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How Much Does a House Cleaner Cost in the Czech Republic in 2026, and What Affects the Price

Profesionální úklid kuchyně v moderním bytě

The house cleaning price in the Czech Republic in 2026 usually lands somewhere around CZK 180 to 350 per hour for regular home cleaning, or roughly CZK 1,500 to 2,400 per visit for a smaller or mid-sized flat. One-off cleaning and deep cleaning cost more, often several thousand crowns. The final number shifts with the type of cleaning, the city, the size of the home, the condition of the space, and the exact scope of work. That is where most people get tripped up. Two similar-looking offers can mean very different results.

If you want a realistic estimate before you send a request, do not focus on one number in a price list. Look at the scope, the pricing model, and the small details around transport, supplies, and add-ons. This guide breaks down what regular and one-off cleaning usually costs in the Czech market, when an hourly rate makes sense, when a flat project price is safer, what is typically included, and how to compare offers without getting hit by annoying surprises later.

What affects the price of home cleaning

The house cleaning price is never about time alone. In practice, providers price the job based on a few variables at once. Size matters, of course, but so do frequency, the type of cleaning, the number of bathrooms, the kitchen, windows, ironing, laundry, and the general condition of the home.

Size of the flat or house

This is the obvious starting point. A tidy studio flat might take two or three hours. A larger 3-bedroom flat or a family house can take much longer. Still, square meters do not tell the whole story. A cluttered 55 m2 flat with one bathroom, a heavily used kitchen, and lots of surfaces can cost more than a more spacious flat that is maintained well.

I see people underestimate this all the time. They say, "It is only a 2+kk." Fine, but is it a calm, mostly clean 2+kk, or a busy flat with two kids, a dog, and a kitchen that has seen a week of frying? Same floor plan. Different job.

Regular cleaning versus one-off cleaning

Regular cleaning is usually cheaper per hour and easier to estimate. When someone comes every week or every other week, the home stays in a manageable condition. The cleaner also learns the routine. That saves time.

One-off cleaning is more uncertain. It often takes longer, includes more detail work, and may involve buildup that was not obvious from the first message or phone call. That is why many providers either raise the hourly rate for one-off jobs or switch to a custom project quote.

Regular cleaning, general cleaning, and deep cleaning are not the same thing

This is one of the biggest reasons people misread a cleaning service pricing page. Regular home cleaning usually covers dusting, vacuuming, mopping, bathroom basics, toilet cleaning, and a standard wipe-down of the kitchen. General cleaning and deep cleaning go further. Think oven cleaning, inside the fridge, limescale removal, greasy tiles, window frames, blinds, top surfaces on cupboards, and the less glamorous parts of a home that are easy to postpone.

So when one provider offers a home cleaning hourly rate and another shows a deep cleaning price of CZK 6,900, that is not a contradiction. It is usually a different service.

Number of bathrooms, kitchen work, windows, ironing, laundry, organization

Add-ons move the price fast. Common extra charges include:

  • window cleaning
  • oven cleaning
  • fridge cleaning
  • ironing
  • laundry and folding
  • changing bed linen
  • organization and decluttering
  • cleaning after pets

These extras matter because one company may include light ironing or bed changes in a regular visit, while another treats them as separate tasks. The headline price looks close. The real offer does not.

Level of dirt and time intensity

The condition of the home has a huge impact. Public Czech price examples make that fairly clear. Popelka, for example, lists CZK 500 per hour per worker for a general cleaning job in a normally dirty home, then adds surcharges for heavily soiled or extremely neglected spaces. That is a useful reality check. A neglected kitchen or badly scaled bathroom changes the economics of the job.

Location and accessibility

Prices in Prague and larger cities are usually higher than in smaller towns. According to a public pricing analysis published by Hlídačky.cz in December 2025, the average hourly cleaning rate on their marketplace was CZK 291 in Prague, CZK 227 in Brno, and CZK 189 in Ostrava. Their nationwide average came out at about CZK 218 per hour. That is not a universal price list for the whole country, but it is a strong market signal.

Accessibility matters too. Parking, travel time, and whether the cleaner needs to carry equipment into a building without a lift can all affect the quote.

Hourly rate versus flat project price

This sounds technical, but it matters a lot if you are booking with real money.

When hourly pricing works well

An hourly rate works best for regular visits with a fairly stable scope. You know the flat, the provider knows the routine, and both sides know what happens during a standard visit. This is common with independent cleaners and some cleaning companies.

The upside is flexibility. If you want to add ironing one week and skip it the next, hourly pricing can be practical.

The downside is obvious too. If you only agree on time and not on results, the cleaner may stop when the paid hours run out, even if you expected one more room to be done.

When a flat project price makes more sense

A flat price is usually the smarter option for one-off cleaning, move-in cleaning, after-renovation work, or deep cleaning. The provider estimates the job, sends a total figure, and you know the budget before the visit starts.

That can reduce tension on both sides. You are not watching the clock. The provider is not trying to defend every extra fifteen minutes.

How to avoid misunderstandings

Ask for the scope in plain language. Not vague marketing copy. A short checklist is enough. Does the quote include oven cleaning? Inside cabinets? Window frames? Blinds? Descaling in the bathroom? Bed linen change? If the provider uses hourly pricing, ask what can realistically be completed in the planned time.

Honestly, most pricing disputes start there. One side talks about time. The other side imagines results.

How much regular, general, and deep cleaning usually costs

The ranges below are based on public Czech pricing examples and market signals. They are not a guaranteed national price list.

| Service type | Typical 2026 range | Common pricing model | |---|---:|---| | Regular home cleaning | about CZK 180 to 350 per hour | hourly rate, often with a minimum visit length | | Regular cleaning for a smaller flat | about CZK 1,500 to 2,200 per visit | hourly or fixed visit price | | One-off standard cleaning | usually higher than regular cleaning, often CZK 220 to 400 per hour or a higher project quote | hourly or project-based | | General cleaning of a flat | often from CZK 5,000 upward | mostly flat project pricing | | Deep cleaning of a larger flat or house | commonly CZK 6,500 to 20,000+ | custom quote | | Windows, oven, fridge, ironing | often charged separately | add-on or separate service |

Public examples from the Czech market

  • Hlídačky.cz published a 2026 market overview with an average cleaning rate of CZK 218 per hour nationwide and strong differences by city.
  • TOP CLASS Service lists CZK 345 per hour for regular cleaning, with a minimum duration of 3.5 hours. Their post-renovation cleaning is listed at CZK 375 per hour, while transport for a vacuum and cleaning supplies can be charged separately.
  • Youklid lists regular cleaning from CZK 1,530 including VAT. Their published case examples include a 55 m2 Prague flat for CZK 1,530 at about 3 hours, a 74 m2 Brno flat for CZK 1,970 at about 4 hours, and an 82 m2 Prague flat for CZK 2,190 at around 4.5 hours with ironing.
  • For deep cleaning, Youklid shows examples such as CZK 6,900 for a 70 m2 flat in Brno and CZK 20,100 for a 220 m2 family house in Brno.
  • Popelka lists CZK 500 per hour per worker for general cleaning in a standard-condition home, a minimum order value of CZK 5,000, and an example of a 3+1 flat at CZK 7,500.

Three quick examples that explain price differences

Example 1: 2+kk flat in Prague, maintained regularly The client wants vacuuming, mopping, the bathroom, toilet, and a standard kitchen wipe-down every two weeks. No windows, no oven, no ironing. This is the kind of job where hourly pricing or a fixed visit price works well.

Example 2: Same size flat, same city, first visit after a long gap Now there is grease in the kitchen, limescale in the bathroom, pet hair everywhere, and the oven has clearly been ignored. The first visit will likely cost more. After that, a cheaper regular schedule may be possible.

Example 3: 3+1 flat in a smaller town, one-off general cleaning before move-in Here, asking only for the home cleaning hourly rate is not enough. A flat quote with transport, windows, bathroom details, and kitchen scope spelled out is usually safer.

Vacuuming a living room during regular cleaning

What to ask before you book

You do not need a long briefing document. A short, practical checklist is enough.

Questions worth asking

  • What is included in the quoted price?
  • Is this regular cleaning only, or does it include extras like the oven, fridge, or inside cabinets?
  • Are cleaning supplies and equipment included?
  • Is transport charged separately?
  • Is there a minimum visit length?
  • Is the first visit priced differently?
  • What happens if the home is much dirtier than expected?
  • What are the cancellation terms?
  • Will the same cleaner come regularly?
  • Is the service insured in case something is damaged?

That last point matters more than people think. A cheap quote feels less attractive if nobody can clearly explain what happens when something breaks.

What is usually included, and what is not

A regular cleaning visit often includes:

  • dusting reachable surfaces
  • vacuuming and mopping floors
  • bathroom and toilet cleaning
  • basic kitchen surface cleaning
  • emptying bins

Often not included by default:

  • window cleaning
  • deep oven and fridge cleaning
  • blinds
  • laundry and ironing
  • wardrobe organization
  • post-renovation cleaning
Bathroom detail cleaning with gloves and spray

How to compare offers without unpleasant surprises

The biggest mistake is comparing the apartment cleaning cost by hourly number alone. CZK 210 per hour can end up more expensive than CZK 320 per hour if the cheaper offer excludes transport, supplies, and half the tasks you assumed were included.

Compare these five things

  • Scope - what exactly is included.
  • Price type - is it a "from" price or a final price.
  • Supplies and transport - included or separate.
  • Communication - clear answers now usually mean fewer problems later.
  • Transparency - do you know who comes, how long it should take, and how complaints are handled.

A fair offer is not always the cheapest one. It is the one you can actually understand.

How to get a more accurate quote

Send the flat size, number of bathrooms, desired frequency, and a short list of extras. Photos of the kitchen and bathroom help a lot. Providers can then quote the real job instead of guessing from a vague sentence.

It also helps to say whether this is your first larger cleanup or the start of a regular arrangement. First visits are often more expensive. That is normal.

Client and cleaner reviewing the cleaning scope before service

Common mistakes when choosing a cleaning service

People usually make one of three mistakes. They chase the lowest rate, they never confirm the scope, or they assume every provider means the same thing by "deep cleaning." They do not.

Another common problem is the vague request. "I need someone to clean my flat" gets vague offers back. "2+kk, 55 m2, Prague 7, every two weeks, no windows, occasional ironing" gets much better responses.

The short version: what should you expect to pay?

If you want the simple answer, the house cleaning price in the Czech Republic in 2026 usually starts in the low hundreds of crowns per hour for regular work, with smaller flats often landing around CZK 1,500 to 2,200 per regular visit. Once you add deep cleaning, multiple bathrooms, windows, oven cleaning, ironing, or Prague pricing, the number climbs quickly.

The best way to avoid overpaying is to compare scope, not just the hourly rate. That is also where CistýKout becomes useful. Instead of choosing blindly by the lowest visible number, you can compare providers with more context around service range, communication, and fit for both one-off and regular cleaning.

If you are still deciding, it also helps to read a guide on how to choose a cleaning service, or browse relevant cleaning categories on CistýKout so you are comparing like with like.

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