What Is the Difference Between Regular and Deep Office Cleaning?
The most common misconception about regular and deep office cleaning is that they are the same service delivered at different intensities — that a deep clean is simply a more thorough version of the regular clean. They are not. Regular cleaning and deep cleaning address entirely different categories of soiling, using different techniques, different equipment, and different time allowances. Understanding the distinction helps Melbourne office managers specify the right program, schedule deep cleans at the right intervals, and avoid the common mistake of expecting a regular clean to deliver deep-clean results.
The Core Difference — Scope and Purpose
Regular office cleaning is a maintenance program. Its purpose is to prevent the daily and weekly accumulation of soiling from reaching an unacceptable standard. It addresses the surfaces and zones that accumulate visible soiling within a single cleaning cycle — one day to one week depending on the frequency. A well-maintained regular program keeps the office consistently presentable throughout the week, every week.
Deep cleaning is a reset program. Its purpose is to address the soiling that accumulates over months in the zones deliberately excluded from the regular program — not because the regular cleaner overlooks them, but because they accumulate slowly enough that addressing them at every visit would be inefficient, and because some require specialist equipment or additional time that the regular visit budget does not allow. The entire office — including all excluded zones — is brought back to the baseline standard that the regular program then maintains.
The maintenance vs reset analogy: Think of regular cleaning as the oil change in a car service — essential, frequent, and keeps the car running reliably. Think of a deep clean as the major service — less frequent, more comprehensive, addresses the components that a routine oil change never touches. Both are necessary; neither substitutes for the other.
What Regular Office Cleaning Covers
What Deep Office Cleaning Covers
Deep cleaning covers everything in the regular program — plus the tasks that accumulate over months and are outside the regular scope.
Side-by-Side Task Comparison Table
| Task | Regular Program | Deep Clean |
|---|---|---|
| Bins emptied and relined | ✓ Every visit | ✓ Included |
| Carpet vacuuming | ✓ Every visit | ✓ Included |
| Floor mopping | ✓ Every visit | ✓ Included |
| Kitchen benchtops and sink | ✓ Every visit | ✓ Included |
| Bathroom cleaning | ✓ Every visit | ✓ Included |
| Skirting boards | ✓ Weekly | ✓ Included |
| Internal glass partitions | ✓ Weekly | ✓ Included |
| Blind slat wipe (all windows) | Monthly (some programs) | ✓ All windows |
| Refrigerator interior full clean | Monthly (some programs) | ✓ Full clean-out |
| High dusting above 2 metres | Monthly (some programs) | ✓ All areas |
| Interior window cleaning (all panes) | ✗ Not included | ✓ All panes |
| Behind and under appliances | ✗ Not included | ✓ All appliances |
| Range hood filter degreasing | ✗ Not included | ✓ Included |
| Full wall wash (all rooms) | ✗ Not included | ✓ All rooms |
| Grout scrubbing (floor and basin) | ✗ Not included | ✓ All grout |
| Exhaust fan internal clean | ✗ Not included | ✓ Included |
| Upholstery spot treatment (all seating) | ✗ Not included | ✓ Full treatment |
| Storeroom and server room floors | ✗ Not included | ✓ Included |
| Carpet extraction | ✗ Separate cost | Optional add-on |
When to Schedule a Deep Clean
Using a Deep Clean to Start a New Program Correctly
The single most effective way to ensure a new regular cleaning program delivers from the first visit is to schedule a deep clean immediately before it begins. This is a recommendation that professional commercial cleaning contractors make consistently — and for good reason.
An office that has been cleaned informally, cleaned by a budget contractor with a compressed scope, or left without professional cleaning for any period will have an accumulation of soiling in the zones excluded from regular programs. The behind-appliance floor in the kitchen, the exhaust fan internals, the blind slats, the upholstery on the office chairs — these areas may have been untouched for months or years. When a new regular program begins in this condition, the regular cleaner is confronted with two choices: address the backlog (taking significantly longer than the agreed visit time and disrupting the program's pricing basis) or maintain the current state of the excluded zones and deliver a program that never quite reaches the visual standard the client expects.
A pre-program deep clean eliminates this problem. The entire office — including all excluded zones — is brought to a clean baseline in a single comprehensive visit. The regular program then begins with everything at its best standard and maintains that standard going forward. This is the correct operational sequence for any new commercial cleaning program.
Cost and Time Comparison
Deep cleaning costs more and takes longer than a regular cleaning visit for the same premises, for the straightforward reason that it covers significantly more scope. For a standard Melbourne commercial office, a deep clean typically costs 3–5 times the price of a single regular visit and takes 3–5 times as long.
For a 150 sqm office on a daily cleaning program priced at approximately $75 per visit, a bi-annual deep clean would typically be priced at $350–$500 per visit depending on the scope confirmed at inspection. If carpet extraction is added, the price increases by approximately $3–$6 per square metre of carpeted area. The deep clean price should always be confirmed after a site inspection — not quoted from a floor area figure alone.
Budget for deep cleaning as part of your annual facilities management plan — not as a reactive expense when the office looks visibly neglected. An office manager who plans bi-annual deep cleans as a line item alongside regular cleaning, window cleaning, and carpet extraction is managing their facilities budget predictably. An office manager who reacts to visible neglect with an emergency deep clean is paying a higher price for the same service and experiencing unnecessary staff complaints in the interim.
The most cost-effective way to schedule deep cleaning is as part of a planned annual or bi-annual program with your regular cleaning contractor, rather than as a reactive one-off booking when the office visibly needs it. Planned deep cleans are typically priced 10–20% lower than reactive one-off requests because the contractor can schedule them efficiently alongside their regular program for the building.
Common Questions from Melbourne Office Managers
"Why does my office not look as clean as I expect after months of regular cleaning?" The most common answer is that the office has never had a deep clean — or has not had one for over a year. The regular program maintains the surfaces it covers, but the accumulated soiling in excluded zones gradually degrades the overall appearance of the office even when the regular scope is delivered perfectly. A single deep clean addresses this visible decline.
"My cleaning contractor has been doing monthly blind and fridge cleaning — is that the same as a deep clean?" No. Monthly tasks such as blind cleaning and refrigerator interior cleaning are the higher-frequency items included in some comprehensive regular programs. They are valuable, but they do not constitute a deep clean. The deep clean addresses the full set of excluded tasks simultaneously — including wall washing, exhaust fans, behind appliances, interior windows, grout scrubbing, and upholstery treatment — in a single visit that takes significantly longer than any regular visit. Monthly blind or fridge tasks within a regular program are part of good program management; they do not replace the periodic comprehensive reset of a proper deep clean.
"Can I schedule my deep clean for the same time as a regular visit?" Not effectively. Because a deep clean takes 3–5 times the duration of a standard regular visit, attempting to combine the two produces either an inadequate deep clean (compressed into a regular visit's time allowance) or a regular visit that is significantly delayed to accommodate the deep clean work. The most practical scheduling approach is to book the deep clean as a separate weekend or after-hours visit, then resume the regular program the following week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Regular & Deep Office Cleaning in Melbourne — Both Programs Available
Golden Star provides both regular commercial cleaning programs and bi-annual deep clean visits across Melbourne. Deep clean before your first regular visit recommended and available. Free site inspection. $20M insured.