Cleaning & Sanitizing Schedule: the full procedure
Assign every cleaning task a frequency and an owner so nothing is missed between shifts and the health inspection is routine.
- Applies to: Kitchen and FOH staff; manager owns the schedule.
- Frequency: Daily / weekly / monthly per task.
- Scope: Covers the cleaning cadence and ownership. Sanitizer concentration (ppm) and contact time follow the product label; chemical safety/PPE and food-contact requirements follow the safety plan / ServSafe / local code.
What you need
- Cleaning schedule (task × frequency × owner)
- Sanitizer + test strips
The procedure, step by step
- List what needs cleaning — Walk the kitchen and FOH and list every surface and piece of equipment that needs cleaning — food-contact and non-food-contact.
- Assign a frequency — Set each task to daily, weekly, or monthly based on use and code-required frequencies (e.g. food-contact surfaces cleaned on the required cadence — per FDA Food Code / local code).
- Assign an owner — Name who does each task and when (which shift), so it’s clear and verifiable rather than “someone’s job.”
- Record completion — Initial the schedule as tasks are done so a manager can see at a glance what’s complete and what’s outstanding.
- Inspect and adjust — Inspect regularly, retrain where tasks slip, and adjust the schedule as the menu or equipment changes.
Quality check before you finish
- Every surface/equipment listed.
- Each task has a frequency.
- Each task has a named owner + shift.
- Completion initialed on the schedule.
- Schedule inspected and kept current.
This is a free, source-anchored standard operating procedure (SOP) you can print and hand to staff. It documents the work sequence for a Restaurant 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
- StateFoodSafety — Maintaining a Cleaning Schedule (statefoodsafety.com)
- SafetyCulture — Restaurant Cleaning Checklist (cadence) (safetyculture.com)
- FDA Food Code 2022 — Cleaning & Sanitizing (anchor) (fda.gov)
About Free Restaurant Cleaning Schedule SOP
Free printable restaurant cleaning & sanitizing schedule SOP: what gets cleaned daily, weekly, and monthly, by whom — so nothing is missed and the health inspection is routine.
How to use
- Read the full procedure top to bottom before the work — the SOP runs in order and each step builds on the last.
- Toggle Ink-saver (black & white) for a cheaper mono print for the binder; leave it off for the full-color version.
- 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.
- 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
What should a restaurant cleaning schedule include?
It assigns every cleaning task a frequency (daily, weekly, monthly) and an owner: daily wipe-downs and floor cleaning, weekly deep tasks (behind/under equipment, hoods per service contract), and periodic deep cleans. A written schedule means nothing slips between shifts.
Does this cover chemical safety?
It covers the cleaning cadence and what-gets-cleaned-when. Chemical dilution and contact time follow each product’s label, and chemical safety/PPE and any food-contact sanitizer concentrations follow your safety plan, the label, and ServSafe / local code.
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