NEPA Cleaning Math

DIY Cleaning vs. Hiring a Pro in NEPA: The True Cost

The honest math, including the costs people forget — time, supplies, equipment, and the projects you'll never get to.

"It's cheaper to do it myself" is the most common reason NEPA homeowners give for not hiring a cleaning service. Sometimes it's true. Often it's not — once you actually do the math on time, supplies, equipment, and opportunity cost. Here's the honest comparison.

The naive comparison

The math most people do in their head:

That's missing about 80% of the actual cost. Let's add it back.

The honest DIY cost

Your time

Cleaning a 3-bedroom NEPA home properly takes most people 4-6 hours per week (the equivalent of bi-weekly professional cleaning). Some weeks more, some less. Let's call it 5 hours/week average = 20 hours/month.

What's your time worth? This is the question. If you're a salaried professional in Scranton or Clarks Summit, the math is something like:

So the "free" DIY actually costs you $600/month in time you could spend earning, working on your business, with your family, or simply resting.

If you're paid hourly, the math is more direct: every hour spent cleaning is an hour you can't bill or work other jobs.

Supplies

A reasonable cleaning supply budget for a NEPA household:

Plus equipment depreciation:

Direct DIY supply cost: ~$60/month

The "stuff you'll never get to" cost

Here's the cost most people forget. When you DIY, certain projects just never happen because they're tedious or hard to find time for:

The cost of not doing these isn't dollars — it's accumulated grime, eventual deep-clean catch-up costs, and a home that subtly never feels truly clean. A good professional service handles these on rotation as part of recurring + annual deep cleans.

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The honest professional cost

For a 3-bedroom NEPA home on bi-weekly cleaning:

Total monthly cost: $400

Side-by-side

For the same 3 BR home, bi-weekly equivalent cleanliness:

Cost DIY Hire Pro
Direct cash $60 $400
Your time (20 hrs × $30/hr) $600 $0
Annual deep clean catch-up (amortized) $30 included
True monthly cost $690 $400

Hiring a pro is actually $290/month CHEAPER when you include time as a cost.

When DIY genuinely makes more sense

The math flips in a few situations:

When hiring is clearly the better deal

FAQ

Isn't it weird to value my own time at $30/hour when I'm not earning while I clean?

Opportunity cost is real even if you're not literally working. The hour you spend cleaning is an hour you can't spend with family, learning a new skill, exercising, sleeping better, or just relaxing. Time is your scarcest resource — assigning it a value forces honest comparison.

What if I do a hybrid — recurring DIY + annual deep clean from a pro?

This works well for many NEPA homeowners. Roughly $400 once a year for a deep clean, then maintain yourself between visits. Math is favorable if you enjoy daily maintenance but dread the inside-fridge / behind-appliance work.

Are there cheaper alternatives to hiring a full service?

Some people hire individual cleaners (independent contractors, often via Nextdoor or Facebook). Cheaper per hour but they typically don't carry insurance, bonding, or workers' comp — meaning you're financially exposed if something goes wrong. Saving $50/month isn't worth the $5,000+ liability of an injured cleaner.

How do I know if my cleaning service is actually saving me money?

Two simple metrics: (1) Are you spending less time cleaning than before? (2) Is your home consistently cleaner than it would be if you were doing it yourself? If both yes, you're winning regardless of what the dollar comparison says.

Can I trial a cleaning service to see if I like it?

Yes — most NEPA cleaners (us included) don't require contracts. Book a one-time clean, see the result, decide whether to move to recurring. No commitment, no auto-billing.


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