Post-construction cleaning in The Bronx: what to know
The Bronx is dominated by large pre-war apartment buildings, especially along the Grand Concourse — interconnected basements, shared trash rooms and aging plumbing drive heavy mouse, rat and German-cockroach pressure.
Busy commercial corridors like Fordham Road and the borough's restaurant density feed rodents into surrounding residential blocks.
High-density apartment living makes bed bug spread between units a constant risk, and 'water bugs' from shared plumbing are common in older buildings.
How much does post-construction cleaning cost in The Bronx?
$0.15–$0.80
Per sqft (national). NYC per-job examples run $300–$600+. Labor for punch-list/partial re-cleans: $25–$75/hr. Example: ~$1,500–$3,000 for a 5,000 sqft space at $0.30–$0.60/sqft.
Tier-2 NYC industry sources cite the Bronx and Staten Island as generally the most price-competitive boroughs for pest control, though this is directional signal from industry blogs, not an independently verified figure.
Market range — not our quote
This is a market range synthesised from published cost guides — not a quote from this provider. The actual price depends on an in-person or photo-based inspection.
Phase-specific per-sqft breakdown (rough/touch-up/final) is from a single industry-blog aggregation, not a major consumer cost-guide (Angi/HomeAdvisor); treat the phase splits as directional, not authoritative.
What drives the price
- Cleaning phase (rough vs. touch-up vs. final)
- Ceiling height / debris volume
- Residential vs. commercial scope
- Site conditions and finish level
Signs you need post-construction cleaning
- A renovation or build has just finished (or is finishing) and the space is covered in fine dust and debris
- You've tried cleaning it yourself and the dust keeps resettling within a day or two
- You need the space move-in or occupancy ready on a specific date after contractors finish
- Dust is visibly coming out of HVAC vents when the system runs after a renovation
- A contractor's scope didn't include final cleaning, or their 'broom clean' isn't sufficient for actual occupancy
How we treat post-construction cleaning in The Bronx
Construction and renovation dust is not the same problem as everyday household dust, and treating it that way is the most common mistake people make trying to clean it themselves. Drywall dust, sawdust and masonry dust are extremely fine — fine enough to pass through standard vacuum filtration and settle into every crevice, on top of cabinets, inside drawers left open during work, and into HVAC vents and return air ducts, from which it recirculates through the space for days after the visible mess looks gone. Wiping surfaces without proper HEPA-filtered vacuuming first just moves the dust around and re-settles it.
The job genuinely happens in phases, and skipping one leaves the space looking clean before it actually is. A rough clean happens while trades are still wrapping up — bagging construction debris, sweeping bulk material, removing protective floor coverings and plastic sheeting — done to make the space walkable and safe, not spotless. The final clean happens once all construction work has physically stopped: HEPA vacuuming of every surface including tops of cabinets and door frames, detailed cleaning of windows and window tracks (which trap an enormous amount of fine dust from nearby sanding or cutting), light fixtures, vents, and every horizontal and vertical surface reachable in the space. A touch-up clean three to five days later catches the dust that was still settling out of the air and off less-obvious surfaces when the final clean happened — this step is what separates a job that stays clean from one that looks freshly dusty again within a week.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of The Bronx and the surrounding The Bronx area — including Grand Concourse, Yankee Stadium, Bronx Zoo, Fordham Road — across ZIP codes 10451, 10452, 10453, 10456, 10457, 10458.