Profitable House Cleaner

Most solo cleaners are underpaid for one reason

their pricing and

structure are wrong.

It's not the clients.
It's not the market.

It's your setup.

If you’re booked, working hard,

and still not making what you should…

you already know something isn’t adding up.


This is where you fix:

. guessing what to charge

. pricing by time

. numbers that don’t hold up

You don’t have a

work problem.


You have a setup problem.

Because right now you’re:

🚫 keeping prices “reasonable”

🚫 doing extra without charging for it

🚫 hoping it balances out

It doesn’t.

That’s why the work keeps going up.
The pricing never catches up.

You already know this is happening.

You’re halfway through a job…
and you already know you didn’t charge enough.

You don’t need to double-check.

You knew halfway through.

I’m Trisha.

I ran my solo cleaning business for 30 years.

I worked part-time and made more than a full-time income.

Not by working harder.

By fixing my pricing and structuring the work the right way.

This isn’t theory.

This is how I built my business.

If your pricing isn’t working, guessing isn’t going to fix it.

You need a better way to price the job.


The First-Time Clean System

Because better pricing alone won’t fix it.

If your first clean isn’t set up right…

you’ll still end up doing too much no matter what you charge.

This is where most cleaners lose

the money.

Featured Articles

Solo cleaning business

Cleaning Business Pricing Why You Still Feel Underpaid

April 27, 20264 min read

If you’ve ever finished a job and thought:

“I should have charged more for this…” you’re not alone.

A lot of solo cleaners hit a point where they:

  • have clients

  • stay busy

  • do good work

…but the money still doesn’t match the effort.

And most of the time, it’s not because you’re bad at cleaning.

It’s because of how your pricing, and how your services are set up

.

The real problem isn’t just your pricing

Most advice will tell you:

👉 “Just raise your rates”
👉 “Charge more per hour”
👉 “Add $20–$30 to your quotes”

But here’s the problem…

That doesn’t fix the actual issue.

Because pricing is not just about picking a higher number. If it was, you would have already fixed this.

cleaning lady


Why raising your prices still doesn’t fix it

You can raise your prices, and still feel like the job isn’t worth it.

Why?

Because:

  • the scope isn’t clear

  • the expectations aren’t defined

  • the first clean turns into way more than planned

  • and you end up doing extra work

So even with a higher number, the job still feels like too much for what you’re getting paid.

That’s why a lot of solo cleaners say: “I raised my prices but something still isn’t right.”


The part nobody is talking about

Here’s what most people miss:

Your pricing only works if your first clean is set up properly.

This is where things usually break down.

The first clean:

  • grows beyond what you expected

  • has no clear structure

  • turns into “I’ll just take care of this too”

  • sets the wrong standard with the client

And now?

Every clean after that becomes harder to manage than it should be.

cleaning lady


This is why good cleaners stay underpaid

You can be:

  • good at cleaning

  • reliable

  • booked

…and still underpaid.

Not because of your effort.

Because the business model is off.

When the first clean is too big and expectations aren’t clearly set:

👉 you do more
👉 you stay longer
👉 you give more than planned

…and the pricing stops making sense.


What actually needs to change

This is where most solo cleaners get it wrong.

They think: “I just need better numbers”

But what you really need is:

  • better pricing structure

  • clearer expectations

  • and a better way to start the client

Because once that first clean is set up correctly…

everything after that becomes easier:

  • the work is more predictable

  • the scope is clearer

  • the money lines up better

cleaning lady


The shift

Here’s one simple shift to start thinking about:

Stop asking:
“What should I charge?”

Start asking:
“What does this job need to pay to make sense?”

That alone will change how you look at pricing.

But…

this is only one piece of it.


Because even if you fix your pricing…

👉 if the first clean still turns into too much
👉 if expectations aren’t clearly set
👉 if you’re still doing extra work

…the problem will keep showing up.

That’s why pricing alone doesn’t fix it.

“But I already have clients…”

If you’re reading this and thinking:

“Okay… but I already have clients. I can’t really change this now.”

That’s not true.

Because this isn’t just about how you start new clients.

It’s about recognizing where your pricing and expectations stopped lining up — and fixing it moving forward.

Even with current clients, you can start to:

  • stop automatically doing extra

  • tighten up what’s actually included

  • adjust how you approach the clean

  • and start bringing your pricing and your work back into alignment

You don’t have to keep operating the same way just because that’s how it started.

Most solo cleaners stay stuck here because they think:

👉 “This is just how this client is”
👉 “I already set the price”
👉 “I can’t change it now”

But you can change how you handle the work going forward.

And once you do that, the business starts to make a lot more sense again.


The next step

If you’re sitting there thinking:

“Okay… this is exactly what’s happening in my business”

then the next step is fixing how you start your clients.

That’s exactly what I break down in my First-Time Clean System.

Inside, I show you how to:

  • structure the first clean

  • set clear expectations from the start

  • stop doing too much for too little

  • and build a more profitable solo cleaning business

👉 Start with the First-Time Clean System here

Related Articles:

Why I Stopped Doing Deep Cleans in My Solo Cleaning Business

Why Most Cleaners are Underpaid

Trisha Carinne

For over 30 years, Trisha built and ran her own successful cleaning business as a solo cleaner handpicking her schedule and consistently earning $5,000+ per month without burnout.

Today, she helps cleaning business owners stop guessing, price with confidence, and run their businesses with structure, boundaries, and CEO-level clarity.



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Trisha Carinne

Trisha Carinne is a 30+ years successful cleaning business owner

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