Cleaning Guides · Hello Services · Updated June 2026
Deep Cleaning vs Regular Cleaning: What’s the Difference and Which One Do You Need?
Deep cleaning and regular cleaning are not two names for the same job — they differ in scope, time, equipment, cost and purpose. This guide explains exactly what each service includes, how often you need them, what they cost in the UK, and how to decide which one is right for your home or business.
- The short answer: maintenance vs reset
- What is regular cleaning?
- What is deep cleaning?
- Deep cleaning vs regular cleaning: side-by-side comparison
- What’s included in each service: room by room
- When do you need a deep clean? 9 clear signs
- How often should you book each one?
- Cost comparison in the UK (2026)
- The health side: dust, allergens, bacteria and mould
- How to choose: a 30-second decision guide
- Frequently asked questions
1. The Short Answer: Maintenance vs Reset
Think of it like car care. Regular cleaning is the weekly wash and vacuum that keeps your car presentable. Deep cleaning is the full valet — engine bay, under the seats, polished trim — that restores it to showroom condition.
🧹 Regular Cleaning
Keeps a clean home clean
- Visible, frequently-used surfaces
- Weekly or fortnightly routine
- 2–4 hours per visit
- Standard domestic products
- Maintains hygiene day to day
🧽 Deep Cleaning
Makes a lived-in home clean again
- Hidden, neglected and built-up areas
- One-off or 2–4 times a year
- 4–10+ hours, often a team
- Industrial equipment & degreasers
- Removes grime, limescale, grease & allergens
Neither replaces the other. Regular cleaning without occasional deep cleaning lets grime quietly accumulate in ovens, grout, carpets and behind appliances. Deep cleaning without regular upkeep means the results fade within weeks. The healthiest, most cost-effective homes use both.
2. What Is Regular Cleaning?
Regular cleaning — also called domestic cleaning, standard cleaning or housekeeping — is the routine maintenance clean performed weekly, fortnightly or monthly. Its job is to keep an already-clean home hygienic and presentable by tackling the surfaces you see and touch every day.
A typical regular domestic cleaning visit covers:
- Vacuuming carpets and mopping hard floors in all rooms
- Dusting accessible surfaces, shelves, sills and furniture
- Wiping kitchen worktops, hob top, sink and cupboard fronts
- Cleaning and disinfecting toilets, basins, baths and showers
- Polishing mirrors and glass surfaces
- Emptying bins and general tidying
- Changing bed linen and light laundry (if agreed)
What regular cleaning deliberately doesn’t do is move heavy furniture, dismantle appliances, scrub grout, descale shower screens, or clean inside the oven. Those jobs need more time, stronger products and specialist equipment — which is exactly where deep cleaning comes in.
3. What Is Deep Cleaning?
Deep cleaning is an intensive, top-to-bottom clean designed to reach everything a routine clean skips: the areas behind, under, inside and above. It targets the built-up grease, limescale, dust, mould and bacteria that accumulate gradually — often invisibly — over months of normal living.
A professional one-off deep cleaning service typically includes everything in a regular clean, plus:
- Kitchen degreasing: inside the oven, hob rings, extractor hood and filters, microwave interior, fridge and freezer interiors, inside all cupboards and drawers, tile grout and splashbacks
- Bathroom descaling: limescale removal from taps, shower heads, screens and tiles; mould treatment on sealant and grout
- Hidden zones: behind and under furniture and appliances, on top of wardrobes and kitchen units, inside wardrobes and storage
- Detail work: skirting boards, door frames, light switches, sockets, radiators (including behind), vents, light fittings and lampshades
- Glass & textiles: internal windows, frames and sills; blinds slat by slat; upholstery vacuuming; optional professional carpet cleaning with hot-water extraction
Deep cleaning is also the foundation of several specialist services: end of tenancy cleaning (a deep clean to an agency checklist), after builders cleaning (a deep clean focused on fine construction dust), and pre-sale cleaning (a deep clean to maximise viewing appeal).
4. Deep Cleaning vs Regular Cleaning: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Regular Cleaning | Deep Cleaning |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Maintain cleanliness and hygiene | Restore cleanliness; remove built-up dirt |
| Scope | Visible, high-use surfaces | Every surface — hidden, high and internal |
| Frequency | Weekly, fortnightly or monthly | One-off, seasonal, or 2–4 times per year |
| Time required | 2–4 hours (one cleaner) | 4–10+ hours (often a team) |
| Equipment | Standard vacuum and domestic products | Industrial vacuums, steam cleaners, degreasers, descalers, extraction machines |
| Appliance interiors | Not included | Oven, fridge, freezer, microwave, washing machine, dishwasher |
| Furniture moved | No | Yes, where safely possible |
| Limescale & grout | Surface wipe only | Full descaling and grout scrubbing |
| Typical UK cost | £18–£30 per hour | From ~£125 (studio) to £400+ (large house) |
| Best for | Ongoing upkeep of a clean home | Resets, move-ins/outs, seasonal refreshes, allergies, post-renovation, special occasions |
5. What’s Included in Each Service: Room by Room
Kitchen
- Regular: worktops, sink, hob top, cupboard fronts, floor, bins
- Deep: all of the above + oven interior and racks, extractor filters, inside cupboards and drawers, fridge/freezer interiors, behind and under appliances, tiles and grout, descaled sink and taps, washing machine drawer and seal, dishwasher filter
Bathroom
- Regular: toilet, basin, bath/shower surfaces, mirror, floor
- Deep: all of the above + limescale removal from screens, tiles and taps, mould treatment on sealant and grout, extractor fan cover, behind the toilet, plugholes, cabinet interiors, polished chrome
Bedrooms & Living Areas
- Regular: vacuum, dust accessible surfaces, tidy, mirrors
- Deep: all of the above + under beds and sofas, on top of and inside wardrobes, skirting boards, door frames, radiators, light fittings, switches and sockets, internal windows and sills, blinds, mattress vacuuming, upholstery and carpet treatment
Hallways & Extras
- Regular: vacuum/mop floors, dust surfaces
- Deep: all of the above + banisters and spindles, cobwebs at ceiling height, front door (both sides), scuff-mark removal from walls and paintwork where safe
6. When Do You Need a Deep Clean? 9 Clear Signs
- You’re moving in or out. A deep clean before unpacking — or an end of tenancy clean before handing back keys — is the single most common trigger.
- It’s been 6+ months since the last one. Even well-maintained homes accumulate hidden build-up.
- The oven smokes or smells when you cook. Burnt-on grease is past the point of routine wiping — a dedicated oven cleaning or full deep clean is due.
- Limescale won’t shift. Cloudy shower screens and crusted taps need professional descaling.
- Allergies are flaring up indoors. Dust mites, pet dander and pollen settle deep in carpets, upholstery and mattresses where regular vacuuming can’t reach.
- You can see or smell mould. Bathroom sealant spots and musty odours call for targeted treatment before they spread.
- You’ve just finished building work. Fine renovation dust travels everywhere and needs a specialist after builders clean.
- You’re hosting, selling or photographing the property. Viewings, valuations and big occasions deserve the full reset.
- You’re starting a regular cleaning routine. Professional cleaners recommend a deep clean first, so the weekly service maintains a high baseline instead of fighting old grime.
7. How Often Should You Book Each One?
| Household type | Regular cleaning | Deep cleaning |
|---|---|---|
| Single person or couple, no pets | Fortnightly | 1–2 times per year |
| Family with children | Weekly | 2–3 times per year |
| Pet owners | Weekly | 3–4 times per year + periodic carpet cleaning |
| Allergy or asthma sufferers | Weekly | Quarterly, with mattress and upholstery treatment |
| Rental property (between tenants) | — | Every changeover (end of tenancy standard) |
| Offices & commercial spaces | Daily or weekly | Quarterly to twice a year |
8. Cost Comparison in the UK (2026)
Regular cleaning is usually priced by the hour — typically £18–£30 per hour across the UK depending on location, with most homes needing 2–4 hours per visit. Booking a recurring slot generally secures a better rate than ad-hoc visits.
Deep cleaning is usually priced by property size and condition rather than by the hour, because the workload is defined by what’s built up, not by the clock. As a guide, professional deep cleans start from around £125 for a studio flat and scale up with bedrooms and bathrooms — see our current price list for details. Add-ons such as carpet hot-water extraction or single-appliance cleans (an oven clean, for example) can be booked separately.
Looked at over a year, the two services aren’t competitors — they’re complements. Skipping deep cleans to save money usually costs more later: baked-on oven grease, ingrained carpet stains and established mould all take longer (and cost more) to put right than to prevent.
9. The Health Side: Dust, Allergens, Bacteria and Mould
The difference between the two services isn’t just cosmetic. The places only a deep clean reaches are exactly where the biological build-up lives:
- Carpets, mattresses and upholstery harbour dust mites and pet dander — leading indoor allergy triggers that surface vacuuming only partially removes. Hot-water extraction and HEPA-filter vacuuming reach far deeper.
- Kitchen grease layers on extractors and behind appliances trap dust, feed bacteria and are a fire risk on heat sources.
- Bathroom mould on sealant and grout releases spores that aggravate asthma and respiratory conditions — and spreads if untreated.
- High and hidden dust (on top of wardrobes, behind radiators, in vents) recirculates every time the heating comes on.
For households with babies, elderly residents, pets, or anyone with asthma or allergies, periodic deep cleaning is less a luxury than basic indoor-air maintenance.
10. How to Choose: A 30-Second Decision Guide
- Is your home already in good shape and you want to keep it that way? → Book regular cleaning.
- Has it been months (or longer) since every corner was cleaned? → Book a deep clean.
- Moving out of a rental? → Book end of tenancy cleaning — a deep clean built around agency check-out lists.
- Just had builders in? → Book after builders cleaning.
- Starting fresh? → Deep clean first, then a regular schedule to maintain it. This is the combination professionals recommend — and the one that costs least over time.
11. Frequently Asked Questions
Is deep cleaning worth the extra cost?
For most homes, yes — when used correctly. A deep clean removes build-up that regular cleaning can never address (oven grease, limescale, grout grime, deep carpet soiling) and protects fixtures from permanent damage. The smart approach is an occasional deep clean to reset the property, with affordable regular cleaning to maintain it, rather than relying on either service alone.
How long does a deep clean take?
Expect 4–6 hours for a one or two bedroom flat with a professional team, and a full day for larger family homes. Time varies with property condition: a home that hasn’t been deep cleaned in years, or one with pets, takes longer than a well-maintained one.
Does deep cleaning include carpet cleaning?
Deep cleaning includes thorough vacuuming of carpets, edges and under furniture. Machine carpet cleaning (hot-water extraction or steam) is usually an optional add-on, because it requires specialist equipment and drying time. It’s worth adding if carpets are stained, smelly or haven’t been professionally cleaned in over a year.
Is end of tenancy cleaning the same as deep cleaning?
They’re close relatives. End of tenancy cleaning is a deep clean performed on an empty property to a letting-agency checklist standard, with the specific goal of matching the check-in inventory and protecting the tenant’s deposit. A general deep clean follows the same intensity but is shaped around a lived-in home rather than a check-out report.
How often should a house be deep cleaned?
Most professionals recommend at least twice a year, and quarterly for homes with children, pets or allergy sufferers. High-traffic zones — kitchen and bathrooms — benefit from targeted deep attention more often than bedrooms and living rooms.
Do I need to do anything before the cleaners arrive?
Light decluttering is the only real preparation: clear floors, worktops and surfaces of personal items so the team spends their time cleaning rather than tidying. For a deep clean, make sure cleaners can access the areas booked — for example, empty the fridge if its interior is being cleaned.
Can deep cleaning remove mould?
Surface mould on bathroom sealant, grout and tiles can usually be treated and removed during a deep clean. Extensive or recurring mould caused by damp, leaks or poor ventilation is a building issue — cleaning will improve it temporarily, but the underlying cause needs fixing for a lasting result.
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Get a Free Quote Book OnlineThis guide offers general information about domestic and commercial cleaning services in the UK. Prices shown are indicative starting rates and vary by location, property size and condition — request a free quote for an exact figure. Last reviewed: June 2026.