Last Updated: July 2026

Commercial Cleaning for Class B & C Buildings in New York City

Commercial Cleaning in New York City typically costs between $0.20-$0.50 and $0.12-$0.30 per square foot, depending on building size, cleaning frequency, and service scope.

Finding reliable commercial cleaning vendors in NYC's competitive commercial real estate market is challenging. Tenants demand spotless spaces, landlords need cost control, and property managers juggle multiple buildings across five boroughs. CleanQuote connects you with pre-vetted vendors who understand Class B and C office requirements, mixed-use complexity, and the dense neighborhoods where your portfolio sits. Get competing quotes in 24 hours—no sales calls, no long contracts.

Starting at

$1,000-$2,500/mo

Coverage

15+ Areas

Response

Within 24hrs

Providers

100% Verified

See how we vet →

Free & no obligation · Takes about 2 minutes · Quotes within 24 hours

Commercial Cleaning Market Snapshot

New York City, NY Market at a Glance

Reviewed July 2026

16 sources · High confidence

Cost range
$0.18–$0.35per sq ft / month
Typical monthly
$1,000-$2,500small facility / mo
Confidence
Highsource-weighted
Coverage
15+areas served

NYC commercial cleaning rates rank among the highest in the U.S., reflecting elevated local wage levels, high-rise vertical logistics, and premium Class A standards. Range expressed as USD per square foot per month; benchmark estimate, not a quote.

New York has among the highest commercial cleaning labor costs in the nation: the NYC minimum wage is indexed to inflation and rising, and prevailing wage and benefit levels for commercial building cleaners are among the highest in the U.S.

What moves the price

  • Elevated local wage and benefit levels
  • High-rise vertical logistics & elevator dependency
  • Premium Class A cleanliness standards
  • Winter salt/slush mitigation
  • After-hours and multi-shift scheduling

Common facility types

Class A high-rise office towersHospitals & outpatient facilitiesUniversities & schoolsHotels & convention spaceTransit hubsLast-mile distribution warehousesFlagship retail

Local considerations

  • NYC minimum wage is indexed to inflation and rising (New York State Department of Labor)
  • Prevailing commercial-cleaning wage and benefit levels are among the highest in the U.S.
  • Manhattan CBD congestion pricing (2025) affects service-vehicle access and scheduling costs
Sources & methodology (16)

High confidence. Primarily government and industry-report sources, recently verified. Ranges reflect commercial cleaning and related commercial programs in the New York City market and are expressed in USD per square foot per month. Verify current pricing with a facility-specific quote.

  • CBRE ResearchIndustry report · source
  • CBRE ResearchIndustry report · source
  • Commercial Cleaning Intelligence BenchmarkBenchmark data
  • Crain's New York BusinessNews · source
  • Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA)Government · source
  • New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC)Government · source
  • New York State Department of LaborGovernment · source
  • NOAA / National Weather ServiceGovernment · source
  • NYC Department of City PlanningGovernment · source
  • NYC Mayor’s Office of Climate & Environmental JusticeGovernment · source
  • Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY)Industry report · source
  • The Port Authority of New York & New JerseyGovernment · source
  • U.S. Bureau of Economic AnalysisGovernment · source
  • U.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsGovernment · source
  • U.S. Census BureauGovernment · source
  • U.S. Census BureauGovernment · source

Ask CleanQuote AI how these numbers apply to your facility

Commercial Intelligence

What Commercial Cleaning actually costs — and how to verify it

Grounded pricing, staffing, and compliance context you can reproduce with our calculators and check against recognized industry standards.

Pricing

Commercial Cleaning Pricing

Typical range
$0.05–$0.25 per sq ft

Actual cost depends on facility size, frequency, scope, and local labor rates. Open the calculator to model your facility, then compare real quotes.

See full pricing
Calculator

Commercial Cleaning Cost Calculator

What does commercial cleaning cost per month for my facility?
Open calculator
Staffing

Staffing & Labor

Model
Production-rate based
Basis
Sq ft × frequency

Convert any facility’s size and frequency into a defensible labor budget and crew size.

Learn more
Authority

Standards & Compliance

  • ISSAISSA Cleaning Standards & CIMS CertificationAll commercial facilities, Janitorial contractors
  • APPAAPPA Custodial Staffing Guidelines (Levels 1–5)Education, Commercial office
  • OSHAOSHA Workplace Safety StandardsHealthcare, Manufacturing
Standards & sources

How to Vet a Commercial Cleaning Provider in New York City

Before you sign, use this buyer checklist. Each question surfaces the answers that separate a reliable, insured, accountable provider from a risky one — the same due diligence CleanQuote runs when verifying vendors.

Insurance & liability

  • Will you add us as an "additional insured" on your general liability policy and send a Certificate of Insurance (COI)?

    Additional-insured status means their policy responds first if their crew causes damage or injury on your site — being only a "certificate holder" does not give you that protection.

    Red flag: They can only list you as a certificate holder, or hesitate to send a COI.

  • What are your general liability limits, and do you carry workers’ compensation and a janitorial bond?

    Look for at least $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate, active workers’ comp (so a crew injury is not your liability), and a bond that covers theft.

    Red flag: Limits below $1M, lapsed workers’ comp, or no bonding.

Workforce & screening

  • Are cleaners W-2 employees or 1099 subcontractors, and do you run background checks and verify work authorization (E-Verify)?

    W-2 employees mean the company carries payroll taxes, training, and supervision. Background checks and E-Verify reduce theft, liability, and compliance risk for after-hours building access.

    Red flag: An all-1099 crew with no screening or documented training program.

  • Who supervises the crew, and how is training documented?

    A named supervisor and a written training program are what separate consistent quality from turnover-driven inconsistency.

    Red flag: No on-site supervision and no training records.

Track record & certification

  • Can you share references for facilities like ours, and are you ISSA CIMS certified?

    References in your facility type prove relevant experience. ISSA’s CIMS (Cleaning Industry Management Standard) certification signals mature management systems and quality processes.

    Red flag: No references in your vertical, or vague, unverifiable claims.

  • What is your client retention and average account tenure?

    High retention is the clearest signal that a provider actually delivers — cleaning is a relationship business, and churn hides service problems.

    Red flag: Evasive answers or a portfolio of only very new accounts.

Scope, pricing & quality

  • Can I see a detailed scope of work and your quality-inspection cadence?

    A written SOW (tasks, frequencies, areas) plus scheduled inspections and reporting is what makes quality measurable instead of a matter of opinion.

    Red flag: A one-line quote with no task list and no QA process.

  • How is pricing calculated, and how do you handle communication and issue response?

    Transparent pricing (per square foot or documented labor hours) and a guaranteed response time let you compare quotes fairly and hold the provider accountable.

    Red flag: A flat number with no basis, or no clear point of contact.

CleanQuote pre-screens providers on insurance, screening, and track record, so the vendors you compare in New York City have already cleared these checks.

Ask CleanQuote AI about Commercial Cleaning in New York City

Get instant, grounded answers on pricing, frequency, staffing, and standards for your specific facility — then turn the conversation into quotes.

Ask CleanQuote AI

Grounded in this page — pricing, standards, staffing, and providers

Ask about Commercial Cleaning — pricing, cleaning standards, staffing, or how to compare providers. I'll give you a grounded answer using CleanQuote's benchmarks and calculators, then connect you with the team when you're ready.

Estimates are labor-budget ranges, not quotes. A CleanQuote specialist follows up on facility-specific requests.

How CleanQuote Works

Get matched with verified commercial cleaning vendors in three simple steps.

1

Tell us about your facility

Share your location, square footage, service type, and cleaning frequency.

2

Get matched with qualified vendors

We connect you with vetted commercial cleaning companies that fit your needs.

3

Compare and choose

Review multiple quotes, compare options, and select the best fit.

What's Included in Commercial Cleaning

Professional commercial cleaning providers in New York City typically include these services:

Dusting all surfaces and fixtures
Vacuuming carpets and rugs
Mopping hard floors
Emptying trash and recycling
Cleaning and sanitizing restrooms
Wiping down door handles and light switches
Lobby and reception area cleaning
Break room and kitchen sanitization
Window and glass cleaning (interior)
Floor polishing and maintenance

Most New York City commercial cleaning programs include daily or weekly service covering all common areas, restrooms, and workspaces with options for specialty services like floor care and window cleaning.

NYC Commercial Cleaning Costs: What to Expect

Commercial cleaning in NYC costs $1,000-$2,500–$8,000+ per month for most facilities, with per-square-foot rates ranging from $0.12-$0.30 to $0.20-$0.50.

Labor costs in NYC are among the highest in the country. For Class B and C buildings, efficient scoping and right-sized programs matter—overpaying for unnecessary services erodes margins. Here are the key factors:

Facility size and layout
Cleaning frequency
Type of facility
Restroom and common area volume
Day porter vs night cleaning
Floor care and specialty services

The best way to control costs is to compare multiple quotes from vendors who understand Class B and C building operations.

Small Office
1,000-5,000 sq ft

$1,000-$2,500

per month

$0.20-$0.50 per sq ft

MOST COMMON
Medium Business
5,000-20,000 sq ft

$3,000-$8,000

per month

$0.15-$0.40 per sq ft

Large Facility
20,000+ sq ft

$8,000+

per month

$0.12-$0.30 per sq ft

For most NYC buildings, the right cleaning plan balances cost, frequency, and consistent service quality tailored to your building class and tenant expectations.

Building Types We Serve Across NYC

Our vetted commercial cleaning vendors specialize in these property types across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx:

The most common building types for commercial cleaning in NYC include Class B and C office buildings, mixed-use properties, and multi-tenant commercial spaces.

Class B Office Buildings
Class C Office Buildings
Mixed-Use Properties
Medical Offices
Retail Storefronts
Property Management Portfolios
Co-Working Spaces
Small Commercial Buildings

Each industry has specific cleaning requirements—healthcare needs compliance-ready protocols, hospitality requires high-appearance standards, and industrial facilities need specialized floor care.

Why New York City Businesses Choose Local Cleaning Providers

The New York City commercial cleaning market has unique characteristics that affect service quality, pricing, and provider availability.

Local Market Factors

  • Providers familiar with New York City building codes and regulations
  • Understanding of local labor markets and prevailing wages
  • Quick response times for Manhattan and surrounding areas
  • Established relationships with local property managers

Provider Selection Tips

  • Request references from New York City-area clients
  • Verify insurance coverage for NY operations
  • Ask about backup staffing for your New York City location
  • Compare at least 3 local quotes before deciding

Commercial Cleaning Coverage Across NYC

We connect you with vendors serving Class B and C buildings across all five boroughs and surrounding areas:

ManhattanBrooklynQueensBronxStaten IslandMidtownDowntownUpper East SideUpper West SideFinancial DistrictLong Island CityWilliamsburgHarlemSoHoChelsea

Commercial Cleaning Resources for New York City

Pricing Guide
Transparent New York City commercial cleaning pricing. Learn cost factors, facility size pricing, frequency impact, and ROI.
Learn More
Industries
Industry-specific commercial cleaning solutions in New York City. Healthcare, tech, retail, finance, and more.
Learn More
Vendor Selection
Guide to selecting the right commercial cleaning provider in New York City. What to look for, questions to ask, and comparison tips.
Learn More

How to Choose the Right Cleaning Company

The best commercial cleaning vendors have at least 3 years of experience, carry $1M+ in liability insurance, perform background checks on staff, and provide dedicated account management with clear communication.

Not all vendors are the same. Look for:

Experience in your industry
Clear scope and expectations
Proper insurance and compliance
Strong communication
Reliable staffing

CleanQuote connects you with vendors experienced in NYC Class B and C building operations.

Buyer's Guide

New York City Commercial Cleaning: What Buyers Should Know

Commercial cleaning is recurring, contracted facility cleaning for offices, retail, and mixed-use buildings, typically priced per square foot per month and held to standard through inspection-based quality assurance.

Why commercial cleaning is different in New York City

New York City is the largest and most complex commercial cleaning market in the United States. While office demand is recalibrating around flight-to-quality post-pandemic, an enormous healthcare, hospitality, education, and transit base — plus fast-growing last-mile logistics — sustains deep, premium, recurring cleaning demand.

  • Class A office competition raising cleanliness standards
  • Medical-grade compliance across dense hospital systems
  • High-traffic lobby, elevator, and restroom maintenance
  • Local Law 97-driven building upgrades
  • Winter reactive/entryway cleaning
  • Flight-to-quality Class A cleanliness competition
  • Very large healthcare and hospital footprint
  • Tourism and hospitality turnover
  • Last-mile warehouse growth
  • Return-to-office cleanliness expectations
Operational realities to expect

What NYC facilities managers should plan for when scoping and scheduling service.

  • Winter salt, slush & ice-melt tracking. De-icing salt and slush are tracked into high-traffic lobbies and elevators, requiring intensive entryway matting, floor care, and finish protection.
  • High-rise vertical foot traffic. Dense multi-tenant towers concentrate foot traffic, elevators, and restrooms, driving high-frequency day-porter and restroom service.
  • Summer heat & humidity. Humidity raises mold/odor risk and increases HVAC and hard-floor maintenance needs.
  • Nor’easters & heavy snow events. Storm events demand rapid entryway, glass, and slip-hazard cleanup to keep buildings safe and open.
Facilities served across New York City

Serving buildings across Midtown Manhattan, Financial District / Downtown, Hudson Yards, Long Island City, Downtown Brooklyn and the wider five-borough market.

Healthcare & medical

One of the largest hospital markets in the world — Northwell, Mount Sinai, NYU Langone, NYC Health + Hospitals, Montefiore, and Memorial Sloan Kettering operate dense multi-campus portfolios.

Education & campuses

CUNY (the largest urban university system in the U.S.), NYU, Columbia, and Fordham create very large multi-building campus cleaning portfolios.

Hospitality & hotels

Tens of millions of annual visitors, one of the largest hotel inventories in the U.S., Broadway, and the Javits Center generate high-turnover hospitality cleaning demand.

Industrial

Land-constrained but active: designated Industrial Business Zones across the outer boroughs host food, light-manufacturing, and service facilities.

Warehouse & last-mile

Last-mile e-commerce distribution is expanding rapidly in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens (and across the Hudson in northern NJ) to serve the dense consumer base.

Manufacturing

Niche and light manufacturing (food production, apparel, and maker space such as the Brooklyn Navy Yard) rather than heavy industry.

Technology & life sciences

"Silicon Alley" plus growing life sciences make tech one of the fastest-expanding office-using sectors, raising Class A cleanliness expectations.

Common facility types

  • Class A high-rise office towers
  • Hospitals & outpatient facilities
  • Universities & schools
  • Hotels & convention space
  • Transit hubs
  • Last-mile distribution warehouses
  • Flagship retail
What affects service planning & execution
  • Extremely dense last-mile delivery market; Manhattan Central Business District congestion pricing (2025) and tight loading access shape service routing and after-hours scheduling.
  • Winter salt/slush entryway programs (Dec-Mar)
  • Cold-and-flu season disinfection (fall/winter)
  • Spring pollen and post-winter deep cleaning
  • Peak tourism/hospitality turnover (year-round, holiday spikes)
  • NYC minimum wage is indexed to inflation and rising (New York State Department of Labor)
  • Prevailing commercial-cleaning wage and benefit levels are among the highest in the U.S.
  • Manhattan CBD congestion pricing (2025) affects service-vehicle access and scheduling costs
Is it right for your facility?
  • A fit for any tenant- or customer-facing commercial space — offices, retail, and mixed-use buildings under one recurring contract.
  • Best when you need one accountable provider across multiple building types rather than separate vendors per space.
When it's typically recommended
  • When cleanliness affects tenant retention, customer impression, or brand reputation.
  • When in-house or fragmented cleaning is producing inconsistent results across sites or shifts.
  • At lease-up, rebranding, or portfolio consolidation, when standards need to be reset uniformly.
Problems it solves
  • Inconsistent quality across buildings, floors, and shifts.
  • No single point of accountability when something is missed.
  • Reactive, complaint-driven cleaning instead of a documented standard.
What's commonly included
  • Floors, restrooms, common areas, trash, and high-touch surfaces on a recurring route
  • Periodic deep cleaning: interior glass, detailed dusting, hard-floor and carpet care
  • Optional add-ons: day porter, window cleaning, floor refinishing
Typical service frequency
  • 2–5 cleanings per week is typical; foot traffic and fixture density push it higher
  • High-traffic entrances and restrooms often justify daily or multiple-daily attention
Multi-Use Facility Planning

The hub service most often covers buildings where several space types share one contract. Planning zones separately — instead of applying one standard everywhere — is what keeps a mixed portfolio both clean and cost-efficient.

  • Zone the building by use type (lobby, office, retail, back-of-house) and set a distinct standard and cadence per zone
  • Right-size frequency to each zone: customer-facing space earns daily attention while low-traffic storage can flex to weekly
  • Coordinate one route across zones so shared equipment and a single supervisor cover the whole building without duplicated trips
  • Use color-coded microfiber to move cleanly between restrooms, food areas, and general space in a multi-use footprint
How pricing is built

Understanding what moves the number helps you read any quote critically. Actual pricing depends on your facility — request quotes for exact figures.

Primary cost drivers

  • Total cleanable square footage and how much of it is customer-facing
  • Cleaning frequency per week — the single largest lever on a recurring contract
  • Fixture density (restrooms, kitchens, glass) that adds labor-minutes per visit

Local NYC cost factors

  • Elevated local wage and benefit levels
  • High-rise vertical logistics & elevator dependency
  • Premium Class A cleanliness standards
  • Winter salt/slush mitigation
  • After-hours and multi-shift scheduling

Scope variables

  • Whether periodic deep cleaning (glass, floors, carpets) is bundled or billed separately
  • Day-porter or daytime coverage added on top of the recurring route
  • Consumables (paper, soap, liners) supplied by the provider vs. the facility

Facility characteristics

  • Building type mix — retail and mixed-use carry higher standards than back-office space
  • Floor types, which dictate equipment and refinishing cycles
  • Number of sites and whether they share a single account team

Specialty add-ons

  • Floor refinishing and carpet extraction as periodic line items
  • Green-cleaning programs where tenants require them

Frequency impact

Cost scales roughly with visits per week; moving from twice-weekly to daily is the biggest step-change on the invoice

Questions to ask providers
  • What insurance and bonding limits do you carry, and can you provide a certificate?
  • Can you share references from facilities of my type and size in this area?
  • How is quality inspected, and how often will I see documented results?
  • What is your supervision model and how are missed tasks escalated?
  • How do you handle staff turnover and backup coverage?
  • What is included in the recurring scope versus billed as a periodic add-on?
  • How are change requests and complaints handled, and what is your response time?
  • What is your onboarding and transition plan from our current arrangement?

Commercial cleaning: quick answers

Get Cleaning Quotes in New York City

Compare vetted providers and save time sourcing vendors

Get Quotes

NYC Commercial Cleaning FAQs

Commercial Cleaning in NYC costs $1,000-$2,500–$8,000+/month. Most buildings need cleaning 3–5 times per week. Response time for quotes is typically within 24 hours.

Common questions about commercial cleaning for Class B and C buildings across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx

Recent Activity

  • Office cleaning request in Manhattan
  • Janitorial services search in Austin
  • Warehouse cleaning inquiry in Dallas
  • Medical facility cleaning request in Miami

Everything You Need to Know About Commercial Cleaning in New York City

Explore detailed guides covering pricing, services, industry requirements, and how to select the right vendor for your New York City property.

Overview

General overview of commercial cleaning in New York City, pricing, and service options

View Overview

Pricing & Costs

Detailed pricing breakdown, cost factors, facility type rates, and budget optimization for New York City

View Pricing

By Industry

Industry-specific requirements, compliance standards, and specialized solutions for healthcare, hospitality, corporate, and more

View Industries

Choosing a Vendor

Vendor selection criteria, evaluation checklist, insurance requirements, and how to compare providers in New York City

View Guide

Other Cleaning Services for NYC Buildings

Explore more professional cleaning options for your NYC office building, mixed-use property, or commercial space

Related Cleaning Services in New York City

Explore other professional cleaning services available in the New York City area

Commercial Cleaning in New York City: explore more

Compare nearby markets, related services, and the benchmarks and guides that help you scope, price, and hire with confidence.

Commercial Cleaning in the Greater NYC Area

Also serving these locations in the NYC metro area

commercial cleaning in Jersey Citycommercial cleaning in Hobokencommercial cleaning in Newarkcommercial cleaning in Yonkerscommercial cleaning in White Plainscommercial cleaning in Long Island

Ready to Find Reliable NYC Cleaning Vendors?

Get quotes from vetted commercial cleaning vendors who understand Class B and C building operations across NYC. Compare pricing, check references, and hire with confidence.