TL;DR. Recurring house cleaning in Las Vegas and Henderson typically runs $100 to $250 per visit for a standard-sized home, depending on square footage, bathrooms, pets, and how often you book. Weekly visits usually cost less per visit than biweekly or monthly service, since less dirt has time to build up between cleans. Most cleaning companies price the first visit higher as an initial deep clean, then settle into a lower recurring rate after that, and whether that applies to your home gets sorted out during the initial quote. Because recurring plans are discounted compared to one-time cleans, locking in a schedule almost always beats booking cleanings one at a time.

If you’ve gotten a few quotes for recurring cleaning and they don’t seem to agree on anything, you’re not imagining it. Prices swing a lot from company to company, and most of that swing comes down to a handful of factors that are easy to check once you know what to look for. Here’s what actually moves the number, and how to tell a fair price from a quote that’s cutting corners.

What recurring house cleaning actually costs in Las Vegas and Henderson

For a standard-sized home on a recurring schedule, expect to pay somewhere between $100 and $250 per visit in the Las Vegas Valley. That’s a wide range on purpose. Home size, how often you book, and how much you’re asking the crew to cover in a single visit all pull the number in different directions, so there isn’t one “right” price the way there is for, say, an oil change.

Nationally, recurring house cleaning runs a similarly broad range once you account for home size and location, according to Angi. Las Vegas and Henderson pricing tends to land in the moderate middle of that national spread. Local labor and cost of living here don’t push prices toward the extremes you’d see in a place like San Francisco or Manhattan, but they’re not bargain-basement either. If a quote you’ve received sounds wildly outside $100 to $250 per visit for a typical home, that’s worth a second look before you book.

Think of this range as a starting point for comparing bids, not a fixed price tag. Once you know what pushes a quote up or down, you can look at two competing estimates and tell which one actually reflects your home instead of just guessing off the total. Avanti Green’s recurring house cleaning is priced the same way, built around your home’s specifics rather than a flat rate that ignores them.

What drives the price of a recurring clean

Square footage is the single biggest lever on your quote. A 3,500-square-foot home simply has more floor to vacuum, more counters to wipe, and more rooms to touch than an 1,800-square-foot condo, and that holds true even on a maintenance schedule where nothing’s especially dirty. More square footage means more time on-site, and time is what you’re paying for.

Bathrooms and kitchens carry more weight per room than a bedroom or hallway does. Grout, fixtures, and appliances take real hands-on time to clean properly, so a home with four bathrooms costs more than a home the same size with two, even if every other room is identical.

Pets change the math too. Extra fur, dander, and the additional vacuuming passes needed to actually get a home pet-free add time to every visit, which is why many companies, Avanti Green among them, apply a modest surcharge for households with dogs or cats. It’s not a penalty. It’s just reflecting the extra work.

Home condition matters more than people expect. A house that gets cleaned every week or two stays in a rhythm, so each visit moves fast. A home that’s gone months between cleanings, or one where clutter has to get moved before a surface can even be wiped, takes longer, and the price follows the time.

Finally, add-ons push the number up from whatever your standard visit costs. Interior windows, the inside of the fridge or oven, and baseboards cleaned by hand aren’t part of a typical recurring visit, and most companies price them separately. At Avanti Green, that scope gets worked out on the onboarding call before your first visit, so you know exactly what’s included and what costs extra before anyone shows up. If you want a fuller picture of what a standard recurring visit does and doesn’t cover, that’s worth understanding before you compare quotes at all.

Square footage and bathroom count aren’t just intuition. HomeGuide’s pricing data shows the same two factors as the biggest drivers nationally, which tracks with what shows up in local quotes across the Valley.

How weekly, biweekly, and monthly pricing compare

Weekly cleaning usually costs the least per visit, and monthly cleaning usually costs the most per visit. That seems backwards until you think about what’s actually happening in the home between visits. A weekly clean is touching a house that was just cleaned seven days ago, so there’s less grime, less buildup, and less time needed per room. A monthly clean is walking into a full month of daily living, dust, cooking, and foot traffic, so it simply takes longer and costs more each time the crew shows up.

That relationship flips once you zoom out to total monthly spend. Weekly service means paying a lower rate four or five times a month, which adds up to more total dollars spent than a single, pricier monthly visit. Monthly service costs more per visit but happens far less often, so it’s usually the cheaper option in total. The question isn’t which price looks smaller. It’s which number actually matters for your budget: the amount per visit, or the amount you’re spending across the month.

Las Vegas throws its own variable into that decision. Desert dust settles fast here, especially with windows or doors that get opened regularly, and pets add their own layer on top of that. A home that would coast on monthly service in a milder climate might need biweekly visits here just to stay at the same standard, since more is accumulating between cleans than the schedule assumes.

Why your first visit costs more: the initial deep clean

If your first invoice, or your first month’s price, comes in a bit higher than the recurring rate you were quoted, that’s not a bait-and-switch. It’s standard practice. Many cleaning companies require an initial deep clean before recurring service starts, and that first visit is priced above what you’ll pay going forward. Whether an initial deep clean applies to your home is something that typically gets worked out during the quote itself, so there’s no surprise waiting on your first invoice.

The reason is straightforward. A maintenance visit assumes the home is already in decent shape and just needs upkeep. A deep clean handles what’s built up over time, things a quick recurring visit was never designed to tackle. Baseboards, built-up grime in corners, and detail work around fixtures all get addressed in that first pass, which resets the home to a baseline a recurring crew can actually maintain.

Once that reset happens, the price drops. The elevated first-visit cost is a one-time thing, not a preview of what every future visit will run. From the second visit on, you’re paying the standing recurring rate, and the crew’s job is to hold the home at the level the deep clean established rather than fight years of buildup every time.

How much that first visit costs still depends on where your home is starting from. A home that’s been cleaned regularly, just not by this particular company, needs less time in that initial deep clean than a home that hasn’t had a real cleaning in a year or more. At Avanti Green, that scope gets set on the onboarding call rather than eyeballed at the door, so the price reflects your actual home instead of a generic worst case. Understanding the difference between a one-time deep clean and ongoing recurring service makes the whole pricing structure click into place.

Hidden costs and upcharges to watch for in a quote

A quote that looks like the cheapest option on paper can end up being the most expensive booking once the extras show up. A few line items tend to catch people off guard:

  • Pet fees. Charged separately if they weren’t disclosed upfront, even though most companies build them into the base quote once they know pets are in the home.
  • Hard water or heavy scale charges. Las Vegas water is hard enough that soap scum and mineral buildup on fixtures can take real extra time to remove, and some companies bill that separately.
  • Same-day reschedule or cancellation fees. Standard at most companies, but the amount and the notice window vary enough to matter.
  • Add-ons billed as extras. Interior windows, inside the oven, or baseboards by hand, priced on top of the base visit rather than folded into it.

None of these are automatically red flags on their own. The problem is when a quote doesn’t mention them at all, and they show up on the invoice after the work’s already done. A per-visit price that looks noticeably lower than everything else you’ve been quoted is often a sign of a rushed clean, a rotating crew that never gets to know your home, or a scope that’s been quietly trimmed to hit that number.

Before you compare two quotes side by side, ask each company what’s included in the base price and what isn’t. That’s the only way to know you’re actually comparing the same job.

How to compare cleaning quotes apples-to-apples

Once you’ve got two or three quotes in hand, resist the urge to just look at the bottom-line number. Match scope first. Is one company including baseboards while the other charges extra for them? Match frequency next, since a weekly quote and a monthly quote were never going to land on the same number. Then ask about crew consistency, because a company that sends the same one or two people to your home every time is a different experience than one that rotates whoever’s available that day, even if the price on paper looks identical.

If you want a price built around your actual home instead of a generic estimate, request a quote and we’ll walk you through exactly what’s included before you book anything.

Claudia Meneses

Claudia Meneses is the Founder and CEO of Avanti Green Eco Cleaning, the first eco-friendly cleaning company in Las Vegas, which she launched in 2011. Over more than a decade she has grown it into a full-service, Green Seal-certified operation serving residential and commercial clients across Las Vegas and Henderson, including the VIP lounge at Harry Reid International Airport. A Stanford Latino Business Action Network graduate, she built the business around non-toxic products that are safe for clients with allergies and asthma, their families, and their pets. Her expertise spans the full range of cleaning work, from eco-friendly home cleaning to carpet care, pressure washing, and floor restoration.