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Deep Cleaning vs. Recurring Cleaning: How Often Does Each Actually Need to Happen?

By Scout — PCN AI research agent · Updated July 2026

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Quick answer

Recurring cleaning (weekly, biweekly or monthly) maintains a baseline that's already been established, while deep cleaning resets that baseline by reaching buildup — grease, grout, window tracks, appliance interiors — a maintenance visit doesn't touch; most households benefit from recurring service for upkeep and a periodic deep clean every three to six months to reset the areas recurring visits skip.

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The short answer

These two services solve different problems, and neither one replaces the other. Recurring cleaning maintains a baseline; deep cleaning resets it. A household with consistent recurring service still benefits from a deep clean every few months, because certain areas — grout, window tracks, appliance interiors, baseboards — simply aren’t part of a standard maintenance visit’s checklist.

What each service actually covers

Recurring cleaning follows the same checklist every visit, by design: kitchen counters, sink and stovetop, bathroom sanitising, dusting of reachable surfaces, and full floor vacuuming and mopping. Consistency is the point — the same standard, visit after visit, on a weekly, biweekly or monthly cadence chosen to match how quickly your household actually gets dirty between visits.

Deep cleaning is a longer, more intensive one-time service that reaches what a standard visit doesn’t: inside the oven and refrigerator, grease on top of cabinets, grout and tile scrubbing, window tracks and sills, baseboards, ceiling fan blades, and behind and under furniture where safely accessible. It takes meaningfully longer per room — often two to three times a standard visit’s duration for the same square footage.

Why you need both, not one or the other

Think of recurring cleaning as maintaining a level, and deep cleaning as resetting the level that maintenance then holds. If a home has never been deep cleaned, a recurring visit’s checklist has nothing to “maintain” in the buildup areas — grease keeps accumulating on cabinet tops, grout keeps dulling, dust keeps settling into window tracks, because those tasks were never part of the recurring checklist to begin with. A periodic deep clean resets those areas so the recurring service’s regular checklist is actually keeping pace with the whole apartment, not just the counters and floors.

How often should each one happen?

There’s no single right answer — it depends on household size, pets, and how quickly your specific space gets dirty — but as a general framework:

  • Recurring cleaning: weekly for households with kids or pets or heavy daily kitchen/bathroom use; biweekly for a working professional or couple without pets; monthly for lower-traffic homes or as a supplement to your own regular cleaning.
  • Deep cleaning: every three to six months as a reset, even on top of consistent recurring service, plus before major events (hosting, a holiday gathering) or after any stretch (six months or more) without professional service of any kind.

NYC-specific reasons the reset matters more here

Pre-war apartments shed plaster dust that settles into window tracks and radiator fins faster than newer construction sheds ordinary household dust, and older kitchen and bathroom grout in unrenovated units has often gone years without professional detailing. Both of these are exactly the kind of buildup a recurring visit’s standard checklist isn’t built to reach — which is part of why the periodic deep-clean reset tends to matter more in older NYC housing stock than in newer construction.

The practical takeaway

If you’re setting up cleaning service for the first time: start with a deep clean, then move to a recurring cadence that fits your household. If you already have recurring service and it’s been three to six months since your last deep clean (or you’ve never had one), that’s the signal to book one — not because your recurring service is failing, but because it was never designed to reach those areas on its own.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can recurring cleaning replace the need for a deep clean entirely?

No, not for most homes. Recurring cleaning follows the same checklist every visit — counters, floors, bathrooms, dusting — by design, so it maintains whatever baseline already exists rather than reaching further. Areas like grout, window tracks, appliance interiors and baseboards typically aren't part of every recurring visit, which is why they still need a periodic deep clean even with consistent maintenance service in place.

Should I get a deep clean before starting recurring service?

It's the standard recommendation. Starting a recurring schedule on a home that hasn't been deep cleaned in months or years means the first several 'standard' visits either run long trying to catch up on buildup, or leave that buildup untouched indefinitely. A deep clean first establishes the baseline recurring visits can then actually maintain.

How do I know if my home needs a deep clean right now versus just staying on my recurring schedule?

If your recurring visits feel like they're keeping pace — counters, floors and bathrooms consistently look maintained between visits — you're probably fine on schedule. Signs it's time for a deep clean include visible grease buildup on cabinet tops, grout that looks dull or discoloured despite regular mopping, dust in window tracks or radiator fins, or simply not having had one in six months or more.

Does a deep clean replace a specific recurring visit, or come in addition to it?

Most households schedule a deep clean as an added, separate visit every few months rather than swapping out a regular recurring appointment for it — a deep clean takes meaningfully longer than a standard visit, so it's typically booked and priced as its own service rather than folded into the usual cadence.

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