Every janitorial relationship starts with an expectation: the building should be clean. But "clean" means different things to different people, and without a written document that defines exactly what will be done, how often, and to what standard, disagreements are inevitable. A cleaning specification eliminates that ambiguity. It is the foundation of accountability between a facility manager and a cleaning provider.
What should be included in a janitorial cleaning specification?
A thorough cleaning specification lists every room or zone in the facility, identifies the cleaning tasks required in each area, assigns a frequency to each task, and specifies the products to be used. It also includes product requirements such as EPA-registered disinfectants with specific kill claims, required dwell times, and dilution ratios. This level of detail ensures cleaning is not just performed but performed correctly.
A thorough cleaning specification is organized by area and by task. It lists every room or zone in the facility, identifies the cleaning tasks required in each area, and assigns a frequency to each task. For example, a restroom specification might include: clean and disinfect toilets and urinals (daily), wipe mirrors and counters (daily), mop floors with disinfectant (daily), restock paper and soap dispensers (daily), scrub grout lines (monthly), and deep-clean partitions (quarterly).
Beyond task lists, a well-built specification includes product requirements. Certain environments, like medical offices, daycares, and food service areas, require EPA-registered disinfectants with specific kill claims. The specification should name the product categories or specific products approved for use, along with required dwell times and dilution ratios. This level of detail ensures that the cleaning is not just performed but performed correctly.
How often should different areas of a commercial building be cleaned?
Cleaning frequency should match the actual use patterns of each area rather than applying uniform schedules across the entire building. High-touch surfaces in medical or school environments may need disinfection multiple times daily, while low-traffic private offices may only need daily vacuuming. A conference room used eight hours a day has different needs than one booked twice a week, and a restroom serving 200 people requires more frequent service than one used by 10.
Frequency is where most cleaning programs succeed or fail. A task that is listed but performed too infrequently creates a false sense of coverage. High-touch surfaces like door handles, elevator buttons, and light switches may need disinfection multiple times per day in a medical or school environment, but only daily in a low-traffic office. Carpet vacuuming might be daily in lobbies and hallways but three times per week in private offices with low foot traffic.
The specification should reflect the actual use patterns of each area rather than applying uniform frequencies across the entire building. A conference room used eight hours a day has different needs than one booked twice a week. A restroom serving 200 people requires more frequent service than one used by a staff of 10. These distinctions prevent both over-servicing, which wastes budget, and under-servicing, which creates complaints.
What are quality benchmarks in a janitorial cleaning plan?
Quality benchmarks define what "complete" looks like for each cleaning task. For floor care, that means no visible streaks, no residue buildup, and uniform finish. For restroom cleaning, it means no visible soil on fixtures, no odor, and fully stocked dispensers at inspection time. These benchmarks give both the facility manager and cleaning provider a shared framework for evaluating performance and holding each other accountable.
A specification without quality benchmarks is just a to-do list. Quality standards define what "complete" looks like for each task. For floor care, that might mean no visible streaks, no residue buildup, and uniform finish across the entire surface. For restroom cleaning, it might mean no visible soil on fixtures, no odor, and fully stocked dispensers at the time of inspection.
These benchmarks give both the facility manager and the cleaning provider a shared framework for evaluating performance. When a complaint arises, the specification becomes the reference document. Was the task performed? Was it performed at the correct frequency? Did the result meet the defined standard? Without these benchmarks, performance conversations become subjective, and accountability erodes.
How Delta builds your specification
Delta Janitorial Systems begins every client relationship with a detailed walkthrough of the facility. During that walkthrough, we document every area, surface type, and usage pattern. We then build a cleaning specification that maps tasks, frequencies, and product requirements to each zone of your building. This document becomes the operating manual for our team and the accountability framework for our relationship with you.
Our Zero-Deviation Cleaning System is built on the principle that a specification is only valuable if it is followed consistently. Our supervisors conduct regular inspections against the specification, and our reporting keeps you informed about what was done and when. If conditions change, such as new tenants, renovated spaces, or adjusted operating hours, we update the specification to reflect the current reality. With over 50 years of experience and a 100% satisfaction guarantee, we stand behind every line of the cleaning plan we build for you. If you do not have a cleaning specification for your facility, or if your current one has not been reviewed in years, contact us at (972) 261-9800 to schedule a walkthrough. A clear specification is the first step toward a cleaning program you can count on.