Is a Cleaning Business Profitable? Free Calculator
Starting a cleaning business sounds easy: low startup costs, steady demand, and you're your own boss. But many owners discover they're working long hours for less than minimum wage after expenses. This calculator shows your real hourly wage — not your revenue — and tells you exactly what's holding you back.
Your Numbers
Advanced
❌ Don't do this yet. At these numbers, this business would earn you just $51.8k/year — that's $25/hour for your time. There are fundamental problems that need fixing first.
Stuck on cash: You'll hit $-2,544 — a negative cash balance — before you break even. You need at least $3.5k more in startup capital to survive the ramp.
Key Numbers
What If...
Move the sliders to see how changes affect your earnings.
Cash Over 24 Months
Frequently asked questions
How much does a cleaning business owner make?+
A residential cleaning business owner typically nets between $25,000-$60,000 per year after expenses. Income depends heavily on price per job ($120-$200 typical), number of jobs per week, and fixed costs like insurance and transportation. Many owners discover they're earning less per hour than a regular job — which is exactly what this calculator helps you see before you start.
How much does it cost to start a cleaning business?+
A residential cleaning business can start for $2,000-$5,000. Basic costs: supplies and equipment ($300-$500), transportation ($500-$2,000), insurance ($300-$600/year), licenses and permits ($100-$500), and initial marketing ($500-$1,500). The low barrier to entry is why competition is fierce.
What is a good profit margin for a cleaning business?+
Most cleaning businesses have high gross margins (70-85%) because variable costs are mainly cleaning supplies and transportation. However, net margins are much lower (10-25%) after accounting for fixed costs like insurance, vehicle maintenance, and marketing. The key is getting enough jobs to cover fixed costs — see the 'breakeven volume' in the calculator above.
This is an estimate based on the numbers you entered, not investment or tax advice. Consult a CPA or financial advisor for your specific situation.
Cleaning Business Profitability — Industry Overview
The residential and commercial cleaning industry in the US generates over $65 billion annually (IBISWorld OD4254, 2026). It's a fragmented market where the vast majority of businesses are solo operators or small teams with fewer than 5 employees. The low barrier to entry — startup costs of $2,000-$5,000 — attracts thousands of new operators every year, but most don't last beyond their first year.
A typical cleaning business operates on high gross margins (70-85%) because the main direct costs are cleaning supplies and transportation. However, the hidden killer is capacity: you can only clean so many houses per week before you run out of time. Most solo operators max out at 8-12 jobs per week when factoring in travel time between jobs, which means revenue is capped by your personal capacity rather than demand.
The typical cleaning business owner earns between $25,000-$60,000/year after expenses — often less than they'd make in a regular job. The difference between a profitable cleaning business and one that's just a job-that-costs-money-to-do comes down to three things: pricing discipline (charging $150+ per job), route density (minimizing unpaid travel time between jobs), and fixed cost control (not overspending on insurance, software, and equipment before revenue justifies it).
Typical Cost Structure for a Cleaning Business
| Cost Category | Monthly Range | % of Revenue | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cleaning supplies | $100-$300 | 5-10% | Chemicals, cloths, gloves, trash bags, PPE |
| Transportation | $200-$500 | 8-12% | Fuel, vehicle maintenance, insurance, depreciation |
| Insurance | $25-$60 | 2-4% | General liability ($300-$600/yr) |
| Marketing | $100-$500 | 5-10% | Ads, flyers, website |
| Software & admin | $30-$100 | 2-4% | Scheduling, invoicing, phone |
| Owner compensation | $2,000-$5,000 | 50-70% | What's left — your actual income |
Why Cleaning Businesses Fail
Underpricing
New operators underprice to win clients, then discover $100/job leaves nothing after costs. Use the what-if slider in the calculator above to see how a $20 price increase affects your income.
Unpaid time
Travel, quoting, supply runs add 10-15 unpaid hours/week. Include these in your hours-per-week input to see your true hourly wage.
Growing too fast
More clients doesn't always mean more profit. Adding staff adds overhead. See our break-even calculator.
Related Tools & Guides
Jobs per month needed to cover costs.
Margin per job and total profitability.
What coverage you need and what it costs.
Maximize deductions as a service business owner.
Cash buffer for seasonal slow periods.
Business structure that saves on taxes.
Industry data: IBISWorld OD4254 (2026), SBA Office of Advocacy.