Most offices look clean. The bins are emptied, the floors are vacuumed, and the surfaces get a quick wipe at the end of the day. That routine work matters, but it only reaches what you can see. Underneath it, in the carpet fibres, the air vents, the grout lines, and the high-touch spots nobody thinks about, grime builds up quietly until it starts to affect how people feel at work.
A deep clean is the periodic reset that clears out that hidden buildup. It is not a longer version of the daily routine. It uses different equipment, reaches different places, and is meant to restore the whole space rather than tidy the parts of it that are easy to see. The hard part for most managers is not deciding whether deep cleans matter. It is knowing when the space actually needs one.
This guide walks through eight clear signs that the time has come, shows how a deep clean differs from routine cleaning, explains how often most offices should schedule one, and covers what to look for when you bring in professional help.
Why office cleanliness is easy to underestimate
The gap between looking clean and being clean is wider than most people expect. A few well-documented findings put it in perspective.
| Finding | What the research shows | Source |
| Desks vs toilet seats | The average office desk carries roughly 400 times more bacteria than a toilet seat, about 5,015 germs per square inch. | Dr. Charles Gerba, University of Arizona |
| Indoor air quality | Indoor air is often two to five times more polluted than the air outside, and people spend about 90 percent of their time indoors. | U.S. Environmental Protection Agency |
| Routine disinfecting | Disinfecting high-touch surfaces cut illness-causing microbes on those surfaces by 99 percent or more. | Dr. Charles Gerba, University of Arizona |
None of this means your office is unsafe. It means surface tidiness and real hygiene are two different things, and routine cleaning is not built to close that gap on its own. The places that matter most for health, such as shared keyboards, phones, vents, and soft furnishings, are often the places a quick daily pass never reaches.
What’s really at stake when deep cleans get skipped
A clean office is not just about appearances, although appearances matter more than many businesses admit. The cost of letting buildup accumulate shows up in several ways at once, and most of them are easy to miss until they add up.
Health and attendance are the most direct. Shared surfaces and stale indoor air move germs and irritants through a team quickly, and a wave of avoidable sick days is expensive in both output and morale. Comfort matters too. People spend roughly 90 percent of their time indoors, so dusty air, musty carpets, and lingering odours quietly wear on focus and energy across a full workday.
Then there is the impression your space makes. Clients, candidates, and partners form a judgment about how a business is run within seconds of walking in, and a tired, slightly grubby office undercuts everything else you are trying to project. Finally, there is the building itself. Carpets, upholstery, and hard floors all last longer when embedded soil is removed regularly, so a deep clean is also a way of protecting the money you have already spent on the space.
8 signs it’s time for a deep clean
1. Sick days are climbing. When more of your team is out with colds or stomach bugs than usual, shared surfaces are often part of the story. Phones, keyboards, door handles, and breakroom counters pass germs between people all day, and routine wiping rarely keeps up. If illness seems to move through the office in waves, treat it as a prompt to reset the whole space rather than chase symptoms desk by desk.
2. The air feels stale or people are sneezing more. Dust, mould spores, and allergens collect in carpets, vents, and upholstery, then recirculate every time the system kicks on. If staff complain about stuffiness, headaches, or itchy eyes that ease up on weekends and worsen at their desks, your indoor air is worth a closer look. Air quality is one of the clearest cases where the problem is invisible until it is addressed.
3. High-touch surfaces look dull or grimy. Light switches, handles, elevator buttons, and shared desks develop a film over time that a daily wipe smears around rather than removes. When these spots start to look dingy or feel slightly tacky, the buildup has outpaced your routine. These are also the surfaces most responsible for passing germs, so the cosmetic problem and the hygiene problem tend to arrive together.
4. Carpets and upholstery have lost their colour. Traffic lanes that have gone grey, chairs with visible wear, and fabric that smells faintly musty are all signs that embedded soil has settled in below the surface. Vacuuming lifts only the top layer. Restoring colour and removing odour takes hot-water extraction or steam, which is squarely deep-clean territory rather than something a daily routine handles.
5. The kitchen or breakroom has a lingering smell. Odours that stick around after the trash is gone usually trace back to spills under appliances, crumbs in hard-to-reach corners, or a fridge that needs more than a quick wipe. Breakrooms are also where food and germs meet most often, which makes them a priority for a thorough clean even when the rest of the office looks fine.
6. Restrooms need more than a daily wipe. Hard-water stains, grout discolouration, and odours that return within hours of cleaning point to buildup that surface cleaning cannot reach. Restrooms are the first thing many visitors quietly judge and the easiest area to let slip, so persistent problems here are a strong signal that a deeper clean is overdue.
7. You’re coming off a renovation, move, or illness outbreak. Construction dust travels everywhere and settles into vents and fabrics, and a recent flu or stomach bug run through the office leaves germs on far more surfaces than a normal day. In both cases, a one-time deep clean resets the space before your normal routines resume, rather than spreading the problem around for weeks.
8. An important visit is on the calendar. A key client tour, an audit, an inspection, or a leadership visit is a practical reason to get ahead of the buildup. First impressions form fast, and a space that genuinely looks and smells clean signals that the details are handled. It is far easier to schedule a deep clean in advance than to scramble the day before.
Routine cleaning versus a deep clean
It helps to see the difference side by side. The two are not competitors. Routine work keeps the space functional between deep cleans, and deep cleans do the work routine cleaning is not equipped for.
| Aspect | Routine cleaning | Deep cleaning |
| Frequency | Daily or weekly | Quarterly, or a few times a year |
| Focus | Visible surfaces, trash, floors, restroom upkeep | Hidden buildup in grout, vents, carpets, upholstery, and behind furniture |
| Equipment | Standard supplies and vacuums | Specialized gear such as hot-water extractors, steam, and HEPA filtration |
| Goal | Keep the space tidy day to day | Reset the hygiene baseline of the whole space |
Thinking of them as two layers of the same system, rather than as a cheaper option and a more expensive option, makes it easier to budget for both and to know which one a given problem calls for.
How often should an office be deep cleaned?
There is no single rule, but a few sensible defaults cover most workplaces:
• Most offices benefit from a full deep clean every quarter.
• High-traffic or customer-facing spaces often move to monthly.
• Carpets and upholstery usually need professional cleaning once or twice a year.
• Restrooms and breakrooms may need deep attention more often than the rest of the office.
• After an outbreak, a renovation, or a move, schedule one right away rather than waiting for the next cycle.
Your own pace depends on headcount, foot traffic, the kind of work happening in the space, and the climate you operate in. Humid regions, for example, tend to push carpet and air-handling cleaning higher up the list. The signs described above are a more reliable guide than the calendar alone, so treat the schedule as a baseline and adjust when the space tells you to.
What a professional deep clean usually covers
A proper deep clean goes well beyond a longer version of the daily routine. To see how a structured commercial cleaning program approaches the work, you can take a look here. In practice, a thorough job usually includes work such as:
• Hot-water extraction or steam cleaning for carpets and upholstery.
• Detailed restroom work, including grout, fixtures, and disinfection.
• Vents, baseboards, blinds, and other spots that collect dust out of sight.
• High-touch surface disinfection across desks, handles, switches, and shared equipment.
• Behind and underneath furniture and appliances, where buildup hides.
What to look for in a cleaning partner
Not all commercial cleaning is the same, and the difference between a reliable partner and a revolving door of vendors usually comes down to a few practical things. Before you sign anything, it is worth checking that a provider offers:
• Proper insurance and background-checked, properly employed staff.
• Clear, written scopes so everyone knows exactly what is and is not included.
• Supervised crews and inspections, rather than results you have to chase.
• Flexible scheduling that works around your operations instead of disrupting them.
• References or reviews from businesses similar to yours.
A good partner makes the whole question of when to deep clean easier, because they build the right cadence into your program and flag the problem areas before they get out of hand.
When to bring in the pros
If two or three of the signs above sound familiar, your routine cleaning has reached its limit and a deep clean is overdue. The right time to call in help is before the buildup starts affecting comfort, health, or the impression your space makes, not after.
Professional commercial cleaners bring the equipment, the products, and the systematic approach that routine cleaning cannot match. Partnering with an experienced team like Impacttakes the guesswork out of scheduling and makes sure every part of your space, including the parts nobody sees, gets the attention it needs.
The bottom line
Routine cleaning keeps the lights looking on, but it was never meant to reach the buildup that quietly affects air quality, health, and the feel of a workspace. When sick days climb, the air goes stale, surfaces dull, restrooms resist cleaning, or a big visit looms, treat it as a signal rather than a one-off annoyance.
A well-timed deep clean protects your people, your impression, and the investment you have made in your space. Build it into your maintenance plan as a regular layer rather than an emergency, and the eight signs above will rarely have a chance to pile up in the first place.
