What's Included in Commercial Cleaning?
A straight answer to what commercial cleaning actually covers, what's usually an add-on, and how to read a cleaning scope of work without getting surprised.
You’d think this would be a simple question. You’re paying a company to clean your building, so what do you get?
If you’ve compared two commercial cleaning proposals side by side, you already know. One company’s standard service is another company’s add-on. One quote says “complete cleaning” and means restrooms and trash. Another says the same thing and includes floor care, window sills, and breakroom sanitation. The words are identical. The service isn’t.
Here’s what’s actually standard, what costs extra, and how to tell the difference before you sign anything.
The baseline: what most commercial cleaning covers
Almost every commercial cleaning company in Portland includes these tasks in a standard recurring contract. If yours doesn’t, that’s worth a conversation.
Trash and recycling. Emptying bins, replacing liners, hauling bags to the dumpster or service area. Portland businesses usually have compost bins too. Not every cleaning company handles the three-stream sort, so ask about that specifically.
Restrooms. Toilets, urinals, sinks, mirrors, counters, restocking paper and soap, floors mopped. This is where cutting corners shows up first and where complaints start. If only one part of your building gets cleaned properly, make it the restrooms.
Vacuuming. All carpeted areas including under desks and along baseboards. That’s how it should work, anyway. A lot of companies vacuum the middle of the room and skip the edges. If your contract just says “vacuuming” without more detail, clarify.
Hard floors. Dust mopping and damp mopping. This is not the same as stripping and waxing, which is a separate, more expensive service. Daily mopping keeps floors clean. Periodic restoration keeps them looking new. Two different jobs, two different price tags.
Surface wiping. Desks, counters, tables, door handles, light switches. This became standard after 2020 and most companies include it now without being asked.
Kitchen and breakroom. Counters, sink, trash. Some companies wipe appliance exteriors. Almost nobody cleans inside microwaves or refrigerators on a regular visit. If you want that done, say so upfront because it won’t be assumed.
Dusting. Shelves, window sills, baseboards, vents. Anything you can reach without a ladder. High dusting (light fixtures, ceiling vents, top of cabinets) is usually periodic or priced separately.
That’s the core. If a proposal doesn’t spell these out, it’s not that they’re automatically included. It’s that you don’t actually know what you’re paying for.
What costs extra
These need different equipment, more time, or specialized training. Expect them quoted separately.
Carpet cleaning. Steam cleaning, bonnet cleaning, or encapsulation. Most offices do this quarterly or twice a year. This isn’t part of regular vacuuming and shouldn’t be treated like it is.
Floor stripping, waxing, and refinishing. The deep restoration work for VCT, LVT, concrete, and similar surfaces. Usually two to four times a year depending on foot traffic. This is project work, not maintenance.
Window cleaning. Interior glass might show up quarterly in some contracts. Exterior windows are almost always separate, and anything above ground level gets expensive fast.
Pressure washing. Sidewalks, building exteriors, parking structures, loading docks. In Portland you need this more than you’d expect. Moss and algae colonize everything from October through May.
Post-construction cleanup. Drywall dust, adhesive residue, paint overspray, construction debris. This is specialized. Your regular cleaning crew isn’t equipped for it and shouldn’t be asked to handle it.
Biohazard or medical-grade disinfection. Bloodborne pathogen cleanup, mold remediation, anything beyond standard sanitation.
High dusting and ceiling work. Warehouse rafters, high-bay fixtures, drop ceiling tiles. If it needs a ladder or a lift, it’s a different scope with different insurance requirements.
Specialty restocking. Your cleaning company handles paper towels, toilet paper, and hand soap. But specific soap brands, air fresheners, hand lotion, feminine products? That’s either on you or it’s an add-on.
Building type changes everything
A 5,000-square-foot office and a 5,000-square-foot medical clinic are not the same job even though the square footage matches.
Offices are the most straightforward. The baseline scope above covers most of it. Throw in quarterly carpet cleaning and you’re good. The real variable is headcount and how hard people go on the breakroom.
Medical and dental offices need exam room disinfection protocols, biohazard waste handling, OSHA compliance documentation, instrument staging area cleaning. This is not office cleaning with extra Clorox wipes. It requires specific training and paper trails. If someone quotes you the same rate for a dental office and a regular office, they haven’t thought it through.
Retail means storefront glass, fitting rooms, high-traffic floor care, and display dusting. The timing is different too. Retail usually needs day porter coverage during business hours rather than after-hours crews.
Warehouses need ride-on floor scrubbers, dock cleanup, high dusting in racking areas, and restrooms built for heavier use. The equipment and schedule look nothing like office work.
Multi-tenant buildings split between common areas (lobbies, elevators, stairwells, hallways) and individual tenant suites, usually on different schedules. The property manager has to know who handles what. We have a full guide to common area cleaning if that’s your situation.
Portland-specific considerations
The rain. October through May, everyone walking through your front door is tracking water and mud across your floors. If your cleaning scope doesn’t account for mat rotation, floor protection, and higher mopping frequency in wet months, your floors will look terrible by spring. We see businesses every June scrambling for floor restoration because nobody adjusted the schedule over winter. That’s an expensive lesson to learn once.
“Green cleaning.” Most Portland businesses want eco-friendly products, and most cleaning companies here say they offer them. The question is what “green” means to them. Green Seal certified? EPA Safer Choice listed? Or did they just buy something with a leaf on the label? It’s worth asking the specific question.
Old buildings. Portland has 1920s brick-and-timber warehouses and brand-new LEED-certified towers and everything in between. Older buildings have unusual floor types, worse ventilation, and more dust. A company that mostly cleans suburban office parks may have no idea what your 1960s downtown building needs.
How to read a scope of work
When a cleaning company sends you a proposal, look for four things:
An itemized task list. Every task written out, not “general cleaning.” If they can’t name the tasks, they haven’t thought about your building.
Frequency for each task. Nightly, weekly, monthly, quarterly. “As needed” is not a frequency. It’s a way to avoid committing to anything.
A clear line between what’s included and what’s an add-on. These should be separated, not buried together.
The assumptions behind the quote. How many restrooms? What square footage? How many people in the building? If these numbers are wrong, the scope will drift within a few months.
If the proposal just says “commercial cleaning services, $X/month” with no detail, expect a disagreement within 90 days about what was supposed to happen. We’ve watched it play out the same way dozens of times.
Our pricing guide breaks down what Portland businesses actually pay by facility type and size, if you want to sanity-check a quote.
How we handle this at RKA
After a walkthrough we send an itemized proposal. Every task listed, every frequency stated, recurring work separated from periodic add-ons. You can read exactly what you’re getting before you agree to anything.
We work with offices, medical and dental practices, retail, warehouses, multi-tenant buildings, and post-construction sites across the Portland metro, including Portland, Beaverton, Hillsboro, Lake Oswego, Tigard, Gresham, Tualatin, Wilsonville, Milwaukie, Happy Valley, West Linn, Oregon City, Troutdale, and Vancouver, WA.
Request a quote or call (971) 600-0752.
Frequently asked questions
What is included in basic commercial cleaning? The standard package at most companies covers trash, restrooms, vacuuming, mopping hard floors, wiping surfaces, breakroom cleanup, and dusting you can reach without a ladder. Carpet cleaning, floor refinishing, and window washing are almost always separate.
How often should a commercial space be cleaned? Depends on the space. Offices usually need three to five visits per week. Medical is almost always nightly. Retail tends to split between a day porter and an after-hours crew. Warehouses vary wildly: some need weekly, some biweekly, and most need periodic deep cleans on top of that.
What’s the difference between janitorial service and commercial cleaning? Janitorial is the recurring stuff: nightly vacuuming, restroom service, trash, the routine that keeps a space functional. Commercial cleaning is the broader category that includes both that routine work and the periodic project stuff like carpet extraction, floor refinishing, and deep cleans.
Should I expect my cleaning company to provide supplies? Most bring their own equipment and cleaning products. Restroom supplies (paper, soap) vary by contract. Some companies include them, some don’t. Worth asking before you sign. We go into more detail in our supply inclusion guide.
How do I know if I’m being overcharged? Get two quotes with the same scope. If one is way cheaper, find the line items they cut. Price differences usually come down to scope differences, not generosity. Our Portland rates guide has benchmarks by building type if you want a reference point.
Written by
The RKA Cleaning Team
We're a locally owned team, keeping Portland workspaces clean Since 2020. Through our hands-on experience cleaning everything from small offices to large complexes, we share practical insights to help local businesses create spaces where people thrive.
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