Moving day has a way of making every small job feel urgent. Then the property manager’s checklist lands in your inbox, and suddenly the big question is what does a bond clean include – and what will they actually inspect?
A bond clean is more than a standard tidy-up. It’s a detailed end-of-lease clean designed to return the property to an acceptable condition for final inspection, allowing for fair wear and tear. That means attention to the obvious areas, like floors and bathrooms, but also the places people often miss, such as skirting boards, light switches, rangehood filters and inside cupboards.
If you’re preparing to hand back a rental, it helps to know what is normally included, what may be treated as an extra, and where expectations can vary between properties.
What does a bond clean include in most rentals?
In most cases, a bond clean includes a top-to-bottom clean of the entire property interior. The goal is presentation and hygiene, but also inspection readiness. Property managers are usually looking for dust, grease, soap scum, marks, built-up grime and anything that suggests the property has not been properly reset for the next tenant.
A standard bond clean generally covers all major living areas, bedrooms, bathrooms, the kitchen and laundry. Cleaners will usually wipe surfaces, remove cobwebs, dust fittings within reach, clean doors and frames, vacuum and mop floors, and detail the wet areas. Kitchens and bathrooms tend to take the most time because they attract the heaviest build-up.
What’s included can still depend on the condition of the property and the quote you’ve accepted. A small unit that’s been well maintained will need less work than a large family home with years of built-up grime. That’s why reputable providers quote based on the property itself, not just the number of bedrooms.
Room-by-room bond cleaning checklist
Kitchen
The kitchen is usually the most heavily scrutinised area at inspection. A bond clean commonly includes cleaning the benchtops, splashback, sink, taps, cupboard fronts, drawers, shelves and the outside of appliances. Inside cupboards and drawers are also usually wiped out, especially if they’re empty and ready for handover.
The oven is a major part of most end-of-lease cleans, but this is also where confusion often starts. Some companies include a standard oven clean in their bond clean service, while others treat a heavily soiled oven as an additional charge. The cooktop, rangehood exterior and accessible filters are commonly cleaned as well. If there is built-up grease above the cupboards or on tiled surfaces, that should also be addressed.
Fridges and microwaves are only included if they are part of the lease and remaining at the property, or if you’ve specifically requested internal cleaning.
Bathrooms and toilets
Bathrooms need detail, not just a quick once-over. A proper bond clean usually includes scrubbing the shower, removing soap scum from glass and tiles, cleaning grout where possible, sanitising the toilet, and wiping down the vanity, basin, mirrors and fittings.
Exhaust fans, towel rails, shelving and skirting boards are often included if accessible. Mould can be a grey area. Light surface mould may come off during standard cleaning, but more severe mould caused by ventilation issues or long-term moisture may need specialist treatment and may not be fully removable.
Bedrooms and living areas
In bedrooms and general living spaces, the work is less intensive but no less important. Cleaners usually dust and wipe reachable surfaces, remove cobwebs, clean wardrobes and built-in shelves, wipe mirrors, vacuum carpets and mop hard floors.
Doors, door frames, handles, switches, power points and skirting boards are commonly included because they’re all areas property managers notice. Spot-cleaning walls may also be done where marks are minor. Full wall washing is usually separate, especially if there are scuffs, grease marks or nicotine residue throughout the property.
Laundry
The laundry is often small, but it can collect a surprising amount of dust and residue. A bond clean generally includes wiping cabinetry, cleaning the sink and taps, dusting surfaces and cleaning the floor. If there’s a dryer, trough cabinet or tiled splashback, those areas are usually cleaned too.
Floors, windows and general finishing details
Vacuuming and mopping throughout the property are standard inclusions. Internal windows are also commonly part of a bond clean, including glass, tracks and sills where accessible. Window coverings can vary. Venetian blinds often take extra time, while curtains are generally not washed unless requested and suitable for laundering.
Final presentation matters. That means rubbish removed from inside the property, surfaces left dry and streak-free where possible, and the home looking ready for inspection rather than merely lived in.
What may not be included automatically
This is the part tenants often find out too late. Even if a service is labelled end-of-lease or bond cleaning, not every provider includes every task by default.
Carpet steam cleaning is a common example. Many leases require it, particularly if pets were kept at the property, but it is often quoted separately. Exterior window cleaning may also be excluded, especially for upper-storey windows or difficult access. Wall washing, pressure cleaning, blind detailing, balcony cleaning, garage cleaning and rubbish removal from outside areas can all sit outside a base package.
Pest control is another separate service in many cases. If your lease requires flea treatment after having pets, that usually won’t be part of the cleaning service unless arranged in advance.
It also matters whether the property is furnished or vacant. A furnished property takes longer and may involve additional work around upholstery, under furniture and around stored items.
Why bond cleans vary from one property to another
Two rentals with the same floor plan can need very different levels of work. Condition is the biggest factor. A home that has had regular cleaning throughout the tenancy is usually more straightforward than one where grease, soap scum or dust have built up over time.
The age of the property also matters. Older homes may have stained grout, worn sealants, marked paintwork or older fittings that do not come up like new. A professional cleaner can improve presentation significantly, but cleaning does not reverse age or damage.
Then there’s the inspection standard of the managing agency. Some property managers are practical and focus on cleanliness overall. Others work line by line through a condition report and check every track, shelf and switch plate. That’s why experienced cleaners often ask for the agent’s checklist if one is available.
How to avoid surprises before the final inspection
The safest approach is to ask for a detailed scope before booking. Don’t rely on the phrase bond clean alone. Ask whether the quote includes the oven, inside windows, cupboards, skirting boards and any extras your lease specifically requires.
If carpet cleaning, pest control or exterior work is needed, organise it early so everything lines up before key return. Timing matters. Cleaning should usually be done after furniture is removed and after any patching, painting or maintenance has been completed.
Photos also help. If you’re booking remotely or under time pressure, sending clear photos can lead to a more accurate quote and reduce the risk of unexpected add-ons on the day.
Does a bond clean guarantee you’ll get your bond back?
A cleaning service can improve your chances, but no honest provider should promise bond return on cleaning alone. Your bond can also be affected by damage, missing items, unpaid rent, lawn issues or problems noted on the original condition report.
What a good bond clean does is remove one of the biggest causes of disputes. It gives you a property that presents well, meets typical inspection standards and has been cleaned with the level of detail expected at the end of a lease. That’s also why many professional companies offer a re-clean guarantee for any reasonable cleaning items raised at inspection within a set timeframe.
For tenants, the value is not just in the cleaning itself. It’s in reducing stress at a point where you’re already juggling removals, paperwork, utilities and deadlines. For property managers and landlords, it means a faster reset between occupants and fewer back-and-forth conversations about presentation.
If you’re comparing providers, look for clarity over cheap headline pricing. A detailed quote, vetted staff, consistent standards and a clear re-clean policy are usually worth far more than a low starting figure that leaves half the job out. If you’re in Adelaide and want the process handled properly the first time, that level of detail is exactly what a professional service should bring.
The easiest way to think about a bond clean is this: it should leave the property ready to be judged, not still needing your attention.




