Complete Deep Cleaning Guide
Everything you need to know about deep cleaning your home, from when to do it and what's involved, to whether you should DIY or hire professionals. Based on thousands of deep cleans across Long Island.
What is deep cleaning?
Deep cleaning goes beyond regular maintenance cleaning to address the dirt, grime, and buildup that accumulates over time in hidden and hard-to-reach areas. While regular cleaning keeps surfaces tidy, deep cleaning tackles grease behind appliances, mineral deposits on fixtures, dust in vents, grime on baseboards, and thorough sanitization throughout. Most homes need a deep clean every 3-6 months, though move-in/out situations, post-construction, or homes with heavy use may need it more often.
Signs Your Home Needs a Deep Clean
Visible buildup on kitchen cabinets, range hoods, or around appliances despite regular cleaning
Hard water stains on fixtures, shower glass, and tile that regular cleaning doesn't remove
Dust accumulation on ceiling fans, light fixtures, vents, and top of cabinets
Grimy baseboards and door frames that haven't been wiped in months
Lingering odors from garbage disposals, drains, or areas you can't pinpoint
Allergies acting up indoors or visible dust when sunlight hits certain areas
What's Covered in This Guide
What Deep Cleaning Covers
Deep cleaning addresses areas that regular maintenance cleaning skips. Here's what a thorough deep clean includes.
Kitchen Deep Clean
Inside and behind appliances, degreasing cabinets, cleaning range hood filters, scrubbing grout, sanitizing sink and disposal, cleaning inside drawers.
Bathroom Deep Clean
Hard water stain removal, grout cleaning, thorough toilet cleaning including base and hinges, behind and under fixtures, exhaust fan cleaning.
Living Areas
Baseboards, door frames, light switches, ceiling fans, air vents, under and behind furniture, window tracks, detailed dusting of all surfaces.
Bedrooms
Under beds, inside closet floors, ceiling fan blades, window sills and tracks, behind furniture, detailed dusting of all surfaces and decor.
Often Skipped Areas
Tops of cabinets and doors, inside light fixtures, behind toilets, garbage can interiors, inside microwaves, refrigerator coils, and more.
Floors Done Right
Moving furniture to vacuum underneath, thorough edge vacuuming, detailed mopping including corners and under appliances, baseboard wiping.
How to Approach a Deep Clean
Work smarter by following the order professional cleaners use. This prevents re-cleaning surfaces and saves hours.
Declutter First
Clear counters, pick up items, and get everything off the floor before you start cleaning. You can't deep clean around clutter.
Apply Products That Need Dwell Time
Spray toilet bowl cleaner, oven cleaner, and degreasers first. Let them work while you tackle other tasks.
Work Top to Bottom, Room by Room
Start with ceiling fans and work down to floors. Dust and debris fall, so clean high surfaces first.
Kitchen and Bathrooms Get Most Attention
These rooms have the most buildup. Plan to spend 60-70% of your deep cleaning time in kitchens and bathrooms.
Save Floors for Last
Everything ends up on the floor during deep cleaning. Vacuum and mop only after everything else is done.
Detailed Deep Cleaning Resources
These guides break down specific aspects of deep cleaning, from room-by-room checklists to understanding when your home actually needs a deep clean versus regular maintenance.
Complete Deep Cleaning Checklist
Room-by-room checklist covering every surface, appliance, and overlooked area. Print it, check it off, and know you haven't missed anything.
View ChecklistHow Often Should You Deep Clean?
Factors that determine the right deep cleaning frequency for your home, from household size to pets to seasonal considerations.
Read GuideHow to Compare Deep Cleaning vs. Regular Cleaning
Understanding what separates a deep clean from your weekly routine, and why both matter for a healthy home.
Read GuideWhat Professional Cleaners Look For
Behind and under appliances is where we find the most buildup. Refrigerators and stoves collect dust, crumbs, and grease that homeowners never see until we move them.
Baseboards and door frames reveal how long since the last deep clean. They collect dust constantly but rarely get wiped during regular cleaning.
Hard water buildup is especially common in Long Island homes. We see it around every faucet, on shower glass, and inside dishwashers. Addressing it early prevents permanent etching.
Range hood filters and exhaust fans get forgotten until they're caked with grease or dust. Both affect air quality and should be addressed in every deep clean.
Grout in high-traffic areas shows wear patterns that reveal where cleaning is needed most. Kitchen and bathroom grout often needs targeted attention beyond regular mopping.
DIY Deep Cleaning vs. Hiring Professionals
Both approaches work. The right choice depends on your situation, time, and what your home needs.
DIY Deep Cleaning
- Home is regularly maintained and doesn't have heavy buildup
- You have a full day available to dedicate to the job
- You want to save money and don't mind the physical work
- Seasonal deep clean as part of regular home care
- You can spread the work over several days if needed
Hire Professionals
- Move-in or move-out cleaning with deadline pressure
- Post-construction dust and debris throughout home
- Heavy buildup that needs professional-grade products
- Pre-event or hosting preparation with limited time
- You'd rather spend your time on other priorities
Deep Cleaning FAQs
How often should I deep clean my home?
Most homes benefit from a deep clean every 3-6 months. However, high-traffic households, homes with pets, or allergy-sensitive residents may need quarterly deep cleaning. Between deep cleans, regular weekly maintenance keeps things manageable.
What's the difference between regular cleaning and deep cleaning?
Regular cleaning maintains surface cleanliness: wiping counters, vacuuming floors, cleaning bathrooms. Deep cleaning goes further by addressing hidden dirt, grease buildup, mineral deposits, and areas that don't get touched weekly. It includes inside appliances, behind furniture, baseboards, vents, and detailed scrubbing.
How long does a deep clean take?
A full deep clean typically takes 4-8 hours for a 2-3 bedroom home when done by one person. Professional teams can complete it faster. Factors include home size, current condition, and whether you're tackling everything at once or spreading it across several days.
Can I deep clean my home myself or should I hire professionals?
DIY deep cleaning works well if you have time, proper supplies, and your home is regularly maintained. Hiring professionals makes more sense for move-in/move-out situations, post-construction, heavy buildup, or when you simply don't have a full day to dedicate to the job.
What's included in a professional deep cleaning?
Professional deep cleaning typically covers: detailed kitchen cleaning including inside appliances and cabinet fronts, thorough bathroom scrubbing with grout and hard water treatment, baseboard and vent cleaning, interior window cleaning, thorough vacuuming and mopping, and attention to overlooked areas like door frames and light fixtures.
Explore More Cleaning Guides
Need Help With Your Deep Clean?
Long Island Maids provides professional deep cleaning services across Nassau and Suffolk County. Our teams handle everything from seasonal refreshes to heavy-duty move-out cleans.
Serving Nassau County, Suffolk County, and the Hamptons.
Serving Long Island since 2013 — Nassau and Suffolk County
Shannon Xerri
Owner & Founder, Long Island Maids
Shannon founded Long Island Maids in 2013 and has built a team that's completed thousands of deep cleans across Nassau and Suffolk County. This guide reflects the techniques and insights developed from real experience in Long Island homes.