House cleaning in Manhattan: what to know
Manhattan is the densest borough in the country, and its housing stock runs from the early-1900s tenements of the Lower East Side, East Village and Chinatown to grand pre-war apartment buildings and co-ops on the Upper East and Upper West Sides. Thin walls, shared stairwells, original plumbing risers and deep baseboard gaps give German cockroaches and mice constant routes between the island's tightly packed units.
Travel density makes Manhattan a bed bug hotspot: hotels, short-term rentals, frequent sublets and a steady stream of international visitors mean even spotless luxury co-ops face introductions through luggage and second-hand furniture, not poor hygiene. In multi-unit buildings a single untreated apartment rarely ends the problem, because bed bugs move along shared walls and risers.
The borough's restaurant and transit density — Times Square, Penn Station, Midtown food corridors and the subway beneath them — sustains one of the city's largest rat populations, feeding rodent pressure out into adjacent residential blocks, while green edges along Central Park, Riverside Park and the Hudson add seasonal ant and occasional-invader pressure to lower-floor and garden apartments.
How much does residential cleaning cost in Manhattan?
$120–$280
Per visit (national). NYC per-visit examples run $100–$400+ depending on apartment size. Hourly: $25–$90 (US national); NYC starting average ~$23.51/hr (Care.com). Per-sqft: $0.10–$0.20 national, ~$0.10–$0.30 NYC (Hey Homero).
| Studio | $100–$150 per visit (NYC) |
| One bedroom | $120–$180 per visit (NYC) |
| Two bedroom | $150–$250 per visit (NYC) |
| Three bedroom+ | $200–$400 per visit (NYC, often 400+) |
NYC pest-control pricing tends to run higher in Manhattan than in Brooklyn or Queens — tier-2 NYC industry sources cite roughly a 10–20% premium, attributed to building-access logistics (walk-ups, elevators, doorman/board approval) and labour costs. This is directional signal from industry blogs, not an independently verified figure — confirm with a quote for your specific building.
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.
Per-visit flat rates vary widely by cleaning company pricing model; hourly vs flat-rate quotes are not always apples-to-apples.
What drives the price
- Home/apartment size (studio vs 3BR+)
- Cleaning frequency (weekly cheaper per-visit than one-off)
- NYC building requirements (COI, doorman/elevator coordination)
- Number of bedrooms/bathrooms
Signs you need house cleaning
- You want a consistent, professional standard for kitchen and bathroom hygiene without doing it yourself weekly
- Life circumstances (a new baby, a demanding work schedule, a health issue) have made regular upkeep hard to keep on top of
- You're hosting, and want the home guest-ready without a full deep clean
- You've relied on inconsistent help before and want a documented, repeatable checklist
- You're comparing a one-time clean against ongoing service and want the difference explained plainly
How we treat house cleaning in Manhattan
Most people searching for 'house cleaning' actually mean one of three different services, and knowing which one you need changes the quote, the time on-site and the checklist. Residential cleaning, in the standard sense, is the maintenance clean of a home you're currently living in — the kitchen and bathrooms get sanitised, floors are vacuumed and mopped, surfaces are dusted, beds may be made, trash goes out. It is not a top-to-bottom deep clean (that's a separate service for a first visit or a periodic reset), and it's not the empty-apartment clean tied to a lease turnover.
In a New York City apartment, the honest scoping conversation happens before the first visit: how many rooms, whether the kitchen has heavy grease buildup, how many bathrooms, whether there are pets, and — critically for the city — how the cleaner gets in and gets equipment up. A fifth-floor walk-up with no elevator changes the time and effort of carrying a vacuum, mop bucket and supply caddy compared with a doorman building with a service elevator. We scope the visit to the real layout, not a generic square-footage estimate.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Manhattan and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Central Park, Times Square, Empire State Building, Wall Street, Grand Central Terminal, the High Line — across ZIP codes 10001, 10002, 10009, 10011, 10014, 10016, 10019, 10025, 10027, 10128.