Cleaning audit guide

School cleaning audits

School cleaning audits need more context than a standard office check. The site changes across the academic year, standards are highly visible, and holiday deep cleans often need a different inspection approach from daily term-time cleaning.

ClassroomsWashroomsTerm timeDeep cleans
KleanFlo mobile school audit designation progress

In this guide

  • Why school cleaning audits are different
  • What areas should be checked
  • How term-time audits differ from holiday audits
  • How to use photos and feedback properly
  • How KleanFlo supports school cleaning audits

School standards

School cleaning is checked in a different rhythm

In a school, the cleaning standard is visible every morning. Pupils, staff, parents, governors and visitors all see the result. A missed bin in a classroom, poor washroom presentation or dust in a hall can quickly become a service concern.

School audits also need to respect the way schools operate. There are term dates, inset days, holiday periods, summer deep cleans, safeguarding requirements, access restrictions and sometimes large areas that cannot be inspected during the normal school day.

Typical areas to audit

  • Classrooms and teaching spaces.
  • Reception, entrances and corridors.
  • Toilets, washrooms and changing areas.
  • Halls, dining areas and sports facilities.
  • Kitchens and staff rooms where included in the contract.
  • Offices, libraries, IT rooms and specialist rooms.
  • External entrances, bins and touchpoints where required.

Term-time audits

Term-time audits often focus on daily standards. The question is whether the contracted routine is being delivered consistently while the school is in use. These audits should be practical and repeatable, with enough detail to identify the areas that need attention without turning every visit into a full site survey.

Holiday deep-clean audits

Holiday audits are different. During Christmas, Easter or summer breaks, cleaning companies may be completing floor work, high-level dusting, carpet cleaning, detailed washroom work or classroom resets. The audit should reflect the work that was actually planned for the holiday period.

A school audit should separate everyday standards from periodic deep-clean standards. If those are mixed together, the result can become confusing.

How KleanFlo helps

KleanFlo can support school cleaning audits through scheduled checks, mobile audit workflows, task, designation and zone audit structures, customer portal reporting and staff feedback. Results can show where standards are strong, where attention is needed and what corrective action should follow.

School cleaning audit result with action needed feedbackAudit feedback can highlight areas that need attention and help staff understand the result.

Related Cleaning Audit Resources

Continue learning about cleaning audits

FAQs

School cleaning audit questions

How often should school cleaning audits be completed?

It depends on the contract, but many school cleaning companies use routine term-time checks and additional audits around holiday deep cleans.

Should school customers see audit results?

Where appropriate, sharing clear results can improve confidence and reduce uncertainty around service standards.

Can pupils be present during a cleaning audit?

Some checks can happen during the day, but many detailed inspections are easier before or after school when access is clearer.

Need better visibility across school cleaning standards?

See how KleanFlo helps cleaning companies plan, complete and share school cleaning audits.

Book a demo