Daily Route & Schedule: the full procedure

Schedule by zone and sequence homes to cut unpaid drive time — more billable cleans per day, less fuel and fatigue.

What you need

The procedure, step by step

  1. Schedule by geographic zone — Group each day’s homes in the same area — a day (or a cleaner) per zone — rather than scattering jobs across the map.
  2. Sequence the zone as a loop — Order the stops to minimize drive time between them (aim for roughly 5–15 minutes between homes) and to end near where you started.
  3. Set realistic daily load — Plan around a benchmark of about 3–5 cleans per cleaner per day depending on home size and scope — do not overbook the day.
  4. Build in buffers — Leave about 15–30 minutes of buffer between jobs for overruns and traffic, so one slow home does not cascade into late arrivals all afternoon.
  5. Place demanding and first-time jobs carefully — Put deep cleans, large homes, and first-time/new-client visits where a run-over will not derail the rest of the day (often last, or with extra buffer).
  6. Confirm access and track actuals — Make sure each job has its access info (keys/codes/pets) before the crew leaves, and review actual time per home against the plan to tighten future routes.

Quality check before you finish

This is a free, source-anchored standard operating procedure (SOP) you can print and hand to staff. It documents the work sequence for a House Cleaning business — not safety or regulatory rulings, which defer to the cited authorities, the applicable code, and your own health-and-safety plan. Open the tool above to print it, toggle ink-saver, or (with a free ToolFluency Business account) edit it to match your own workflow.

Sources

About Free Cleaning Route & Schedule SOP

Free printable cleaning route and schedule SOP: zone-based scheduling, sequencing homes to cut drive time, time-per-home benchmarks, and buffers.

How to use

  1. Read the full procedure top to bottom before the work — the SOP runs in order and each step builds on the last.
  2. Toggle Ink-saver (black & white) for a cheaper mono print for the binder; leave it off for the full-color version.
  3. Click Print SOP to print or save as PDF. Print one per crew, laminate it for the binder, or attach it to the job in your scheduling system.
  4. Train new hires on it and have staff sign off. Found something out of date? Use the feedback link — flagged SOPs are re-researched against the source list.

Frequently asked questions

How should a cleaning business schedule its routes?
Schedule by geographic zone — group a day’s homes in the same area and sequence them in a loop to minimize drive time (a 5–15 minute target between stops). Benchmark roughly 3–5 cleans per cleaner per day, build 15–30 minute buffers for overruns, and put demanding or first-time jobs where they won’t cascade delays.
Why does routing matter for a cleaning company?
Drive time between homes is unpaid, unproductive time. Tight, zone-based routes mean more billable cleans per day and less fuel and fatigue. Tracking actual time per home versus the schedule is the feedback loop that tightens routes over time.

Part of ToolFluency’s library of free online tools for Printables. No account needed, no data leaves your device.