The AED 35–90 spread: what a cleaning hour is really made of
The headline number in the UAE market is an hourly rate per cleaner, and it sits in a wide band of roughly AED 35–90. At the bottom you are usually getting one cleaner, no supplies, a weekday daytime slot, and a company that keeps overheads thin. At the top you are paying for provided materials, a supervisor, weekend or evening timing, insurance cover for breakages, and sometimes simply a brand premium in areas like Downtown Dubai or Saadiyat where companies know clients rarely compare.
Break the hour apart and the cost structure is consistent across the Emirates: the cleaner's wage and accommodation, transport between jobs, consumables if included, the company's trade licence and visa costs, and margin. That is why a rate of AED 25–30 per hour should worry you rather than please you — at that price something is being skipped, usually either the worker's legal status or any accountability when your glass dining table cracks.
The practical takeaway: never compare two quotes on the hourly number alone. A quote of AED 40–50 without materials and with a minimum-hours rule can cost more per useful cleaned hour than AED 60–75 all-in. Always reprice quotes as total dirhams for the visit you actually want.
Hourly or package: run the numbers before you commit
Hourly booking is flexible and suits irregular needs — a pre-guest tidy, a post-party recovery, a one-off before an inspection. But per-hour rates on ad-hoc bookings sit at the top of the band, typically AED 50–90 with materials. If you are booking the same visit every week, you are paying a premium for flexibility you are not using.
Packages flip that. A monthly plan of one four-hour visit per week commonly lands around AED 550–1,300 depending on emirate and materials. Worked back per hour, that is often AED 35–65 — noticeably below the same visits booked one by one. The trade-off is commitment: check cancellation terms, whether unused visits roll over, and what happens during your annual leave, because a package that charges for four August visits while you are abroad has quietly erased its own discount.
There is a middle route many households miss: book ad hoc but with the same vendor each time. Repeat bookings often earn returning-customer rates without a contract, and the cleaner who already knows your flat works faster — a three-hour job on visit one is often two and a half hours by visit four. The same-vendor rebook function in the tamam app exists for exactly this reason: you keep the learning-curve saving without signing into a package.
Supplies included or bring your own: the small line that decides the winner
Most UAE cleaning companies quote two rates, with materials and without, and the gap is usually AED 5–15 per hour or a flat AED 10–30 per visit. Over a weekly four-hour clean, choosing 'with materials' can add AED 1,000–2,500 a year.
Buying your own kit — mop and bucket, microfibre cloths, glass cleaner, floor solution, bathroom descaler — costs roughly AED 150–350 upfront and perhaps AED 40–80 a month in refills. If you clean weekly, own-supplies pays for itself within two to three months, and you control what touches your surfaces: the pH-neutral floor cleaner your marble needs, rather than whatever multi-surface liquid is in the company caddy.
The exception is deep cleans and specialist work. Steam machines, wet vacuums, rotary scrubbers and sofa-shampoo kit are exactly what the higher rate buys, and no sane household purchases them. For regular maintenance, supply your own; for anything involving machinery, let the price include it.
Deep clean versus regular: when the expensive visit is the cheap one
A regular clean is maintenance: floors, dusting, bathrooms, kitchen surfaces, beds. A deep clean is restoration: inside the oven and fridge, limescale, grout, skirting boards, under and behind furniture. Deep cleans are priced as a job rather than by the hour — commonly AED 400–900 for an apartment and AED 600–1,500 for a three-to-four-bedroom villa — and people flinch at those numbers next to an AED 150–350 regular visit.
The analyst's view is different. A home deep-cleaned two or three times a year needs fewer regular hours to stay presentable, because a two-hour weekly visit maintaining a clean baseline achieves more than three hours fighting accumulated grime. Households that skip deep cleans often creep from three to four weekly hours without noticing — an extra AED 2,000–4,000 a year, more than the deep cleans would have cost.
Where deep cleans are non-negotiable: move-in and move-out. UAE landlords routinely withhold part of a security deposit over cleaning, and deposits are far larger than the AED 400–900 an apartment move-out clean costs. A documented professional clean, with photos, is one of the highest-return cleaning purchases in the country.
Shamal season: budgeting for desert dust
UAE dust is not ordinary household dust. Shamal winds, most active from roughly May to August, carry fine mineral dust that gets through window seals, coats balconies in hours and resettles on every surface within a day of cleaning. It is abrasive too — walked-in grit is what puts micro-scratches in polished floors long before anything else does.
Demand and need both spike in summer. After a major storm, same-day slots get scarce and some companies add peak pricing. If a storm is forecast, the money-smart move is the opposite of instinct: wait until it has fully passed, then book one thorough visit, rather than paying for a clean that is undone by evening. A post-storm clean of a two-bed usually needs an extra hour over normal scope — expect AED 40–90 more, not a doubled bill.
Cheap mitigation beats paid remediation. Door draught strips cost AED 20–60 per door, a proper entrance mat traps the grit that would otherwise sand your floors, and rinsed balconies stop dust migrating indoors. Households that do this genuinely need fewer paid hours per month.
Marble, porcelain and the expensive ways to clean a floor wrong
A large share of UAE homes — especially older Dubai and Abu Dhabi stock — have real marble floors, and marble is calcium carbonate: anything acidic etches it permanently. Vinegar, lemon-based cleaners and most supermarket limescale removers leave dull cloudy patches no mopping fixes. Restoring etched marble means grinding and repolishing at roughly AED 15–40 per square metre, so one wrong bottle used across a 100-square-metre flat can create a four-figure repair. If your floors are marble, insist on pH-neutral cleaner and say so at booking.
Porcelain and ceramic tile, standard in newer towers and much of Sharjah and Ajman, are far more forgiving — the risk shifts to grout, which stains and darkens and is the first thing a viewing tenant notices. Grout work is a legitimate deep-clean item, not something a regular hourly visit covers.
Unsure what you have? Marble is cool to the touch with veining that runs irregularly, and no two tiles match; porcelain repeats its pattern. When a cleaning company asks about your floor type before quoting, that is a quality signal. When they never ask, that tells you something too.
Live-in help versus on-demand: the honest total-cost comparison
The traditional UAE answer to housework is sponsoring a full-time domestic worker. The visible costs are salary and visa, but the true annual figure adds mandatory medical insurance, accommodation and food, a return flight, end-of-service gratuity accrual, and agency fees amortised over the contract. Counted honestly, a live-in commonly costs AED 30,000–60,000 per year — far above the salary line most people quote at dinner parties.
On-demand cleaning at AED 35–90 per hour makes the comparison mechanical. Eight hours a week — two solid visits — costs roughly AED 15,000–37,000 a year at ad-hoc rates, less on a package. Below about ten to twelve hours of genuine weekly need, on-demand is almost always cheaper. Above twenty hours, or where the role includes childcare and cooking, the live-in model starts to justify itself on grounds no hourly service can match.
The middle band is where households misjudge. The common error is sponsoring a full-time worker to cover a part-time cleaning need because the salary alone looked comparable to a cleaning package. Salary alone is not the cost. Run the full number for your actual hours before taking on a two-year sponsorship obligation, because exiting early has costs of its own.
How to compare cleaning quotes like an analyst
Every cleaning quote in the UAE answers a slightly different question, which is why comparing headline rates misleads. First fix the job: bedrooms and bathrooms, floor type, materials included or not, whether you need ironing or interior-cabinet work. Then ask each vendor to price that exact scope. A vendor that revises its estimate after hearing details is being accurate, not evasive.
Reprice everything as total AED, then sanity-check the time assumption. A studio takes two to three hours; a two-bed apartment three to four; a villa five to eight cleaner-hours. A quote assuming two hours for a four-bedroom villa is not a bargain — it is a plan to leave early, or to call you mid-visit asking for more hours at a rate you can no longer negotiate. This is the single most common way cheap quotes become expensive visits.
This comparison step is why tamam shows multiple verified vendors side by side with transparent AED price ranges rather than one fixed rate — the range is honest about the fact that a real price depends on your actual home. Collect two or three quotes against one written scope and the outlier explains itself.
- Fix one written scope first; make every vendor price the same job
- Convert hourly rates to total AED including materials and minimums
- Check the assumed duration against realistic times for your home size
- Ask what happens if the work runs over: fixed price or metered hours
- Confirm breakage policy and that staff are the company's own employees
Where people quietly overpay
The biggest silent overspend is hours creep. Bookings get set once and never revisited: the four-hour slot chosen when the flat was new continues for years, even after a deep-clean routine or better dust-proofing cut the real need to three. Reviewing booked hours twice a year against what the cleaner actually finishes is worth AED 1,000–3,000 annually to a typical household, and almost nobody does it.
The second is paying premium time out of habit. Friday and Saturday mornings are the most contested slots in the country and priced accordingly; the same company's Tuesday 9am visit can sit AED 10–25 per hour lower. If anyone in the household works from home even one weekday, moving the clean is free money. The third is scope-stuffing: a proper deep clean holds for months, so a company proposing one every four weeks is selling regular cleaning in an expensive wrapper.
Finally, loyalty without verification. Long-standing arrangements drift above market because nobody re-checks. You rarely need to switch — checking current ranges once a year and asking your existing company to match usually works, and keeping a good cleaner at a fair rate beats retraining a stranger on your home every quarter to save AED 5–10 an hour.
what it costs
Ranges below reflect the current UAE market and assume licensed companies rather than informal help. The hourly band is wide because materials, timing, emirate and building access all move the number — treat these as brackets for judging quotes, not prices to demand.
| job | typical range |
|---|---|
| Standard hourly rate, per cleaner | AED 35–90 |
| Materials and supplies surcharge, per visit | AED 10–30 |
| Regular clean, 2-bed apartment (3–4 hours) | AED 120–350 |
| Deep clean, 1–2 bed apartment | AED 400–900 |
| Deep clean, 3–4 bed villa | AED 600–1,500 |
| Move-in / move-out clean, apartment | AED 400–900 |
| Sofa or mattress shampoo, per piece | AED 100–300 |
| Monthly package, one 4-hour visit weekly | AED 550–1,300 |
Your real price depends on your home's size, condition and access, which is why the reliable number comes from comparing verified vendors' quotes against one written scope in the tamam app rather than from any table.
How an at-home cleaning visit actually runs
The first fifteen minutes decide how much value you get. In most towers the team must clear building security, which can mean company ID checks or a pre-registered permit — give your vendor the building name at booking so they arrive with the right paperwork, and warn them about paid or restricted parking (Dubai Marina and Abu Dhabi's Corniche towers are notorious time sinks). In villas, decide in advance whether the team may access the garden, garage and outdoor taps.
What the pro brings depends on what you agreed: a materials-included regular clean means cloths, mop, vacuum and standard chemicals arrive with the cleaner, while a deep clean adds machinery — steam units, wet vacuums, sometimes a rotary scrubber. If you booked without materials, have your own kit laid out, including the pH-neutral cleaner if your floors are marble. Expect two to three hours for a studio, three to four for a two-bed, and five to eight cleaner-hours for a villa, often delivered by a team of two.
Your preparation is worth real money: clear surfaces so paid time goes to cleaning rather than tidying, secure valuables and documents as routine, point out priority areas and anything fragile in the first five minutes, and stay reachable. Booking, payment and tracking sit in the tamam app, and vendors can coordinate arrival over WhatsApp — useful when the guard needs a company name or the driver needs a pin drop for an unnumbered villa.
how it plays out emirate by emirate
dubai
Dubai is the deepest and most price-dispersed market: the same two-bed clean can be quoted at AED 35–50 per hour by a company based in Al Quoz and AED 70–90 by one marketing to the Palm and Downtown. Tower communities add friction worth planning for — many Emaar, Nakheel and JLT buildings require cleaning staff to register at security with company ID, and some restrict service-lift hours. Move-out cleans matter disproportionately here: with Ejari-registered tenancies and frequent deposit disputes, a documented professional clean with photos is cheap insurance.
abu dhabi
Abu Dhabi's market is shaped by regulated domestic-work channels and by geography: many cleaning companies operate out of Musaffah, so villa communities off the island — Khalifa City, MBZ City, Al Reef — should confirm travel time is not billed. Housing stock skews larger than Dubai's apartment core, so per-visit totals run higher even at similar hourly rates. In Al Ain, villas are bigger again, gardens collect Hajar-edge dust, and the vendor pool is thinner — book ahead rather than expecting same-day, and expect minimum-visit charges to cover the drive.
sharjah
Sharjah hourly rates typically sit AED 5–15 below Dubai for equivalent work, and many companies serve both emirates from Sharjah bases — which is why Dubai residents near the border sometimes get better quotes from Sharjah-licensed firms. Family-sized apartments in Al Nahda, Al Majaz and Muwaileh dominate demand, and buildings here are often strict about registering outside workers with the watchman, so give your vendor the building name in advance. Weekends are squeezed by Dubai-commuter households who can only host cleaners on Saturday, so midweek slots are both easier and cheaper.
ajman
Ajman offers some of the lowest hourly rates in the country, often AED 35–55, but the catch is minimums: many cleaners travel in from Sharjah, so companies impose three-to-four-hour minimum bookings to make the trip worthwhile. The housing stock works against you slightly — older corniche towers and low-rise blocks in Al Nuaimiya tend to have looser window sealing, so dust ingress is heavier and a weekly clean does more real work than the same visit in a newer sealed tower. Budget hours accordingly rather than assuming Dubai benchmarks transfer.
ras al khaimah
RAK's cleaning demand concentrates in Al Hamra Village, Mina Al Arab and the growing Marjan Island short-let market, where holiday-home turnover cleaning is its own economy — same-day changeover cleans command premium rates and book out around public holidays. Quarry and cement activity near the Hajar range adds a distinctive fine grey dust in some districts that settles harder than coastal sand; mention it at booking because it changes the tools needed. The vendor pool is smaller than in the southern emirates, so a reliable company found once is worth rebooking deliberately.
fujairah
The east coast has a different enemy: humidity. Fujairah's Gulf of Oman climate means bathroom mould, mildew around AC vents and a salt film on seaward windows that inland homes never see, so a useful clean here weights ventilation, bathroom treatment and glass work over dusting. The professional pool is thin and partly serves the weekend beach-house trade from Dubai owners, making Thursday-to-Saturday the crunch. If you own a weekend property, a pre-arrival clean booked midweek is easier to get and typically AED 30–80 cheaper than a Friday-morning scramble.
umm al quwain
Travel math decides cleaning prices in Umm Al Quwain: teams drive in from Ajman and Sharjah, so minimum bookings run longer and one-off two-hour visits are hard to place. The housing stock — big villas, tiled floors, dusty plots — favours fortnightly deep-cleans over daily touch-ups. Booking a recurring slot with the same team pays off quickly here, because the drive-in providers prioritise their standing routes and the same crew learns the house.
Before the cleaner arrives: a ten-minute prep that saves an hour
- Write a one-line scope with your priorities and share it at booking, not on arrival
- Tell the vendor your building name so security passes and parking are sorted in advance
- State your floor type — marble homes need pH-neutral cleaner confirmed explicitly
- Clear surfaces and floors of personal items so paid hours go to cleaning, not tidying
- Secure valuables, cash and documents as a matter of routine
- Lay out your own supplies if you booked without materials
- Confirm the total price and what happens if the job runs over before work starts
- Do a walkthrough against your scope before the team leaves, while fixes are free
- Note the finish time versus hours booked, and adjust your next booking accordingly
mistakes to avoid
Comparing hourly rates instead of total visit cost
An AED 40–50 rate with a materials surcharge and a four-hour minimum can cost more than an AED 60–75 all-inclusive quote. Reprice every quote as total dirhams for your exact scope. The hourly number is a marketing figure, not a price.
Booking too few hours and paying overtime rates mid-visit
Underbooking is the classic trap: the team runs out of time, and you either accept a half-finished home or buy extra hours on the spot with zero negotiating position. Book realistic hours for the first visit, then trim once you have seen actual finish times.
Letting acidic cleaner near marble
One session with vinegar or a supermarket descaler can etch cloudy patches across a marble floor that only grinding and repolishing at AED 15–40 per square metre will remove. Confirm pH-neutral products at booking, and if you supply materials, remove the wrong bottles from reach entirely.
Paying deep-clean prices on a monthly schedule
A genuine deep clean holds its value for months; a company proposing one every four weeks is selling regular cleaning in expensive packaging. Two or three deep cleans a year plus disciplined weekly maintenance is the cost-efficient rhythm for almost every UAE home.
Never revisiting a standing booking
Hours creep and rate drift are silent: the four-hour slot set years ago continues after your real need fell, and loyal-customer rates rise above market. Re-check booked hours against actual finish times and current ranges twice a year, then ask your existing vendor to match rather than switching.
Sponsoring full-time help for a part-time need
Comparing a live-in worker's salary against a cleaning package ignores visa fees, mandatory insurance, accommodation, flights and gratuity, which push the true cost to AED 30,000–60,000 a year. Count your genuine weekly hours first; below ten to twelve, on-demand cleaning wins the arithmetic comfortably.
frequently asked questions
How many hours should I book for my home?
As a working rule: two to three hours for a studio, three to four for a two-bed apartment, and five to eight cleaner-hours for a villa, often split across a team of two. First visits run longer than maintenance visits, so book generously once, then trim after you see what the cleaner actually finishes.
Is AED 35–40 per hour too cheap to be safe?
Not automatically — weekday, no-materials rates from lean Sharjah or Ajman companies legitimately sit there. It becomes a red flag combined with no trade licence, cash-only payment, or staff who are not the company's own employees, because then there is no accountability for damage. Verify the company, not just the price.
Should I provide cleaning supplies or pay for theirs?
For regular weekly cleaning, your own kit usually pays for itself within two to three months against a surcharge of AED 10–30 per visit, and lets you control what touches marble and delicate surfaces. For deep cleans, pay the inclusive rate — the machinery is the point.
How often does a home actually need a deep clean?
Two to three times a year for most UAE apartments, plus always at move-in and move-out. Homes near construction or with heavy shamal exposure may justify quarterly. More often than that and you are buying regular cleaning at deep-clean prices.
Can I request the same cleaner every visit?
Yes, and you should — a cleaner who knows your home works noticeably faster by the third visit, which is a real saving on hourly billing. Rebooking the same vendor through the tamam app is the practical way to keep that continuity without a contract.
What is safe to use on marble floors?
Only pH-neutral cleaners. Vinegar, lemon-based products and most descalers etch marble permanently, and repolishing costs roughly AED 15–40 per square metre. State your floor type at booking and, if supplying materials, put the correct bottle out first.
Is a cleaning package worth it over ad-hoc booking?
If you clean weekly at a fixed rhythm, usually yes — packages typically work out meaningfully cheaper per hour. Check three terms before signing: cancellation notice, whether missed visits roll over, and whether your slot and cleaner are fixed. Rigid terms with no rollover can cost more than ad-hoc booking in a travel-heavy year.
Do I need to be home during the clean?
No, and many regular clients hand over access once trust is established, but stay home for the first visit or two. Either way, secure valuables, cash and documents as standard practice — it protects the cleaner from suspicion as much as it protects you.
Is on-demand cleaning cheaper than sponsoring a live-in maid?
Below roughly ten to twelve genuinely needed hours a week, almost always — the full cost of sponsorship including visa, insurance, accommodation, flights and gratuity commonly reaches AED 30,000–60,000 a year, well above the salary figure people quote. Above twenty hours, or where the role includes childcare and cooking, live-in starts to make sense.
Does a regular clean include the oven, fridge and windows?
Usually not — interior oven and fridge cleaning, full window washing and grout work are deep-clean or add-on items, and assuming otherwise is the most common source of end-of-visit disappointment. If you want them, name them in the scope when booking so hours and price reflect it.
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