Moving out of a Perth rental and wondering whether a regular house clean will do the job — or whether you need to pay for a dedicated bond clean? The short answer is: they are very different services, and using the wrong one at vacate can cost you your bond.
This guide explains exactly what separates a bond clean from a regular clean, why the difference matters for Perth renters, and how to make sure you get the right one before your exit inspection.
A regular clean maintains a lived-in home. A bond clean returns a vacated property to its original rental-inspection standard — and must match the entry condition report. They are not interchangeable.
What is a bond clean?
A bond clean — also called a vacate clean, end of lease clean or exit clean — is the thorough, comprehensive clean performed when a tenant vacates a rental property. The goal is simple: return the property to the exact condition documented on the entry condition report (allowing for fair wear and tear), so the property manager passes the exit inspection and releases the full bond.
In Western Australia, property managers use the entry condition report as their reference point. They compare photos taken when you moved in against the property's state when you leave. If there are discrepancies attributable to cleaning — grease in the oven, soap scum on the shower screen, grime in window tracks — you'll face a deduction.
A proper bond clean covers every surface, fixture, appliance and fitting in the property. It takes significantly longer than a regular clean and is almost always more expensive.
What is a regular house clean?
A regular house clean is a maintenance service — usually weekly, fortnightly or monthly — that keeps a lived-in home in a clean, tidy and hygienic state. It covers the surfaces and areas you use and see every day: floors, bathrooms, kitchen benchtops, mirrors, dusting and general tidying.
It does not go into the level of detail required for a rental inspection. A regular cleaner won't typically clean inside the oven, scrub window tracks, wipe inside cupboards, clean the rangehood filter or tackle grout with a detail brush. These things simply aren't part of a standard maintenance clean scope.
Side-by-side comparison
Here's how the two types of clean compare across the key areas that matter at a rental inspection:
| Area / task | Regular clean | Bond clean |
|---|---|---|
| Oven (inside & out) | Usually skipped | ✓ Fully degreased |
| Rangehood & filter | Wiped only | ✓ Filter soaked, degreased |
| Inside cupboards & drawers | Exterior only | ✓ Inside and out |
| Shower screen (descaling) | Light wipe | ✓ Descaled, polished streak-free |
| Grout & tile scrubbing | Surface wipe | ✓ Detail scrubbed |
| Window tracks | Usually skipped | ✓ Detail cleaned |
| Skirting boards | Occasional | ✓ All skirting boards wiped |
| Light fittings & ceiling fans | Dusted only | ✓ Fully cleaned |
| Built-in wardrobe interiors | Usually skipped | ✓ Shelves and tracks cleaned |
| Wall marks & scuffs | Skipped | ✓ Spot-cleaned throughout |
| Carpet steam cleaning | Not included | ✓ Add-on (usually required) |
| Re-clean guarantee | Not typical | ✓ Standard with Exit Property Co |
| Typical cost (3-bed Perth) | $120–$180 | $340–$480 |
Why are they so different in price and scope?
The scope difference drives the price difference. A bond clean on a standard 3-bedroom Perth home takes a team of two professionals approximately 6–9 hours. The same home as a regular fortnightly clean takes 3–4 hours. That's roughly double the labour — and that's before accounting for the additional detail work (oven, window tracks, grout, skirting boards) that a bond clean demands.
The standard is also different. A regular cleaner is maintaining a property for day-to-day living. A bond cleaner is preparing a property to pass a professional rental inspection by a property manager who is comparing it against entry photos. These are not the same bar to clear.
"The oven, the shower screen and the window tracks are the three things agents always check first. A regular clean almost never gets those three right at bond-clean standard. That's where DIY and regular-clean attempts fall down."
Do I need a bond clean, a regular clean or a deep clean?
You need a bond clean if:
- You are vacating a rental property and want your full bond returned
- Your lease requires the property to be professionally cleaned at exit
- A property manager or agent will be conducting an exit inspection
- You want a written checklist and a re-clean guarantee in case anything is flagged
You need a regular clean if:
- You want your home maintained on a weekly or fortnightly schedule
- You own your property and just want ongoing help with cleaning
- You're a tenant maintaining a property during your tenancy (not at vacate)
You need a deep clean if:
- You're moving into a new property and want it thoroughly cleaned before you unpack
- You want an annual or seasonal clean that goes deeper than a regular visit
- You've let a property lapse and need a catch-up clean that's more thorough than usual
When you book a bond clean with Exit Property Co, every job comes with a free re-clean guarantee. If the property manager raises anything within our agreed scope, we return at no additional cost. It's the difference between hoping your bond comes back and knowing it will.
Can a regular cleaner do a bond clean?
Technically, any cleaner can attempt a bond clean — but most regular cleaning services are not set up to deliver the standard required. They may lack the right equipment (commercial degreasers, steam cleaners, detail brushes), the checklist tied to WA exit condition requirements, or the experience to know what property managers specifically look for.
More importantly, most regular cleaning companies don't offer a re-clean guarantee. If they miss the oven or the shower grout fails inspection, you're on your own for the cost of a second clean — or the deduction comes out of your bond.
If bond return is the goal, use a specialist. The extra cost of a proper bond clean is almost always less than a typical bond deduction.
Frequently asked questions
A bond clean is a comprehensive, inspection-ready clean of every surface, fixture, appliance and fitting in a rental property. A regular clean is a maintenance service covering day-to-day surfaces — floors, bathrooms, kitchen benchtops and general dusting. Bond cleans take 2–4 times longer and cost significantly more because the standard they must meet is the exit condition report.
Technically yes, but most regular cleaners are not trained or equipped to deliver a bond-clean standard. Without a checklist tied to the exit condition report, a property inspection is likely to reveal missed items. For bond purposes, it's strongly recommended to use a company that specialises in bond cleans and offers a re-clean guarantee.
Even thorough DIY cleaners frequently miss items on a rental inspection — not because they're not capable, but because agents inspect to a different standard and use entry condition photos as evidence. A professional bond clean backed by a re-clean guarantee is much lower risk than a DIY attempt, especially when a four-week bond is on the line.
A bond clean typically costs 2–3 times more than a regular maintenance clean of the same property. A regular clean for a 3-bed home might cost $120–$180. The same property as a bond clean costs $340–$480. The difference reflects the deeper scope, longer time and the guarantee attached to a bond clean.
Book a bond clean in Perth
Exit Property Co specialises in end of lease cleaning across the Perth metro. Every bond clean comes with a written checklist, flat-rate pricing and a free re-clean guarantee — so you can hand back the keys with confidence.
Request a free quote online or call 08 6275 9872. We're available 7 days a week and reply the same day.
