A clean office isn't just about appearances. It's about employee retention (clean workplaces are easier to recruit into), client trust (a dusty waiting room loses deals), and avoiding the slow accumulation of grime that becomes a major project six months from now. Whether you're hiring a commercial cleaner or managing it in-house, here's the checklist.
Daily tasks
These should happen every working day, whether by your team or your cleaning service:
- Restrooms — toilets, sinks, mirrors, floors, restock paper/soap
- Kitchen / break room — counters, sink, microwave, fridge exterior, floors, dishwasher loaded if used
- Trash collection (especially in restrooms and kitchens — odor builds fast)
- Reception / lobby — high-touch surfaces, glass doors
- Floors in high-traffic areas — vacuum (carpet) or sweep (hard surface)
- High-touch surfaces sanitized — door handles, elevator buttons, light switches, shared keyboards
- Conference rooms reset — chairs returned, table wiped, AV equipment surfaces dusted
Weekly tasks
- All workstations — desks, monitors, keyboards (light), surfaces dusted
- All trash bins emptied + relined
- Floors throughout — vacuumed (carpet), mopped (hard surface)
- Glass — partition glass, conference room glass, lobby glass
- Kitchen deep — fridge interior wipe, microwave interior, behind-coffee-machine cleanup
- Restroom deep — grout brushed, fan covers dusted, baseboards wiped
Monthly tasks
- Light fixtures dusted (especially fluorescent covers — they get yellow with dust)
- Air vents and registers dusted
- Inside fridge fully cleaned (shelves removed)
- Behind appliances cleaned (where accessible)
- Baseboards throughout (not just spot-cleaned)
- Doors, doorframes, trim hand-wiped
- Windows interior — full clean (not just spot wipes)
- Carpet edges vacuumed where regular vacuum misses
- Restock supply inventory check
Quarterly / seasonal tasks
- Carpet professional steam cleaning (or rotate quarterly across different areas)
- Hardwood / vinyl floor deep clean and refinish if needed
- HVAC filter replacement
- Window exterior cleaning (Spring + Fall)
- Upholstery cleaning on lobby furniture
- Tile and grout deep cleaning (especially restrooms)
- Office furniture inventory and replacement assessment
By room — what each space needs
Reception & lobby
This is what every visitor sees first. Daily: dust front desk, polish glass doors, vacuum entry rugs, wipe lobby furniture arm rests. Weekly: full floor clean, plant care if applicable, magazine/marketing display refresh. Monthly: deep dust on shelving and decor.
Open-plan workstations
Daily: empty trash, wipe shared surfaces. Weekly: dust desks, monitors, surfaces, keyboards (light wipe — never fully clean someone's keyboard without permission). Monthly: under-desk dusting, cable trays, baseboards.
Private offices
Daily: trash. Weekly: full surface dust + vacuum. Tip: leave a small "do not move" indicator (we use a card) so the cleaner knows to dust around personal items rather than rearranging.
Conference rooms
After every meeting (ideally — your team or cleaner): chairs returned, table wiped, AV remotes back in place. Daily: full surface clean. Weekly: chair fabric vacuumed, glass cleaned both sides, AV equipment dusted (carefully).
Kitchens / break rooms
This is the room that goes downhill fastest if neglected. Daily: counters wiped, sink emptied and scrubbed, microwave interior wiped, floors swept, trash out. Weekly: fridge exterior + handles, dishwasher cycle if used, deep mop. Monthly: fridge interior, oven interior (if applicable), behind appliances.
Restrooms
Daily, no exceptions: full sanitation. Toilets (bowl, seat, base), sinks, mirrors, floors, restock paper/soap, empty trash. Weekly: grout brushed, fan covers dusted, floors fully mopped (not just spot-mopped), baseboards wiped. Monthly: deep grout, mirror frame dusted, ceiling vent cleaned.
How often should an office actually be cleaned?
Depends on size and usage, but typical NEPA office cleaning frequencies:
- 5+ employees, daily client traffic: 5x/week (every weeknight)
- Medical / dental practice: 5x/week minimum, sometimes daily during the day for sanitation
- Small office (1-5 people), no client traffic: 2-3x/week
- Solo professional or part-time office: 1x/week
- Retail or storefront: Daily (after closing)
- Salon / spa: Daily (after closing) for thorough; deep weekly
If you're not sure where you fall, get a walk-through quote — most NEPA commercial cleaners (us included) will visit your facility for free and recommend the right frequency for your space and budget.
In-house vs. professional commercial cleaner
Some Lackawanna County businesses handle cleaning in-house (existing employees, or a hired part-time cleaner). Some hire a commercial cleaning service. The math:
In-house works for:
- Very small offices (1-3 people) where employees do their own kitchen/desk maintenance
- Businesses where the owner is on-site daily and willing to handle restrooms and floors
- Operations where cleaning is part of an existing job description (some retail / spa)
Professional commercial cleaner is usually the better choice for:
- Any office with 5+ employees
- Any facility with daily client traffic (medical, professional services, retail)
- Businesses that want their team focused on revenue work, not facility maintenance
- Businesses where insurance, bonding, and consistency matter
The cost of professional cleaning is almost always less than the loaded cost of having an employee or owner do it (when you factor in the employee's hourly rate, the time spent, and the fact that they're not doing their actual job during that time).
FAQ
How much does commercial cleaning cost in Scranton, PA?
Highly variable based on facility size and frequency. Small offices (5x/week) typically run a few hundred per week; larger facilities scale from there. Most NEPA commercial cleaners (us included) do a free 20-minute walk-through and provide a flat-rate per-visit quote, so you know exactly what you're paying.
Do commercial cleaners work during business hours or after?
After-hours is standard — your team starts each day in a fresh space, no disruption during work. Some businesses (medical, retail) need during-day touchups; cleaners can split their time accordingly.
Are commercial cleaners HIPAA-aware for medical practices?
Reputable ones, yes. We don't access patient records, charts, or PHI; we focus on surface cleaning while respecting privacy. For specialized sterile-environment cleaning (operating rooms, lab biohazard), you need a medical-cleaning specialist, not general commercial.
Can my office customize what's cleaned and how often?
Yes — every commercial contract should be custom. Tell your cleaner what matters most (e.g. 'restrooms must be perfect every day; employee desks weekly is fine'). A good NEPA commercial cleaner builds the scope around your priorities and your budget.
How do we transition from in-house to a commercial cleaner?
Typically a 2-week ramp: walk-through, scope agreement, key handoff, first deep clean to bring everything to baseline, then ongoing service starts. Most Lackawanna County businesses are fully transitioned within a month.