Window Cleaning in St. Petersburg
Compare local window cleaning / window washing pros in St. Petersburg and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: $100–$600
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Window Cleaning prices in St. Petersburg
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-story home, exterior only Average window count, pole or ladder clean | $100 | $150 | $220 |
| Average home, inside and out Full service including sills | $180 | $250 | $380 |
| Large / two-story home, inside and out High window count, screens included | $300 | $420 | $600 |
How to hire a window cleaning pro in United States
- Get a per-pane count and written quote — US pricing is usually per window with interior/exterior stated separately
- Confirm general liability insurance and workers' comp for crews — ladder work is the risk that matters
- Ask whether screens, tracks and storm windows are included or add-ons (they're usually add-ons)
- For two-story-plus homes, ask how upper windows are reached — water-fed pole from the ground is the safest answer
- Ask about hard-water stain treatment separately if you have sprinkler overspray marks
- Book spring and fall slots ahead — they're the peak seasons in most states
Residential window cleaning is unlicensed in the US; liability insurance and workers' compensation matter because of ladder work. Exterior work beyond safe ladder or pole reach on taller buildings is specialist rope-access territory governed by OSHA rules and priced as commercial work.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives window cleaning prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
What should I do before the cleaner arrives?
Unlock side gates, move cars off the driveway if poles or hoses need the space, close windows fully, and confine pets. For interior cleans, clear window sills of plants and ornaments — cleaners charge for time, and moving your things is time. Flag any cracked panes or fragile lead-light windows before work starts to avoid disputes.
Does a standard clean include frames, sills and tracks?
Exterior frames and sills — usually yes with water-fed pole cleaning, since the brush does them anyway. Interior tracks, screens and deep frame scrubbing are typically add-ons. Ask specifically: 'glass only' vs 'glass, frames and sills' is the most common source of disappointment. First cleans should always include frames — dirty frames drip onto clean glass with the first rain.
Doesn't rain make window cleaning pointless?
No — rain itself is fairly clean; the spots you see after rain come from dirt already sitting on the glass. Pure-water-cleaned windows usually stay clear through rain, which is why professional rounds run all year. Most round cleaners offer a re-clean if windows genuinely spot within a day or two of the visit — ask about the policy.
Do window cleaners do skylights and conservatory roofs?
Many do, as a priced add-on — conservatory or glass-roof cleaning is slower, needs care about walking loads, and often costs as much as the rest of the house combined. Self-cleaning glass coatings still need occasional professional attention. Ask when booking; not every round cleaner carries the right equipment.
How is window cleaning priced?
Three models: per pane/window (most transparent for one-offs), per visit (standard for regular rounds — a fixed price for your whole house), or hourly (rare for homes, common for commercial). Regular-round pricing is far cheaper per clean than one-offs because maintained glass cleans fast. Always confirm whether the price covers exterior only or inside and out — that single detail explains most quote differences.
Can cleaners reach upper-floor and awkward windows?
Water-fed poles handle most windows up to 3-4 storeys from the ground. Beyond that, or over conservatories and extensions where ladders can't stand, you're into specialist access — longer poles, ladders with standoffs, or (for tower blocks) rope access, which is commercial-grade work priced accordingly. Point out awkward windows when getting a quote, not when the cleaner arrives.
What does window cleaning cost in the US?
Typically $4-$14 per pane, with whole-house jobs averaging $150-$300 for an average home and inside-and-out service at the top of that range. Screens (roughly $1-$5 each) and tracks are common add-ons. Two-story homes price meaningfully higher than single-story.
Are screens and storm windows included?
Usually not by default. Screen cleaning runs about $1-$5 per screen, and storm windows can effectively double the pane count — which is why quotes that skip the question balloon on site. Count your windows, screens and storms before calling and ask for an itemised all-in price.
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