Carpet Cleaning Intake Forms: What to Capture Before the First Service
A carpet cleaning technician who arrives at a job without knowing the fiber type, the age of the stains, or whether there is pet urine saturated into the pad is going to waste the client's time and the company's chemicals. Worse, they risk using the wrong method on the wrong carpet and causing permanent damage that the client will expect the company to pay for. Carpet cleaning is not general cleaning — it is a fiber-specific, chemistry-driven process where the intake determines whether the job goes right or goes sideways.
Most carpet cleaning companies take a name, an address, and a room count over the phone. That is not intake — that is scheduling. A real carpet cleaning intake form captures everything your technician needs to select the right method, bring the right equipment, set accurate expectations, and protect the business when a client claims a pre-existing stain appeared after your visit. Here is what that form should include.
Property information: defining the scope before the truck rolls
Carpet cleaning pricing, equipment selection, and time estimates all start with the property. A 900-square-foot apartment with three rooms of Berber is a fundamentally different job than a 4,000-square-foot home with plush carpet on three floors, a finished basement, and a dog. Your intake should capture:
- Service address — full address including unit number. For commercial jobs, include suite, floor, and building access details (after-hours entry, security desk, freight elevator for equipment).
- Property type — residential single-family, apartment, condo, townhouse, commercial office, retail, rental turnover. Rental turnovers have a hard deadline tied to the next tenant's move-in date. Commercial jobs often have after-hours-only access windows. Each property type changes your scheduling and logistics.
- Total carpeted square footage — this is the number that drives quoting for companies that price per square foot. If the client does not know, ask for an estimate or plan to measure on arrival.
- Number of rooms — and define what counts as a "room." This is critical because "room" is the most disputed term in carpet cleaning. Your intake should state your definition: a room is up to a specified square footage (200 or 250 square feet is standard), and any area exceeding that counts as two rooms. Hallways, walk-in closets, staircases, and L-shaped spaces need explicit classification. A client who hears "four rooms for $149" and then finds out their open-concept living/dining area counts as two rooms at checkout is a one-star review waiting to happen.
- Access details — parking for the truck and hose routing. Hot water extraction rigs need to park within 200 feet of the entry point, and the hose runs through the front door. Are there stairs to the carpeted area? Can the truck park in the driveway, or is it street parking only? Gated community codes, lockbox information, and alarm system instructions.
- Pets — type, number, and whether they will be confined during service. Pet households require different pre-treatment protocols and often reveal odor issues that the client may not notice because they have acclimated to them. Document pet information at intake, not on arrival.
- Children — homes with infants or toddlers may require low-toxicity or fragrance-free products. Young children also spend more time on the floor than adults, which changes the urgency of drying time and chemical residue considerations.
Carpet details: the information that determines the entire job
This is where carpet cleaning intake separates from every other cleaning trade. The carpet itself — its construction, fiber, age, and warranty — dictates which cleaning method is safe to use, which chemicals can be applied, how much moisture is acceptable, and what results the client should realistically expect.
Carpet type and construction
- Wall-to-wall carpet — the standard residential installation. Stretched over pad and tack strip. Important because the pad underneath affects drying time, odor retention, and whether moisture can reach the subfloor.
- Area rugs — may be cleaned on-site or picked up for plant cleaning depending on the material and value. Handmade, antique, or silk rugs should never be cleaned on-site with hot water extraction.
- Berber (loop pile) — snags easily. Aggressive agitation or a rotary extractor can pull loops and cause permanent damage. Requires low-moisture or encapsulation methods in many cases.
- Plush (cut pile) — shows vacuum marks and traffic patterns clearly. Tolerates hot water extraction well but is more prone to showing re-soiling if not rinsed properly.
- Frieze (twisted) — hides soil better than plush but traps debris deeper in the fiber twist. May require more pre-spray dwell time.
- Shag (long pile) — requires specialized equipment. Standard wands do not reach the base of shag fibers. Drying time is significantly longer.
Carpet fiber: the most critical field on the form
Fiber type is not a nice-to-have detail — it is the single most important variable in method and chemical selection. The wrong chemical on the wrong fiber causes irreversible damage:
- Nylon — the most common residential fiber. Durable, resilient, responds well to hot water extraction. Handles most cleaning chemicals. Still requires pH-neutral rinse to prevent rapid re-soiling.
- Polyester (PET) — stain-resistant by nature but attracts oily soils that bond to the fiber and resist standard cleaning. Requires degreasing pre-treatment. Polyester also has a tendency to "ugly out" — losing its texture permanently — if cleaned with excessive heat or agitation.
- Olefin (polypropylene) — common in commercial and Berber installations. Extremely stain-resistant but has a low melting point. Excessive heat or friction can melt or distort the fiber. Dry or low-moisture methods are often preferred.
- Wool — natural fiber that is highly sensitive to pH, temperature, and agitation. Alkaline cleaners cause browning. Hot water causes shrinkage. Aggressive scrubbing causes fuzzing. Wool requires wool-safe products, cool water, and gentle extraction. A technician who treats a wool carpet like nylon will ruin it in one visit.
- Triexta (SmartStrand/Sorona) — newer fiber marketed as stain-proof. Handles most cleaning methods well, but manufacturers have specific warranty requirements about approved cleaning processes. Document the fiber and check warranty terms.
Age, condition, and cleaning history
- Age of the carpet — a 15-year-old carpet that has never been professionally cleaned will not look new after one service. Setting this expectation at intake prevents callback complaints.
- Current condition — traffic lane wear, matting, fraying, seam damage, ripples or buckling. These are pre-existing conditions your technician needs to document before cleaning, not after.
- Previous cleaning history — when was it last cleaned, by whom, and what method was used? Carpets that have been repeatedly cleaned with shampoo or bonnet methods may have significant detergent residue buildup that causes rapid re-soiling. This residue affects your pre-treatment plan.
- Manufacturer warranty requirements — many carpet manufacturers require professional hot water extraction every 12 to 18 months to maintain the warranty. Some specifically prohibit dry cleaning or bonnet methods. If the client has a warranty, document the manufacturer and model so your team can verify approved methods.
Stain and problem identification: the inventory that drives your pre-treatment
Carpet cleaning is largely stain management. A technician who shows up without knowing what stains are present is guessing at chemistry, and guessing at chemistry is how you set stains permanently instead of removing them.
Stain inventory
For each stain, your intake should capture three things: what it is (or what the client believes it is), where it is located, and how long it has been there. Age matters enormously — a coffee stain from this morning responds to pre-treatment differently than a coffee stain from six months ago that has been walked over daily and set by repeated DIY cleaning attempts.
Build your stain identification section around the common categories because clients often describe stains by what caused them:
- Pet urine — the most complex stain category. Surface stains that the client blotted immediately are cosmetic. But pet urine that has soaked through the carpet into the pad — or worse, through the pad into the subfloor — is an odor problem that no amount of surface cleaning will resolve. Your intake needs to distinguish between surface pet stains, pad-saturated urine, and subfloor contamination, because each requires a different treatment protocol and a different price point.
- Red dye stains — red wine, Kool-Aid, fruit juice, tomato sauce. These are dye stains that require specialized reducing or oxidizing agents. Standard pre-spray will not remove them.
- Tannin stains — coffee, tea, beer, soft drinks. Respond well to oxidizing agents but can be set permanently by alkaline cleaning solutions applied incorrectly.
- Grease and oil — cooking oil, motor oil, cosmetics, lotion. Require degreasing solvents as pre-treatment. These stains wick back after cleaning if the source in the pad is not addressed.
- Ink — ballpoint, marker, printer toner. Each ink type requires a different solvent. Ballpoint responds to alcohol-based treatments. Permanent marker often requires POG (paint, oil, grease) solvents.
- Rust — from furniture legs, metal objects, or water with high iron content. Requires acid-based rust removers that can damage certain fibers and must be tested before application.
- Blood — protein-based stain that sets with heat. Must be treated with cold water and enzyme-based cleaners. Hot water extraction applied directly to a blood stain before pre-treatment will cook the protein into the fiber permanently.
Beyond stains: other problem areas
- High-traffic lanes — hallways, main walkways, areas in front of couches and recliners. These areas have ground-in soil that requires more aggressive pre-spray and possibly a second pass.
- Water damage history — has the carpet been flooded or had water damage? Even if it was dried and the client considers it resolved, there may be mold or mildew in the pad that your team should know about before disturbing it.
- Mold concerns — visible mold, musty smell, prior mold remediation. Cleaning mold-contaminated carpet without proper containment spreads spores. This is not a standard carpet cleaning job — it may require remediation specialists.
- Allergy concerns — does anyone in the household have allergies, asthma, or chemical sensitivities? This affects product selection and may require HEPA filtration on your equipment and fragrance-free cleaning solutions.
Cleaning method: matching the process to the carpet
This is the section of your intake where professional knowledge meets client expectation. Many clients call and ask for "steam cleaning" without understanding what that means or whether it is appropriate for their carpet. Your intake form should document both what the client wants and what you recommend, along with the reasoning:
- Hot water extraction — what most people mean when they say "steam cleaning," though no actual steam is involved. Hot water and cleaning solution are injected into the carpet under pressure and immediately extracted. This is the method recommended by most carpet manufacturers and the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI). It provides the deepest clean but has the longest drying time — typically 6 to 12 hours.
- Low-moisture encapsulation — a polymer-based cleaning solution is applied and agitated into the carpet. As it dries, it encapsulates soil particles into crystals that are vacuumed away. Drying time is 1 to 2 hours. Good for maintenance cleaning between deep cleans and for commercial settings where carpet must be walked on quickly.
- Dry compound cleaning — an absorbent compound is spread across the carpet, brushed in, and vacuumed up. No water involved. Best for delicate fibers like wool or situations where moisture is a concern (slab-on-grade floors with no moisture barrier). Does not provide the same depth of cleaning as extraction.
- Bonnet cleaning — a rotary machine with an absorbent pad scrubs the carpet surface. Common in commercial settings for appearance cleaning between deep extractions. Not a deep cleaning method — it cleans the top third of the fiber and can leave detergent residue that causes rapid re-soiling.
Your intake should capture the client's stated preference, your technician's recommendation based on fiber type and condition, and the expected drying time. Setting drying time expectations at intake — not after the carpet is wet — prevents the call at 8 PM asking why the carpet is still damp.
Add-on services: scope expansion that drives revenue
Add-ons are where carpet cleaning companies increase ticket size, but only if they are presented and documented at intake rather than pitched on-site where they feel like upselling:
- Stain pre-treatment — specialized spotting for specific stain types beyond standard pre-spray. This is a skilled service that should be priced separately from the per-room rate.
- Scotchgard or fabric protector application — a fluorochemical protector applied after cleaning that helps carpet resist future staining. Some clients request it routinely; others have never heard of it. Present the option at intake with pricing so the client can decide before the technician is in the home.
- Pet odor enzyme treatment — enzymatic solutions that break down uric acid crystals in pet urine. For pad-saturated urine, this may involve pulling back the carpet, treating the pad and subfloor separately, and re-laying the carpet. This is a fundamentally different scope than surface cleaning and needs its own line item.
- Carpet stretching and re-tacking — if the carpet has ripples, buckling, or has pulled away from the tack strip, stretching can be done during the same visit. Document the issue at intake so the technician brings a power stretcher and knee kicker.
- Furniture moving — will your crew move furniture, or does the client need to clear the rooms? If you move furniture, document a liability waiver for potential damage to the furniture or the floor underneath it. Heavy items (pianos, china cabinets, entertainment centers) are typically excluded. State the exclusions at intake.
- Upholstery cleaning — many carpet cleaning clients also want a couch, loveseat, or dining chairs cleaned during the same visit. Capture this at intake so the technician brings upholstery tools and plans the time accordingly.
Pre-inspection and documentation: protecting the business
The pre-inspection is not just good practice — it is your defense against claims that your cleaning caused damage that was already there. A client who calls a week later and says your technician created a bleach spot in the hallway is making a claim you cannot refute without documentation. Your intake should establish the pre-inspection protocol:
- Pre-existing damage documentation — note every visible issue before cleaning begins: existing stains, worn areas, seam damage, discoloration, bleach spots, carpet burns, fraying, pet damage. Walk the job with the client and record these together.
- Pre-service photos — photograph every room and every visible stain before starting. Timestamped photos are the single best protection against damage claims. Your intake form should note that pre-service photography is standard procedure.
- Expectation setting — some stains will not come out. Old pet urine that has oxidized may be permanent. Traffic lane wear is physical fiber damage, not soil, and cannot be cleaned away. A 20-year-old carpet will look better after cleaning but will not look new. Your intake should include a section where the technician notes specific areas where results may be limited, and the client acknowledges this before work begins.
- CRI Seal of Approval compliance — if your company uses CRI-certified equipment and solutions, note this at intake. CRI certification is a trust signal that tells the client your equipment and chemicals meet industry standards for soil removal, moisture levels, and fiber protection. It also matters for warranty compliance — some carpet manufacturers require CRI-approved cleaning to maintain coverage.
Pricing structure: per room, per square foot, or minimum charge
Carpet cleaning pricing is one of the most confusing areas for consumers, and that confusion breeds disputes. Your intake form should establish the pricing model clearly:
- Per-room pricing — the most common residential model. Simple for the client to understand, but only works if "room" is clearly defined (see the room definition issue above). Per-room pricing also requires rules for odd spaces: hallways, stairs (per flight or per step?), closets, landings.
- Per-square-foot pricing — more precise and eliminates the room-definition debate. Better for commercial jobs and large residential spaces. Requires measurement before quoting.
- Minimum charge — most companies have a minimum service charge regardless of how few rooms the client needs cleaned. If your minimum is $129 and the client only wants one room, this should be disclosed at intake, not on the invoice.
- What is included in the base price — standard pre-spray, hot water extraction, basic spot treatment. What is extra? Stain-specific spotting, protector application, pet treatment, furniture moving.
- Move-in and move-out pricing — empty-home cleaning is typically priced differently because there is no furniture to work around, but the client expects every inch cleaned including closets and under where appliances sat. State move-in/move-out rates at intake.
Scheduling: logistics that affect quality
Carpet cleaning scheduling is not just about finding an available slot. Environmental conditions and client preparation directly affect the quality of the result:
- Date and time — preferred appointment window, with a note about how much time the job is expected to take based on the room count and services requested.
- Client preparation — what does the client need to do before the technician arrives? Move breakable items off surfaces? Vacuum? Clear floors of toys and clutter? Confine pets? Your intake should include a preparation checklist so the client knows their responsibilities and your technician does not arrive to find a playroom floor covered in LEGOs with a golden retriever running through the house.
- Weather and humidity — carpet cleaned on a humid August day in a home without air conditioning will take significantly longer to dry than carpet cleaned in January with the heat running. High humidity also increases the risk of mold and mildew developing in the pad before the carpet dries. If you are in a humid climate, your intake should note the drying time variability and recommend scheduling when the client can run air conditioning or fans after service.
- Repeat service schedule — the CRI recommends professional carpet cleaning every 12 to 18 months for residential and every 6 months for commercial. Pet households and high-traffic homes benefit from more frequent service. Capture the client's interest in recurring service at intake and set the next appointment before you leave the first one.
Building trust through thorough documentation
A carpet cleaning intake form that asks about fiber type, warranty requirements, and stain history tells the client something that a "$99 whole house special" coupon does not — that this company knows what they are doing. The carpet cleaning industry suffers from a perception problem driven by low-price operators who use one method on every carpet, skip pre-inspection, and leave behind soapy residue that makes the carpet look worse within two weeks. A thorough intake separates your company from that category before your technician pulls a single hose out of the truck.
The intake also protects the business. Pre-existing damage documentation, signed expectations about stain removal limitations, and clear pricing terms are the difference between a resolved complaint and a chargeback. Every disputed claim you handle with documentation instead of argument is money and reputation saved.
If you run a broader cleaning operation, the process of capturing property details, access instructions, and service terms at intake applies across the board. General cleaning service intake covers many of the same property and scheduling fields, but carpet cleaning adds the fiber-specific, chemistry-specific, and stain-specific layers that make it a specialized trade. If you are building documentation across multiple service lines, the Trade Services Bundle includes carpet cleaning alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.
Carpet cleaning intake forms — $12.99 complete set
Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Property details, carpet type and fiber, stain inventory, cleaning method selection, add-on services, pre-inspection documentation, and pricing structure. Built for carpet cleaning companies.
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