekly schedule gets the deepest recurring discount (15 to 30 percent) and the lowest absolute price because there is little square footage and one bathroom to clean.

Formulas Used

Per-visit cleaning price build-up

Per-visit price = Base size fee + Bathroom adjustment + Clean-type multiplier + Add-ons - Frequency discount

Cleaners start from a base fee tied to home size, add for extra bathrooms, multiply for the level of clean, stack add-ons, then subtract a recurring-frequency discount. Build the number in that order.

Where:

Base size fee= Driven by bedrooms / square footage; each added bedroom adds about $25 to $35
Bathroom adjustment= Each bathroom beyond the first adds $10 to $40 because they take longer to clean
Clean-type multiplier= Standard = 1.0x, deep clean = 1.5 to 2.0x, move-out = 1.7 to 2.2x of the standard rate
Frequency discount= Weekly cuts 15 to 30 percent, bi-weekly 10 to 20 percent, monthly 5 to 10 percent off the one-time price

Per-square-foot and hourly cross-check

Per-visit price = Area (sq ft) x rate per sq ft, OR Cleaner-hours x hourly rate

Two common cross-checks confirm a per-visit quote. Multiply living area by a per-square-foot rate, or estimate the labor hours and multiply by the per-cleaner hourly rate.

Where:

Rate per sq ft= $0.10 to $0.20 for standard cleaning, up to $0.25 to $0.30 for deep cleaning
Cleaner-hours= A 2,000 sq ft standard clean takes roughly 3 to 4 cleaner-hours; deep cleans take 1.5 to 2x longer
Hourly rate= $25 to $50 per cleaner-hour; a 2-person crew bills $75 to $100 per hour
Area= Cleanable living area in square feet, excluding garage and unfinished space

House Cleaning Service Costs in 2026: What Homeowners Actually Pay

1

What House Cleaning Services Cost in 2026

Professional house cleaning is one of the easiest home services to shop on price, but the quotes you collect can look confusingly far apart. In 2026 the typical US homeowner pays $120 to $300 per visit, yet a single home can be quoted anywhere from $90 to $500 depending on the level of clean and how it is priced. The spread is not random — it tracks four things every cleaner is really measuring: how big the home is, how dirty it is, how often they will come back, and what your local labor market charges.

The clearest way to think about price is by cleaning type. A standard routine clean of a typical three-bedroom, two-bathroom home runs $120 to $240. A deep clean — the detailed, top-to-bottom first visit — runs $200 to $400 because it takes roughly one and a half to two times the labor hours. A move-in or move-out clean of an empty home runs $250 to $450, since cleaners can reach everything but are held to a turnover-ready standard. Use the calculator above to land on a figure for your home, then read on to understand what each input is actually pricing.

It also helps to know how cleaners arrive at the number. Some price per visit from a size-based table, some price per square foot at $0.10 to $0.20 for standard work and up to $0.30 for deep cleans, and some bill hourly at $25 to $50 per cleaner-hour. These methods usually land within a few dollars of each other for the same home, so if one quote is wildly higher, ask which method it uses and whether it assumes a deep clean. The first visit on a new account is almost always billed as a deep clean regardless of the method.

House cleaning pricing by clean type, US, 2026.
Cleaning TypeTypical Per VisitPer Square FootBest For
Standard clean$120 to $240$0.10 to $0.20Routine upkeep
Deep clean$200 to $400$0.20 to $0.30First visit / seasonal
Move-in / move-out$250 to $450$0.20 to $0.35Empty home turnover
Hourly (per cleaner)$25 to $50/hrn/aSmall or odd jobs

Almost every company bills the first visit on a new account as a deep clean, then drops to the standard rate once the home is maintained. Budget for that higher first invoice even if you only want routine service afterward.

2

Six Factors That Move Your Cleaning Bill

Two homes on the same street can get quotes that differ by a hundred dollars, and the variance is almost always explainable. Cleaners price from a base size fee and then adjust for the workload your specific home creates. The more rooms, bathrooms, clutter, and detail you bring, the more cleaner-hours they have to staff against your job — and labor is the overwhelming majority of what you are paying for.

Read every quote against the list below. If a company cannot tell you how your bathroom count or your requested add-ons map to their price, the quote is a guess that will be revised on the day they actually see the home.

Bathrooms and kitchens drive far more of the bill than bedrooms. A home with three bathrooms costs noticeably more than one with the same bedroom count and a single bath, so count bathrooms first when you compare quotes.

  • Home size: each added bedroom adds about $25 to $35; square footage is the underlying driver
  • Bathrooms: each bathroom beyond the first adds $10 to $40 because they are the slowest rooms to clean
  • Cleaning type: deep cleans run 1.5 to 2x a standard clean; move-outs run even higher
  • Frequency: weekly cuts 15 to 30 percent, bi-weekly 10 to 20 percent, monthly 5 to 10 percent off the one-time rate
  • Condition and clutter: pet hair, heavy buildup, and clutter add time and can trigger a surcharge
  • Add-ons: inside the fridge or oven, interior windows, and laundry each add $25 to $75
3

How Recurring Frequency Cuts the Per-Visit Price

Frequency is the single biggest lever you control. Cleaning companies discount the per-visit rate to win repeat business, because a recurring client is predictable revenue and a maintained home is faster to clean each time. A weekly plan typically cuts 15 to 30 percent off the one-time rate, a bi-weekly plan 10 to 20 percent, and a monthly plan 5 to 10 percent. The discount compounds with the labor savings: a home cleaned every two weeks never accumulates the grime of one cleaned once a quarter, so each visit is genuinely less work.

That is why the smart move for ongoing service is to pay for one deep clean up front and then settle into a recurring schedule at the discounted standard rate. A standard clean quoted at $180 one-time often drops to $130 to $150 on a bi-weekly plan. The table below shows how a sample $180 one-time clean prices out across frequencies so you can see the trade-off between visit frequency and monthly spend.

The catch is that the lowest per-visit price is not always the lowest monthly cost. Weekly cleaning has the deepest discount per visit but four or five visits a month, so the monthly total is higher than bi-weekly even though each clean is cheaper. Match the frequency to how fast your home actually gets dirty: households with kids, pets, or home offices justify weekly or bi-weekly, while a tidy single-person home is often fine on monthly service with the occasional deep clean.

How frequency discounts a sample $180 standard clean, 2026.
FrequencyDiscountSample Per VisitVisits/MonthMonthly Total
One-time0%$1801$180
Monthly5 to 10%$162 to $1711$162 to $171
Bi-weekly10 to 20%$144 to $1622$288 to $324
Weekly15 to 30%$126 to $1534$504 to $612

The lowest per-visit price and the lowest monthly bill are not the same thing. Weekly has the deepest per-visit discount but the highest monthly total — choose the frequency that matches how fast your home gets dirty, not the biggest headline discount.

4

Standard vs Deep vs Move-Out Cleaning

The words get used loosely, but the three cleaning tiers buy very different things, and overpaying happens when you order a tier you do not need. A standard clean is surface maintenance — dusting, vacuuming, mopping, wiping counters, and cleaning visible bathroom and kitchen surfaces. It is what keeps an already-clean home looking sharp, and it is the cheapest tier at $120 to $240 for a typical home. If a deep clean reveals worn flooring underneath, the carpet installation cost calculator prices replacement when scrubbing is no longer enough.

A deep clean adds the detail work that builds up over months: baseboards, inside the oven and refrigerator, behind and under appliances, grout scrubbing, window tracks, light fixtures, and door frames. It runs $200 to $400 because it takes one and a half to two times the labor of a standard clean. A move-in or move-out clean is a deep clean of an empty home held to a turnover standard for a landlord, buyer, or security deposit — it runs $250 to $450 and often pairs with hauling, which the junk removal service cost calculator estimates separately.

Match the tier to the situation. Order a deep clean for a first visit, a seasonal reset, before a party, or before listing a home. Order a move-out clean only when the home is empty and someone will inspect it. For everything in between, a standard clean on a recurring schedule is the right call, and paying for a deep clean every visit is simply burning money on labor the home does not need.

House cleaning tier comparison, 2026.
TierWhat It IncludesPer VisitRight Situation
StandardDust, vacuum, mop, surfaces$120 to $240Routine maintenance
Deep cleanStandard + detail and buildup$200 to $400First visit / seasonal
Move-outDeep clean of empty home$250 to $450Turnover / deposit

Order a deep clean for the first visit or a seasonal reset, then drop to a standard recurring clean. Paying deep-clean prices on every visit wastes money on labor a maintained home does not need.

5

How to Hire a Cleaning Service and What to Watch For

The cheapest cleaning is the one you do not have to redo or dispute, so vet on fit and transparency, not headline price alone. Collect two or three written quotes that spell out the clean type, what is included, the assumed home size, what triggers a surcharge, and whether the first visit is a deep clean. A quote dramatically below the others usually assumes a standard clean where the others assume a deep clean, or excludes bathrooms and add-ons that reappear as a change order on the day of service.

Confirm insurance, bonding, and supplies before you book. A reputable company carries liability insurance and bonds its cleaners, so a broken vase or a theft claim is covered — protection an uninsured individual cleaner cannot offer. Ask whether they bring their own supplies and equipment, who actually shows up, and what happens if your regular cleaner is sick. For a one-off deep clean or a move-out, a company's flat rate and accountability are usually worth the premium; for ongoing routine work, a trusted, insured individual can save 20 to 30 percent.

Finally, set expectations in writing for recurring service. Agree on the checklist, the arrival window, who has a key or door code, and how to handle a clean that misses the mark — most companies will re-clean a missed area within 24 hours if you flag it promptly. If the deep clean turns up bigger problems like persistent bathroom mold, the mold remediation service cost calculator prices the specialist work that a cleaning crew is not equipped to handle, so you are not paying a cleaner to fight a problem they cannot fix.

Never choose a cleaner on price alone. An uninsured low bid that breaks an item or skips bathrooms costs far more in replacement and re-cleans than the $20 to $40 a visit you saved picking the cheapest quote.

  1. 1

    Define the clean type

    Decide whether you need a standard, deep, or move-out clean before requesting quotes so the numbers are comparable.

  2. 2

    Collect two to three quotes

    Insist each one states the assumed home size, what is included, and whether the first visit is billed as a deep clean.

  3. 3

    Verify insurance and bonding

    Confirm liability insurance and bonded cleaners so breakage or theft is covered — uninsured individuals are cheaper but riskier.

  4. 4

    Confirm supplies and staffing

    Ask who brings supplies, who actually shows up, and what happens if your regular cleaner is out sick.

  5. 5

    Set the recurring agreement

    Lock in the checklist, arrival window, key or code access, and the re-clean policy before the first recurring visit.

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Last Updated: Jun 18, 2026

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.

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