House Cleaning in Reno
Compare local house cleaning / maid service pros in Reno and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: $100–$550
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House Cleaning prices in Reno
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apartment standard clean 1-2 bedroom, single visit, about 2-3 hours | $100 | $140 | $200 |
| 3-bedroom standard clean Whole-home maintenance clean, single visit | $130 | $180 | $280 |
| Deep clean Whole home including oven, baseboards, build-up removal | $200 | $300 | $450 |
| Move-in / move-out clean Empty home, cabinets and appliances inside and out | $250 | $360 | $550 |
How to hire a house cleaning pro in United States
- Decide between an independent cleaner and a cleaning company — companies cost more but handle insurance, vetting and payroll
- Ask for proof of general liability insurance and, if they have a crew, workers' compensation coverage
- Confirm whether the company is bonded — a janitorial bond covers theft claims
- Check reviews on at least two platforms and call one or two local references
- Do a walkthrough (in person or video) and get a written quote listing rooms and tasks, hourly or flat-rate
- Clarify who supplies products and equipment, and flag surface restrictions or allergy preferences
- If you pay an individual cleaner directly above the IRS household-employee wage threshold, budget for household employment taxes — agencies handle this for you
House cleaners generally need no state license in the US, so insurance and bonding are the main quality signals. If you directly employ a cleaner rather than hiring a company, IRS household-employer rules can require you to withhold and pay Social Security and Medicare taxes once annual wages pass the yearly threshold.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives house cleaning prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
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.
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.
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.
Why does the first clean cost more than recurring visits?
First cleans are priced 30-100% higher because the cleaner is removing months of build-up — limescale, soap scum, greasy kitchen surfaces — that maintenance visits never face. Some companies require a deep clean before starting a recurring schedule. After that, the home stays near baseline and visits get faster and cheaper.
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.
Do house cleaners need a license in the US?
There's no state occupational license for house cleaning, though some cities require a general business license. That means vetting falls to you: proof of general liability insurance, bonding, and workers' comp (for crews) are the signals that separate professional operators from informal ones.
What is the 'nanny tax' and does it apply to my cleaner?
If you directly employ a household worker and pay above the IRS annual wage threshold (adjusted yearly, in the low thousands of dollars), you owe Social Security and Medicare taxes and may need to file Schedule H. Hiring through a cleaning company avoids this entirely — the company is the employer, not you.
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