Trying to work out what cleaning services in Dublin should cost is one of those things that feels like it should take five minutes and ends up taking considerably longer. You get quotes that vary by fifty percent and you can’t easily tell whether the cheap ones are a bargain or a warning. You see packages described in similar language that turn out to mean quite different things when you actually look at what’s included. And you find out after the fact that the rate you were quoted didn’t include VAT, which it probably should have.

Let me try to give you an honest picture of how this market works and what you’re actually comparing when you’re comparing quotes.

 

The Legal Floor and Why It Matters

The SIPTU Employment Regulation Order for the contract cleaning sector, which came into effect in October 2025, sets the minimum hourly rate for cleaners in Ireland at €14.80 per hour from January 2026. This is the legal minimum. Any cleaning service quoting you below this rate is either paying their staff illegally, misrepresenting the rate somehow, or structuring costs in a way that doesn’t add up honestly. None of those are situations you want to be involved in.

The practical implication is that the floor for what you should expect to pay per hour for a professional cleaning services Dublin booking is higher than some of the figures you’ll see quoted online. When you’re quoted €15 or €16 per hour, there is essentially no margin left for travel, supplies, insurance, or any administrative overhead. Something is being cut somewhere.

What Dublin Rates Actually Look Like in 2026

For residential domestic cleaning in Dublin, the realistic range is €20 to €25 per hour from a professional company. Independent self-employed cleaners tend to come in at the lower end of that range or slightly below it, around €18 to €22 per hour, depending on their experience and how in-demand they are. Dublin rates run 10 to 20 percent higher than those in Cork, Galway, or Limerick, which is a genuine reflection of travel costs, parking, cost of living, and demand rather than arbitrary pricing.

A full day of cleaning with a professional cleaning company in Dublin, which works out to roughly eight hours, runs somewhere in the €160 to €220 range. With an independent cleaner it’s more like €110 to €140. The gap between these figures isn’t just about the margin; it also reflects what each provides. A professional company covers its own insurance, provides backup cover if the usual cleaner is sick, and can be held to account through a formal complaints process. An independent cleaner is often just one person, which is fine when it works and less fine when they cancel at short notice and you have no recourse.

For context on specific job types, a one-off deep clean of a typical three-bedroom Dublin house runs €150 to €300, depending on the condition of the property and the scope of what’s included. End-of-tenancy cleaning tends to sit at the higher end of this range or above it, because the standard required is higher and the work is typically more intensive than a maintenance clean of a well-kept home.

How the Pricing Models Differ

There are three main ways cleaning services in Dublin price their work, and which one makes sense depends on what you’re actually booking.

Hourly rate is the most common model for regular domestic cleaning. You pay for the time the cleaner spends in your home. This is straightforward and easy to compare across providers. The thing to watch is whether the quoted rate is the actual rate or whether it excludes VAT, which VAT-registered cleaning companies charge at 13.5 percent. A quote of €22 per hour from a VAT-registered company and a quote of €22 per hour from a non-registered independent cleaner are not the same thing once you run the numbers. Always ask.

Flat fee pricing is more common for one-off jobs with a defined scope, deep cleans, end-of-tenancy cleans, post-move cleans. You agree a price for the completed job rather than paying by the hour. For well-defined jobs this often delivers better value because the cleaner is incentivised to work efficiently rather than stretch the time, and you have a fixed cost to budget against. For jobs where the scope is likely to shift, hourly is usually safer.

Package pricing bundles a defined scope into a fixed price, typically expressed as a property-size tier. One-bedroom apartment, two-bedroom house, three-bedroom house, and so on. These are convenient because they give you an immediate sense of cost without detailed negotiation. The thing to check is what specifically is included, because the same package name from two different providers can cover quite different work.

What Regular Booking Gets You

If you’re thinking about a weekly or fortnightly arrangement rather than one-off cleaning, the economics shift in your favour. Most cleaning services in Dublin offer lower hourly rates for regular bookings than for one-offs, usually in the range of €1 to €3 per hour less, because the predictability of regular work has value to the provider and they pass some of that value on.

Regular booking also tends to produce better cleaning outcomes over time for a reason that’s easy to overlook. A cleaner who comes to the same property every two weeks learns it. They know which corners accumulate most, which surfaces need specific attention, what the household routine is and how to work around it. The tenth clean in a regular arrangement is almost always better than the first, and that quality improvement is part of what you’re paying for in a regular arrangement even if it’s not listed as a feature.

The trade-off is commitment. Many cleaning services in Dublin require some minimum notice period to end a regular arrangement, usually two to four weeks. This is reasonable from a business planning perspective but worth understanding before you sign up, particularly if your schedule or circumstances might change.

The VAT Situation

This trips people up more than it should. Cleaning services in Ireland are subject to VAT at 13.5 percent. VAT-registered businesses, which includes most established professional cleaning companies, add this to their prices. They should tell you upfront whether the quoted price includes VAT. If they don’t, ask.

Independent cleaners who earn below the €42,500 annual VAT registration threshold don’t charge VAT, which makes their headline rate look more competitive. For residential customers who can’t reclaim VAT, this is a real saving. For businesses that can reclaim VAT, the comparison is different: a VAT-registered company’s invoice is recoverable in a way that an unregistered cleaner’s receipt isn’t.

What to Watch Out For

A few things that come up regularly when people compare cleaning services Dublin quotes and end up confused.

Quotes that don’t specify whether they include supplies. Professional companies generally include their own cleaning products. Independent cleaners often expect you to provide them, or charge additionally. A quote that assumes you’re supplying products and one that includes professional-grade commercial chemistry aren’t directly comparable.

Time estimates that assume ideal conditions. A quote for cleaning a three-bedroom house in three hours assumes a property that’s already reasonably tidy and maintained, not one that hasn’t had a proper clean in six months. If the property is in genuinely poor condition, the time required, and therefore the cost, will be higher than the standard package suggests.

Minimum booking times. Many providers have a minimum booking of two to three hours even for smaller properties. If you only need an hour’s work done, the minimum booking means you’re paying for more time than you’ll use. Understanding this before you book prevents the frustration of feeling overcharged for a short job.

The cleaning services Dublin market is large enough to offer real choice and varied enough to require some care in comparing what you’re actually getting across different quotes. The rates above are realistic for 2026. The pricing models are the main ones you’ll encounter. And if the numbers seem too good to be true, they usually are.

 

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Olivia is a contributing writer at CEOColumn.com, where she explores leadership strategies, business innovation, and entrepreneurial insights shaping today’s corporate world. With a background in business journalism and a passion for executive storytelling, Olivia delivers sharp, thought-provoking content that inspires CEOs, founders, and aspiring leaders alike. When she’s not writing, Olivia enjoys analyzing emerging business trends and mentoring young professionals in the startup ecosystem.

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