House Cleaning near you in Ireland
Known locally as domestic cleaning. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in Ireland.
Typical price: €55–€450
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What house cleaning costs in Ireland
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly clean (3 hours) Recurring maintenance visit | €55 | €75 | €105 |
| One-off standard clean 3-bed house, single visit | €90 | €130 | €190 |
| Deep clean 3-bed house, full build-up removal | €200 | €300 | €450 |
Popular cities for house cleaning
- House Cleaning in Dublin
- House Cleaning in South Dublin
- House Cleaning in Cork
- House Cleaning in Limerick
- House Cleaning in Galway
- House Cleaning in Tallaght
- House Cleaning in Waterford
- House Cleaning in Drogheda
- House Cleaning in Dundalk
- House Cleaning in Swords
- House Cleaning in Navan
- House Cleaning in Bray
- House Cleaning in Dún Laoghaire
Browse Ireland by region
How to hire a house cleaning pro in Ireland
- Decide agency vs self-employed cleaner — agencies cost more per hour but carry insurance and handle replacements
- Ask for public liability insurance confirmation in writing
- Take references seriously — the Irish market is heavily word-of-mouth
- Agree a written task list and hours; pay at or above the national minimum wage
- If you directly employ a regular cleaner, you may need to register as an employer with Revenue and operate PAYE/PRSI — agencies keep this on their side
- Confirm who supplies products; many Irish domestic cleaners use the household's own
Frequently asked questions
Can I ask for eco-friendly or fragrance-free products?
Yes, and most providers accommodate it — either with their own green product line (sometimes a small surcharge) or by using products you supply. Flag allergies, babies, and pets when booking. Note that some jobs, like heavy limescale or mould, genuinely need stronger chemistry to work.
How do I prepare my home before the cleaner arrives?
Tidy clutter off floors and surfaces — cleaners charge for time, and picking up toys or dishes eats paid minutes. Secure valuables and important documents, note anything fragile, and leave instructions for alarm codes or pets. You don't need to pre-clean; that's what you're paying for.
Should I tip my house cleaner?
Norms vary by country. In North America, tipping 10-20% on one-off or deep cleans is common, and many people give a holiday bonus to a regular cleaner rather than tipping each visit. In the UK, Australia, and most of Asia, tipping is appreciated but not expected. Agency cleaners often can't accept cash tips — a good review carries real weight instead.
What is usually excluded from a standard clean?
Commonly excluded: exterior windows, inside the oven and fridge, laundry and ironing, dishes, wet-wiping walls, mould remediation, cleaning up after pests, biohazards, and anything requiring a ladder. These are add-ons or specialist jobs. Always get the inclusion list in writing so the visit matches your expectations.
Why do quotes for the same home vary so much?
Three reasons: insurance and legitimate employment cost real money (the cheapest quotes usually skip both), companies price in supervision and cover for sick days, and scope assumptions differ — one quote's 'clean' may exclude half of what another includes. Compare on a written task list, insurance status and the same visit frequency, not on the headline number.
What happens if something gets damaged during a clean?
Reputable providers carry public/general liability insurance that covers accidental damage — ask for proof before the first visit, not after an incident. Report damage within 24 hours with photos. With uninsured independents you're relying on goodwill, which is the real cost hidden inside a cheap hourly rate.
What do cleaners charge in Ireland?
Typically €18-€35 per hour. Dublin sits at the top of the range, with €25-€35/hour common for insured agency cleans; independents outside the capital often charge €18-€22. A weekly 3-hour visit generally runs €55-€105.
Do I have tax obligations if I hire a cleaner directly?
Potentially yes. A regular cleaner working under your direction, on your schedule, with your equipment can be classed as your employee — meaning employer registration with Revenue, PAYE/PRSI and minimum-wage compliance. Agencies and genuinely self-employed cleaners (own clients, own kit, invoices) keep you outside those obligations.
Related services
Planning a budget?
See the full house cleaning cost guide or browse all Ireland price guides.
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