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House Cleaning in Singapore

Compare local part-time cleaner / home cleaning pros in Singapore and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.

Typical price: SGD 90–SGD 580

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House Cleaning prices in Singapore

Researched estimates for Singapore (SGD), adjusted for city size from national ranges. Updated 2026.
Job size Low Typical High
Weekly 4-hour session Recurring part-time clean, HDB flat SGD 90 SGD 110 SGD 160
One-off general clean HDB 4-room or small condo, single session SGD 170 SGD 250 SGD 370
Deep clean Whole-home spring clean, team of 2-3 cleaners SGD 290 SGD 400 SGD 580

How to hire a house cleaning pro in Singapore

  1. Use an NEA-licensed cleaning business — Singapore requires cleaning companies to hold a licence under the Environmental Public Health Act
  2. Never engage another household's migrant domestic worker (MDW) for part-time cleaning — it breaches MOM work-pass rules and both sides can be penalised
  3. Compare platform rates (e.g., Helpling) against direct companies; expect a 3-4 hour minimum per session
  4. Confirm exclusions — most part-time cleaners won't do exterior window panes, high ceiling fans or aircon servicing
  5. Agree supplies: many Singapore cleaners expect the household to provide products, a vacuum and a mop
  6. For weekly slots, lock in a fixed schedule early — reliable cleaners' recurring slots fill quickly

Cleaning companies in Singapore must hold an NEA cleaning business licence and pay cleaners under the Progressive Wage Model, which sets wage floors by job level. It is illegal to engage a migrant domestic worker employed by another household for part-time cleaning.

Budgeting first?

See the full breakdown of what drives house cleaning prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.

House Cleaning cost guide for Singapore

Frequently asked questions

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.

What questions should I ask before hiring?

Ask: Are you insured, and for how much? Who exactly will clean my home — same person each visit? What's on your standard task list, and what's excluded? Do you bring supplies? What's your policy on damage, rescheduling and cancellation? How do you handle keys? Providers who answer these crisply are almost always the better operators.

Is it safe to give my cleaner a key?

Key-holding is standard for recurring cleans, but do it deliberately: use a lockbox or smart lock where possible, get key-holding terms in writing (companies usually have a policy), and check the cleaner or company carries insurance that covers key loss and lock replacement. Change codes when you change providers.

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's the difference between a standard clean and a deep clean?

A standard clean covers surfaces you touch weekly: vacuuming, mopping, dusting, bathrooms, kitchen wipe-down and bins. A deep clean adds the build-up work — inside the oven and fridge, skirting boards, under furniture, limescale removal, grout scrubbing and window sills. Deep cleans typically cost 50-100% more and take roughly twice as long. Book a deep clean first if the home hasn't been professionally cleaned in 6+ months, then maintain with standard cleans.

Is it legal to hire a freelance part-time cleaner in Singapore?

Yes, if the cleaner is a Singaporean or PR working for themselves. It is illegal if the 'freelancer' is a migrant domestic worker employed by another household — MOM enforces this, and the hiring household can be fined. Booking through an NEA-licensed company or established platform removes the ambiguity.

What do part-time cleaners cost in Singapore?

S$18-$35 per hour, with most licensed providers at S$22-$30 and platforms like Helpling from about S$25/hour. Sessions carry a 3-4 hour minimum, so a weekly clean of an HDB flat typically runs S$80-$140 per visit.

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