Cleaning Service Intake Forms: What to Document Before the First Walkthrough
A cleaning crew that shows up to a first appointment without knowing the square footage, whether there are pets, or that the client has a marble countertop they need treated with a specific product is going to waste time, risk damage, and look unprofessional. The walkthrough is supposed to be the moment you demonstrate competence. It falls apart when your team is asking basic questions that should have been handled before they arrived.
Most cleaning companies collect a name, address, and phone number. Some ask how many bedrooms. That is not intake — that is scheduling. A real cleaning service intake form captures everything your team needs to quote accurately, clean safely, and protect the business from disputes about scope, damage, and expectations. Here is what that form should include.
Property details: the scope of the job starts here
Every cleaning estimate is a function of space. A 1,200-square-foot apartment and a 4,500-square-foot colonial are fundamentally different jobs, and your pricing, staffing, and time allocation all flow from the property profile. Your intake should capture:
- Total square footage — the single most important number for quoting. If the client does not know, ask for an approximate range.
- Number of rooms — bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchen, living areas, dining room, home office, bonus rooms. Bathrooms especially drive time estimates because they require the most detail-oriented work.
- Number of floors and staircases — a three-story townhouse with two staircases takes longer than a single-floor ranch of the same square footage. Stairs also affect what equipment your team needs to carry.
- Property type — single-family home, condo, apartment, townhouse, commercial office, Airbnb or short-term rental. Each has different expectations. An Airbnb turnover clean has a fixed checkout-to-checkin window. A commercial office has after-hours access requirements.
- Pets — type, number, and whether they will be confined or loose during cleaning. Pet hair requires different equipment (HEPA vacuum, lint rollers, upholstery tools). Certain pets also create safety concerns for cleaning staff — an unconfined large dog in a home where a stranger is moving room to room is a real issue that should be addressed before the first visit, not during it.
Service type: standard, deep, move-in/out, or post-construction
This is where most cleaning companies create confusion for themselves. A client calls and says "I need a deep clean." Your team shows up and does what they consider a deep clean. The client expected something different. Now you have a complaint, a callback, and a trust problem — all because you never defined terms.
Your intake form should present clear service categories and let the client select:
- Standard / maintenance clean — regular recurring service. Dusting, vacuuming, mopping, kitchen and bathroom surfaces, trash removal. The baseline.
- Deep clean — everything in a standard clean plus baseboards, inside appliances (oven, refrigerator), window tracks, light fixtures, ceiling fans, behind furniture. Define what "deep" means so the client's expectation matches your scope.
- Move-in / move-out clean — empty-property cleaning. Inside all cabinets and closets, appliance interiors, window cleaning, garage sweep, light switch plates. Typically tied to a lease security deposit or a real estate closing, which means the client has a hard deadline and high standards.
- Post-construction clean — dust removal from drywall, paint overspray cleanup, adhesive removal, window sticker removal, construction debris. This is specialized work that requires different products and often more than one pass.
- Carpet cleaning — if your company also offers carpet cleaning as an add-on or standalone service, the intake requirements are substantially different — fiber identification, stain inventory, and method selection all need their own fields. See our carpet cleaning intake guide for the full breakdown.
- One-time or special event — pre-party, post-party, holiday preparation, estate cleanout. These are non-recurring with specific scope.
Frequency and scheduling
Cleaning is a recurring revenue business. Your intake is where you establish the service cadence and the scheduling logistics that make recurring service work smoothly:
- Frequency — weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, or one-time. Bi-weekly is the most common residential frequency, but clients who want weekly service expect a lighter, faster visit since the home was cleaned seven days ago. Monthly clients expect more thorough work because the home has had four weeks of use. Your pricing and time allocation should reflect this.
- Preferred day and time window — does the client want a specific day? Are there days that do not work? Is there a window (mornings only, after 1 PM)?
- Occupancy during cleaning — will someone be home? Will the client be working from home? Working-from-home clients often have specific requirements about noise and which rooms to clean first or last so they can use their office uninterrupted.
Access: keys, codes, lockboxes, and alarms
Access logistics are where cleaning companies lose the most operational time. A crew arrives and cannot get in. They call the client. The client is in a meeting. The crew sits in the driveway for twenty minutes. That is a scheduling failure that cascades into every appointment after it.
Your intake form needs to capture all access details upfront:
- Entry method — client will be home and let the crew in, key under mat, lockbox with code, smart lock code, garage keypad, key left with a neighbor or building concierge.
- Alarm system — is there one? What is the disarm code? What is the arm-on-exit procedure? Who does the crew call if the alarm triggers? Nothing derails a cleaning appointment faster than a security alarm going off two minutes after entry.
- Gate or building access — gated community codes, apartment building buzzer numbers, parking instructions, elevator fob requirements.
- Locking up — how should the crew secure the property when they leave? Lock the deadbolt and return the key to the lockbox? Pull the door shut (auto-lock)? Leave a specific door unlocked for the client?
These access details overlap with what any service trade needs to capture. Pest control companies deal with the same gate codes, lockboxes, and alarm systems — the difference is what happens once your crew gets inside. Window cleaning companies face a similar overlap, with the added complication of height access, lift requirements, and per-pane pricing models.
Areas of focus and areas of exclusion
Not every room in a home gets the same level of attention, and some areas may be off-limits entirely. Your intake should capture both sides:
Priority areas. Many clients have specific areas that matter more to them than others. The master bathroom. The kitchen. The kids' playroom. Knowing these priorities means your crew spends time where the client values it most, not where your default checklist sends them.
Exclusions and off-limits areas. A home office with sensitive documents. A nursery where the baby is sleeping during the appointment. A basement workshop the client does not want touched. A room being renovated. Capture these at intake so your crew knows before they arrive, not when they open a door they should not have.
Specific tasks the client expects. Making beds? Doing dishes in the sink? Folding laundry left in the dryer? Loading the dishwasher? These are not standard cleaning tasks in most companies, but clients often assume they are included. Your intake form is where you surface these assumptions and either include or exclude them explicitly.
Supplies: who provides what
This is a source of constant miscommunication in the cleaning industry. Some companies bring all their own products and equipment. Others expect the client to provide cleaning supplies. Some do a mix. Your intake should make this clear:
- Company-provided supplies — if you bring everything, state it. This is a selling point and eliminates the "I ran out of paper towels" problem.
- Client-provided supplies — if you expect the client to have products on hand, list what you need. Vacuum, mop, cleaning solutions, paper towels, trash bags.
- Client-preferred products — some clients insist on specific brands or formulations. They want Method, not Lysol. They want vinegar-based products only. They have a $40 bottle of marble cleaner that must be used on their counters and nothing else. Capture this at intake. A crew member who grabs the closest spray bottle and damages a surface because they did not know about a product requirement is a preventable problem.
Special surfaces and materials
This is where cleaning intake diverges sharply from other service trades. Your team is touching nearly every surface in the home, and the wrong product on the wrong material causes damage that is expensive to repair and impossible to undo:
- Hardwood floors — what type of finish? Some hardwoods cannot be wet-mopped. Some require specific products. Wax-finished floors require completely different care than polyurethane-sealed floors.
- Natural stone — marble, granite, travertine, slate. Acidic cleaners (including vinegar) etch marble. Your crew needs to know every stone surface in the home before they start.
- Stainless steel appliances — requires specific cleaners and wiping direction to avoid streaks and scratches. Many all-purpose sprays leave residue on stainless.
- Specialty countertops — butcher block (oil, do not soak), concrete (sealed or unsealed?), copper, soapstone. Each has care requirements that are not obvious.
- Delicate fixtures — unlacquered brass, oil-rubbed bronze, antique hardware. Standard bathroom cleaners will strip the finish on these in a single application.
Chemical and allergy restrictions
This is a health and liability field, not a preference field. Some clients have genuine medical conditions that make certain cleaning products dangerous to them:
- Chemical sensitivities or allergies — MCS (Multiple Chemical Sensitivity), fragrance allergies, specific ingredient allergies. These clients need fragrance-free, low-VOC, or specific "green" products.
- Respiratory conditions — asthma, COPD, or other conditions aggravated by aerosol sprays, strong fragrances, or volatile chemicals.
- Infant or immunocompromised household members — homes with newborns or individuals undergoing chemotherapy may require non-toxic, plant-based products exclusively.
- Pet-safe requirements — beyond just having pets present, some products are toxic to specific animals. Phenol-based cleaners are dangerous to cats. Essential oil diffusers and tea tree products are toxic to birds.
Document these restrictions at intake and flag the file so your crew sees them before they load products onto the van. A crew member who brings the wrong product because the restriction was buried in a notes field will not check the notes field.
Pricing structure and service terms
Your intake form should establish how pricing works so there are no surprises after the first cleaning:
- Pricing model — flat rate per visit (most common for recurring), hourly rate, or per-square-foot. Flat rate is easier for the client to budget, but hourly may be necessary for initial deep cleans or post-construction work where the scope is uncertain.
- What is included vs. add-on — if interior window cleaning, oven deep-cleaning, or refrigerator cleaning are add-ons at extra cost, this should be clear on the intake form, not discovered when the invoice arrives.
- Cancellation and rescheduling policy — how much notice is required? Is there a cancellation fee? For recurring clients, what happens when they skip a visit — does the next visit cost more because the home has gone longer between cleanings?
Quality guarantees and breakage policy
These are the terms that protect both the client and your business. Capturing them at intake — before the first clean — prevents disputes later:
Quality guarantee. Do you offer a satisfaction guarantee? A re-clean within 24 hours if the client is unhappy? A refund policy? Whatever your standard is, the intake form is where the client learns about it. A client who discovers your re-clean policy after filing a complaint on Google is a client you have already lost.
Breakage and damage policy. Items get broken during cleaning. A vacuum cord catches a vase. A mop handle knocks a picture frame. A crew member scratches a floor. Your intake should establish: how are damage claims reported (within 24 hours, in writing), what is your liability policy (replacement value, repair, insurance claim), and what items of extraordinary value should the client secure before the appointment? A $3,000 crystal vase on a narrow hallway table is a risk your crew should know about before they roll a vacuum past it.
Insurance disclosure. Your intake should note that you carry general liability and workers' compensation insurance, and provide your policy information. Clients who are hiring a legitimate cleaning company — as opposed to an individual off a marketplace app — expect this, and documenting it at intake sets you apart.
Building the client relationship from the first form
A thorough intake form does more than collect data. It tells the client that you run a professional operation. When a prospective client fills out a form that asks about their floor types, their alarm code, and their chemical sensitivities, they understand that this company has cleaned enough homes to know what questions matter. That is the first step toward trust, and trust is what keeps a bi-weekly cleaning client on your schedule for three years instead of three months.
If you are building documentation across a multi-trade operation, the Trade Services Bundle includes cleaning services alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.
Cleaning service intake forms — $12.99 complete set
Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Property details, service type, frequency, access instructions, special surfaces, chemical restrictions, pricing structure, and breakage policy. Built for cleaning companies.
View Cleaning Service Forms