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How often should you clean everything? A room-by-room schedule

A complete cleaning frequency chart for kitchen, bathroom, bedroom and living room, plus why 70% consistency beats a perfect schedule you abandon.

13 July 2026·9 min read·The Tidywell Team

Most homes run on four cleaning speeds: daily (a few minutes, stops mess building up), weekly (the real reset, vacuuming and bathrooms and laundry), monthly (things that build up slowly, like the fridge or the shower drain), and seasonal (windows, mattresses, the stuff behind the fridge). The chart below breaks that down room by room.

How often should you clean the kitchen?

The kitchen is the highest-frequency room in most homes because it gets used multiple times a day, every day.

TaskFrequencyWhy
Wipe counters and hobDailyFood residue attracts pests and hardens fast
Wash or load dishesDailyStanding water and food waste smell within hours
Empty kitchen binEvery 1-2 daysFood waste turns quickly in a warm room
Clean sink and drainWeeklyPrevents buildup and lingering smells
Wipe cupboard fronts and appliance exteriorsWeeklyGrease film builds up gradually
Clean microwave interiorWeeklySplatters bake on and get harder to remove over time
Clean out fridge (wipe shelves, check expiry dates)MonthlySpills and forgotten items collect at the back
Deep clean oven interiorEvery 2-3 monthsBaked-on residue only comes off with a proper soak or dedicated clean
Clean behind and under large appliancesEvery 3-6 monthsDust, crumbs and grease settle where daily cleaning doesn't reach

How often should you clean the bathroom?

Bathrooms need less daily attention than kitchens, but the weekly pass matters more.

TaskFrequencyWhy
Wipe sink and counterDaily (if quick)Toothpaste and soap scum build fast in a small space
Squeegee shower glass or tilesAfter each shower, if you canCuts limescale buildup dramatically
Clean toiletWeeklyThe task most people under-do and most notice when skipped
Clean shower or bathWeeklySoap scum and mould thrive in damp, warm conditions
Wash bath matWeeklyStays damp between uses, so it holds onto bacteria and mildew
Mop floorWeeklySplashes and hair collect quickly in a small room
Clean mirrorWeeklyToothpaste splatter and water spots are constant
Descale showerhead and tapsMonthlyLimescale reduces water flow and looks worse the longer it sits
Clean bin and replace linerWeeklySmall, enclosed, and used for used tissues and cotton pads
Wash shower curtain or linerEvery 2-3 monthsMould and mildew build up in the folds

How often should you clean the bedroom?

Bedrooms feel low-mess because you're mostly asleep in them, but bedding and dust are constant.

TaskFrequencyWhy
Make the bedDailyTakes under a minute and changes how the whole room reads
Change bed sheetsWeekly (or every 2 weeks minimum)Sheets accumulate sweat, skin cells and dust mites overnight
Wash pillowcasesWeeklyClosest fabric to your face and hair, gets oily fast
Wash pillowsEvery 3-4 monthsAbsorb sweat and oil over time even under a case
Vacuum floor and under the bedWeeklyDust and hair collect fastest where you can't see them
Dust surfaces (shelves, nightstand)WeeklyVisible buildup within days in most homes
Rotate or vacuum mattress, wash duvetEvery 3-6 monthsBulky items that don't need weekly washing but do need an occasional refresh

How often should you clean the living room?

Living rooms collect general household clutter faster than dirt, so the schedule leans lighter and more spread out.

TaskFrequencyWhy
Tidy surfaces and cushionsDailyPrevents the "everything pile" effect
Vacuum high-traffic areasWeeklyDust and crumbs from daily use
Dust shelves and surfacesWeeklyVisible film builds within a week in most homes
Wipe down remote controls, light switches, door handlesWeeklyHigh-touch surfaces that carry the most germs
Vacuum upholstery (sofa, cushions)MonthlyDeeper dust and skin cell buildup than surface vacuuming reaches
Clean windows (interior)MonthlyFingerprints and dust film accumulate steadily
Wash throws and cushion coversMonthlyGet more contact than people expect
Clean curtains or blindsEvery 3-6 monthsTrap dust that surface dusting doesn't touch

Whole-home tasks that don't belong to one room

Some tasks apply everywhere or fall between rooms, so they're the easiest to forget entirely.

TaskFrequencyWhy
Change HVAC or air purifier filtersEvery 1-3 monthsAirflow and air quality drop as filters clog
Test smoke and CO alarmsMonthlyThe one job on this list with real safety stakes
Deep clean carpets and rugsEvery 6-12 monthsSurface vacuuming doesn't reach embedded dirt
Clean windows (exterior)Every 3-6 monthsWeather and pollen build a film daily cleaning never touches
Clean gutters (houses)Twice a year, spring and autumnBlockages cause water damage that costs far more than the clean

The full picture, by frequency

Same information, sorted by how often you need to think about it rather than which room it's in.

TierWhat it coversRough total time
DailyKitchen wipe-down, dishes, bed made, quick tidy10-15 minutes
WeeklyBathroom scrub, vacuuming, laundry cycle, bed sheets, dusting60-90 minutes
MonthlyFridge clean-out, upholstery vacuum, window interiors, filter checks30-60 minutes
Seasonal (every 3-6 months)Oven deep clean, mattress, curtains, exterior windows, behind appliancesHalf a day, once

The frequency you'll actually keep beats the one that's technically correct

None of the numbers above are laws. They're consensus defaults pulled from what most cleaning guides agree on, adjusted where real life gets in the way. Wash sheets every ten days instead of seven and nothing bad happens. Let the oven go four months between deep cleans instead of three and the house does not fall apart.

The mistake most schedules make is treating every task as equally urgent, which is exactly what makes a schedule collapse the first bad week. A schedule you follow roughly 70% of the time, forever, beats a perfect one you run for two weeks and then quietly stop opening. Our guide to building a cleaning routine you'll actually keep covers that without the guilt spiral, and the ADHD-friendly weekly cleaning schedule template turns the weekly tier into a day-by-day plan.

Letting the schedule run itself

The tedious part of a cleaning frequency chart is not knowing the numbers, it's remembering to apply them. "The bathroom was due four days ago" is not a fact anyone tracks reliably in their head.

That's what Tidywell's Smart Schedule automates. Encode each task's frequency once (daily, weekly, every two weeks, monthly, whatever matches this chart or your own home) and it load-balances the week for you, surfacing easy wins first instead of burying them under the big jobs. The week calendar view shows the whole week at a glance, and premium accounts can look up to eight weeks ahead. If you'd rather have something physical, PDF export turns the schedule into a page you can print and stick on the fridge.

Our household management app guide covers how a chore app like this compares to building the same thing by hand in a generic list app.

Frequently asked questions

How often should you clean your bathroom?
Wipe the sink and counter daily if you can, and give the toilet, shower and floor a proper clean once a week. The weekly pass is the one that actually matters for hygiene; daily wiping just keeps the week easier. Missing a week is not a crisis, just start again next week.
How often should you wash your sheets?
Once a week is the sensible default, or once every two weeks if weekly genuinely does not happen. Pillowcases can be swapped more often, since they sit closer to your face and hair and pick up oil faster than the rest of the sheet set.
How often should you wash towels?
After about three to four uses, roughly twice a week for most people. A towel reused daily is fine hygiene-wise for a few days, but it starts smelling and holding water less well before then, which is your real signal to swap it.
What should I clean every day versus once a week?
Daily tasks take under two minutes and stop small messes compounding: wiping counters, the day's dishes, making the bed. Weekly tasks are the reset: vacuuming, bathroom scrub, laundry, dusting. If you only have time for one tier, the daily one protects you more.
Do I actually need to deep clean seasonally?
Not on a fixed date, but eventually, yes. The oven interior, windows, mattress and behind large appliances build up slowly enough that you won't notice week to week, then notice all at once. Treat the seasonal list as a once-every-few-months pass, not a calendar-locked chore.
What if I can't keep up with a cleaning schedule like this?
Then it's doing its job wrong. A schedule you follow some of the time and feel bad about the rest is worse than a shorter one you actually keep. Treat these frequencies as a reference to pull from, not a full checklist, and let the least important items slide further out.

Try Tidywell free

Turn this chart into a schedule that runs itself

Encode each task's frequency once and Smart Schedule load-balances the week for you, easy wins first. Week calendar view shows what's coming, and PDF export puts it on the fridge if you want it there too.

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