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How to Pass Janitorial Inspections: Prep Checklist for Cleaning Companies

Last updated: March 20, 2026

TLDR

To pass janitorial inspections consistently: review contract scope and quality standards before every inspection cycle, build area-specific checklists your crew uses on every visit, conduct internal walk-throughs 24-48 hours before client visits, and follow up on any deficiencies in writing with a resolution timeline.

DEFINITION

Cleaning Verification
Documented proof that a client site was cleaned to the contracted standard. Can include timestamped photos, completed digital checklists, and GPS-confirmed crew check-ins. Cleaning verification is the evidence you produce when a client questions whether work was performed.

DEFINITION

Punch List
A list of specific deficiencies found during an inspection that need correction. Each item includes the area, the issue, and typically a deadline for resolution. Punch lists create accountability on both sides — the cleaning company knows what to fix, and the client has a written record of what was reported.

DEFINITION

Pass/Fail Threshold
The minimum score a site must receive to be considered passing an inspection. Some contracts define this numerically (e.g., 85% of checklist items must pass). Others use descriptive standards. Knowing the threshold before an inspection lets you prioritize which areas carry the most weight.

Why Inspections Feel High-Stakes

For commercial cleaning companies, inspections are contract renewal events in disguise. A client who walks their facility with you and sees documented quality scores is harder to lose than one who only hears from you when something goes wrong.

The operators who pass inspections consistently don’t have cleaner crews — they have better documentation and more systematic preparation.

Step 1: Review Contract Scope and Quality Standards

Most inspection failures happen because the cleaning company and the client have different expectations — and neither has looked at the contract since it was signed.

Before every scheduled inspection, read:

  • Scope of work: which areas and tasks are explicitly included
  • Frequency requirements: how often is each task supposed to happen?
  • Quality standards: if the contract references ISSA standards, a client-specific rubric, or measurable criteria, know what they are

If your contract doesn’t define quality standards, ask the client for their inspection form before they use it to evaluate you. Working from their form means you can prepare against the actual criteria.

Step 2: Build Area-Specific Checklists

Vague task lists produce vague results. “Clean the restroom” means different things to different crew members.

Effective checklists are specific enough that the result is either done or not done:

Restroom checklist example:

  • Disinfect toilet bowl, seat, and exterior (including flush handle)
  • Disinfect sink and faucet handles
  • Clean mirror (streak-free)
  • Wipe down all horizontal surfaces
  • Restock paper towels, toilet paper, and soap
  • Empty trash and replace liner
  • Mop floor (include behind toilet)
  • Check for odor before leaving

This level of specificity lets crew members self-inspect and lets you verify quickly during a walk-through.

Step 3: Train Crew on Photo Documentation

Photo documentation has two effects: it creates a timestamped record, and it changes crew behavior.

A cleaner who knows they have to photograph the restroom before clocking out will look at the restroom differently. The photo requirement is also the quality check.

For inspection-sensitive accounts, require photos of:

  • Every restroom (one per restroom)
  • Entry areas and glass
  • Kitchen or break room
  • Any area that has generated a complaint in the last 90 days

Store photos tied to the visit record. When a client says the entry glass wasn’t cleaned on a specific date, you pull the photo from that night.

Step 4: Internal Walk-Throughs Before Client Visits

The most reliable way to pass client inspections is to inspect yourself first, with enough time to fix problems.

“Enough time” means 24-48 hours minimum. A walk-through at 6pm the night before a 9am inspection gives you time to address deficiencies with the same night’s crew or a spot-clean crew first thing in the morning.

Walk the site the way the client will:

  • Enter from the main entrance — first impressions count
  • Check the most-used restrooms first
  • Look at floor transitions (doorways accumulate dirt)
  • Run your hand along window ledges and high shelves
  • Check supply stock in restrooms

Document what you find. If you find it, fix it. If you fix it, note it.

Step 5: Use a Scoring System

Scoring makes quality measurable and patterns visible. A simple three-level system:

  • Pass: area meets all standard checklist items
  • Minor deficiency: one or two missed items, not a sanitation issue
  • Major deficiency: sanitation failure, supply stockout, or contract standard not met

Track scores by area over multiple visits. An area that produces minor deficiencies consistently has a root cause — crew training, supply access, or task frequency. Patterns that show up in scores get fixed; patterns that only show up in complaints are already at the client’s level.

Step 6: Follow Up Deficiencies in Writing

When a deficiency is identified — yours or the client’s — document it:

  1. Area and specific issue
  2. Date found
  3. Root cause (if known)
  4. Corrective action taken
  5. Date corrective action was verified

If the client found the deficiency, send them a brief written response within 24 hours: what the issue was, what you did to correct it, and how you’re preventing recurrence. This is the professional response that keeps contracts.

“We’ll fix it” verbally is forgotten. A written response with a resolution date is a record that shows the account is managed.

Q&A

How do you prepare for a commercial cleaning inspection?

Review the contract scope and quality standards before the inspection date. Build area-specific checklists your crew completes every visit. Conduct your own walk-through 24-48 hours before the client visit. Fix any deficiencies before they arrive. Clients inspect what they can see — the entry, restrooms, and common areas first.

Q&A

Why do cleaning companies fail client inspections?

Most failures come from the cleaning company and client having different expectations — not from crews doing poor work. The contract scope was never reviewed, the quality standard was never defined in writing, or the crew was not trained to the specific checklist the client uses to score the site.

Q&A

What is the best way to document cleaning work for inspections?

Timestamped end-of-shift photos tied to each visit record. Require one photo per restroom, entry area, and kitchen at minimum. When a client claims a task was skipped on a specific date, you pull the photo from that visit. GPS-confirmed check-ins establish that the crew was physically on-site.

Q&A

How should a cleaning company respond to a failed inspection?

Respond in writing within 24 hours. Identify the specific deficiency, what corrective action was taken, and how recurrence is being prevented. A written response with a resolution date demonstrates the account is managed. Verbal assurances are forgotten; a written record protects the contract at renewal time.

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Want to learn more?

What do janitorial inspectors look for?
Client inspectors typically check restroom cleanliness and supply stock, floor cleanliness (no streaks, debris, or build-up), high-touch surfaces (door handles, light switches, elevator buttons), trash status, and odor. Medical and food-service facilities also check disinfection compliance and chemical labeling.
How often should I do internal quality walk-throughs?
At minimum, before any scheduled client inspection. For high-value accounts or accounts with a history of complaints, weekly internal walk-throughs are standard. New accounts should be walked weekly for the first 60-90 days.
What is ISSA's role in janitorial quality standards?
ISSA (the Worldwide Cleaning Industry Association) publishes cleaning time standards and quality benchmarks used across commercial cleaning. Some contracts reference ISSA standards directly. Familiarity with ISSA production rates and quality definitions gives you a credible baseline when clients challenge your work quality.
How do I handle a client who is never satisfied?
First, get their inspection criteria in writing. If they won't provide a specific standard, ask them to mark up the last inspection report with what they expect. Without a written standard, every inspection is subjective. If you're consistently meeting documented standards and still receiving complaints, that's a contract management conversation, not an operations problem.

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