Janitorial cleaning services

Janitorial cleaning that keeps daily upkeep from slipping.

Restrooms, trash, supplies, shared spaces, and high-touch areas shape how a facility feels every day. Demo Clean builds janitorial plans around the routine work that keeps a building ready between deeper cleaning cycles.

Schedule a Walkthrough

Who this is for

Buildings where daily details cannot keep getting pushed off.

Janitorial cleaning is for facilities that need steady, recurring support. It covers the areas that get used all day and makes sure the basics do not become customer complaints.

01 Busy offices

Restrooms, trash, breakrooms, touchpoints, shared work areas, and employee-facing spaces.

02 Multi-tenant buildings

Common areas, lobby touchpoints, shared restrooms, corridors, entry points, and property-manager priorities.

03 Professional spaces

Reception areas, appointment spaces, staff areas, restroom upkeep, and supply-sensitive areas.

04 High-traffic facilities

Buildings where restrooms, trash, floors, and shared spaces need frequent attention to stay ready.

The common problem

Janitorial misses usually show up in the same places.

When restrooms slip, trash piles up, supplies run out, or breakrooms get ignored, people notice quickly. The work may seem routine, but it still needs clear ownership and a consistent standard.

01 Restrooms are the first place complaints show up.
02 Trash and supplies get missed when the routine is vague.
03 Shared spaces slip when no one owns the daily details.
Janitorial team reviewing restroom supply and task standards in a commercial building
Routine with standards Janitorial service works best when supply checks, restroom care, and shared spaces follow a clear rhythm.

What janitorial cleaning includes

The recurring work that keeps the building ready day after day.

Restroom service

Fixtures, counters, partitions, dispensers, trash, touchpoints, odors, and visible restroom standards.

Trash and liners

Routine trash removal, liner changes, recycling areas, waste points, and back-of-house trash needs.

Supply checks

Paper products, soap, restroom stock, supply storage, reporting expectations, and restocking routines.

Breakrooms

Tables, counters, sinks, touchpoints, trash, floors, shared appliances, and employee-use areas.

Touchpoints

Door handles, counters, switches, railings, shared equipment areas, and other frequently touched surfaces.

Shared spaces

Lobbies, corridors, waiting areas, conference-adjacent spaces, copy areas, and common traffic zones.

How we build the scope

The janitorial routine should be clear before the work starts.

Good janitorial service is not just a list of chores. It is a rhythm for the spaces people use most, with clear expectations for timing, supplies, priorities, and follow-up.

01 Map daily-use areas

Identify restrooms, trash points, shared spaces, breakrooms, and supply-sensitive areas.

02 Set restroom and supply standards

Define what needs to be checked, restocked, reported, and corrected during each service window.

03 Build the communication loop

Clarify how misses, supply issues, access needs, and customer requests are handled.

Janitorial frequency

The right rhythm depends on how the building gets used.

Daily For high-use facilities

Best for restrooms, breakrooms, trash, and shared spaces that need attention every business day.

Several times per week For steady traffic

A strong fit when restrooms and shared spaces need regular service but not a full daily schedule.

Day porter support For visible daytime upkeep

Useful when restrooms, lobbies, trash, or common areas need attention while the building is active.

Custom For mixed facility needs

Combines core janitorial tasks with extra supply checks, restroom focus, or high-traffic area support.

Why Demo Clean

Janitorial cleaning should feel managed, not reactive.

Routine Clear recurring task expectations
Supplies Restroom and supply checks defined up front
Follow-up Simple communication for issues and requests
Quality Standards built around the spaces people notice daily

Janitorial cleaning FAQ

Questions before we build the janitorial routine

What is included in janitorial cleaning?

Janitorial cleaning usually includes recurring restroom care, trash removal, supply checks, shared-area upkeep, touchpoint attention, breakroom cleaning, and routine visible-detail cleaning.

How often do we need janitorial service?

Frequency depends on building traffic, restroom usage, employee count, customer visibility, and how quickly shared spaces need attention between visits.

Can janitorial cleaning happen during business hours?

Some work can happen during business hours, while other work is better after hours. The schedule depends on access, traffic, noise tolerance, and the spaces being serviced.

Do janitorial services include restroom supplies?

Restroom supply checks can be included in the scope. Supply purchasing, storage, restocking, and reporting expectations should be defined before service begins.

Schedule a walkthrough

Let’s build the janitorial routine around your building.

Show us the restrooms, shared spaces, supply points, and daily-use areas that matter most. We will use the walkthrough to build a janitorial scope that keeps the basics from slipping.

Review restrooms, trash points, and shared spaces. Match janitorial frequency to building traffic. Define supply checks and follow-up expectations.