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How Much Does a House Cleaner Cost in Los Angeles in 2026? Real USD Rates & How to Hire
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How Much Does a House Cleaner Cost in Los Angeles in 2026? Real USD Rates & How to Hire

Los Angeles house cleaning runs about $30–$50 per hour per cleaner in 2026, with a standard recurring visit landing near $150–$350. Here's what drives the price, how to hire someone reliable, and how to find cleaning work.

CQD New Gen12 July 2026

Wondering what a house cleaner actually costs in Los Angeles right now, and how to find one you can trust? This guide gives you real 2026 dollar figures, the factors that move the price, and simple steps to hire — or to get hired if you clean for a living.

TL;DR: In 2026 a house cleaner in LA runs roughly $30–$50 per hour per cleaner, or about $150–$350 for a standard recurring visit. Whether you're hiring help or looking for cleaning work, it starts in the same place — free to post, no commission.

Key facts

  • Hourly rate (LA): commonly $30–$50 per hour per cleaner, with the wider market ranging $25–$80/hour depending on service and home. (Angi)
  • Entry-level starting rates: the average starting cost sits near $24/hour as of mid-2026. (Care.com)
  • Standard recurring visit: most insured cleans land at $150–$350 per visit, depending on size and frequency. (Maid VIP)
  • US national average: $45–$50/hour per cleaner, or about $120–$280 per standard visit. (HomeGuide)
  • Deep clean: $200–$500+; move-out clean: $250–$600. (HomeGuide)
  • LA pricing runs about 14% above the national average, driven by higher wages and cost of living.

What you'll actually pay in Los Angeles

For a routine clean of a typical LA apartment or two-bed home, expect $150–$250 for a standard visit, or roughly $30–$50 per hour if you're billed hourly. Larger homes in the hills or on the Westside push toward the top of that range and beyond.

One-off jobs cost more per visit than a recurring plan. Weekly or biweekly service almost always earns a lower rate than a single deep clean, because the home stays easier to maintain.

What drives the price up or down

  • Size and layout: more rooms, more bathrooms, and stairs all add time.
  • Type of clean: standard vs. deep vs. move-out. A deep clean can be double a standard visit.
  • Frequency: recurring plans are cheaper per visit than one-time bookings.
  • Condition: heavy build-up, pet hair, or post-renovation dust means more labor.
  • Independent vs. agency: independents often charge less per hour, while agencies bundle insurance, vetting, and cover if someone's sick — you're paying for reliability.
  • Extras: inside-oven, inside-fridge, interior windows, and laundry are usually add-ons.

How to hire a reliable cleaner in Los Angeles

  1. Write a clear brief. Home size, number of bathrooms, frequency, and any must-do extras (oven, windows, pet hair).
  2. Post the job for free. Describe the work and your budget, and let vetted local cleaners reach out to you.
  3. Compare a few quotes. Look at rate, what's included, and whether supplies are provided.
  4. Check reviews and references. Ask about experience with homes like yours.
  5. Start with a trial clean. One session tells you more than any profile. If it's a fit, lock in a recurring slot.
  6. Agree the details in writing: scope, price, cancellation, and access.

Hiring a short-let or Airbnb cleaner

Running a short-let in LA? You need someone reliable for fast turnovers between guests, often with linen changes and restocking. Look for cleaners who explicitly offer turnover cleaning, can work to a checklist, and are flexible on same-day timing. Agree a per-turnover flat rate rather than hourly so your costs stay predictable across bookings.

Looking for cleaning work in Los Angeles?

Demand for reliable cleaners is strong across LA, and you don't need an agency taking a cut. On CQD New Gen, cleaners keep 100% of what they earn — there's no commission on your jobs. Build a profile, set your rates, and respond to local job posts directly. Homeowners and short-let hosts post work every week; posting is free for them, so there's a steady stream of real jobs to reply to.

Whether you're hiring help or hunting for work, it starts in the same place — free to post, no commission, and built around a trusted community of cleaners and clients.

www.cqdnewgen.ai

FAQ

How much does a house cleaner cost per hour in Los Angeles in 2026?

Commonly $30–$50 per hour per cleaner, with the wider market spanning $25–$80/hour. Independents can start lower (around $24/hour), while agencies charge more for insurance and vetting.

What's a fair price for a standard clean in LA?

Most standard recurring visits land between $150 and $350, depending on home size, condition, and frequency.

Is it cheaper to book recurring cleaning?

Yes. Weekly or biweekly plans almost always cost less per visit than a one-time clean, because the home is easier to maintain and cleaners can work faster.

How do I find a reliable cleaner without paying agency fees?

Post your job for free on a marketplace like CQD New Gen, compare quotes from local cleaners, check reviews, and start with a trial clean before committing to a recurring slot.

Do cleaners pay commission on CQD New Gen?

No. Cleaners keep 100% of what they earn with no commission, and clients can post cleaning jobs for free — always.

Ready to put this into practice?

Build Your Profile — Free