Letting someone into your home — your bedroom, your kids' rooms, your office — is a real act of trust. Most Scranton-area cleaners are honest, hardworking people. But there's enough variance in the local market that you should know how to vet before booking. Here's the homeowner's guide.
The five non-negotiables
Before booking any cleaner in NEPA, confirm all five of these. If a company can't or won't provide them, find someone else — there are plenty of legitimate options.
1. Liability insurance
Mistakes happen — a broken vase, a scratched floor, a damaged fixture. A reputable cleaning company carries general liability insurance (typically $1M+) so that if something goes wrong, you're not paying out of pocket. Ask for a Certificate of Insurance (COI). Legitimate companies can email it within an hour.
2. Bonding
Bonding protects you against theft. It's separate from liability insurance — you want both. A bonded company has paid for a financial guarantee that covers losses if an employee steals from your home. Same ask: COI for bonding.
3. Background checks on every cleaner
Every person who enters your home should have been background-checked by their employer. Ask: "Do you background-check every employee, including new hires? What's covered in the check?" The answer should include criminal records (national + Pennsylvania state) and ideally driving record.
4. Workers' compensation
If a cleaner injures themselves in your home, you do NOT want to be liable. Workers' comp insurance protects you — without it, an injured cleaner could potentially sue the homeowner. Reputable companies carry this; freelance/independent cleaners usually don't.
5. A real local presence
"Local" is overused, but it actually matters here. A company with a real Scranton or Lackawanna County phone number, a website with a physical address, and reviews from actual NEPA neighborhoods is more accountable than a national franchise where the owner lives in Texas. When something goes wrong, you want to be able to reach a real local person.
What to look for in reviews
Google Business Profile reviews are usually more reliable than Yelp for NEPA cleaning services (Yelp's filter buries a lot of legit reviews). When reading:
- Look for specifics, not generalities. "Great service!" tells you nothing. "Sarah cleaned our 3-bedroom in Hill Section bi-weekly for two years and we're so sad to be moving" is real.
- Read the negative reviews. Every company has some. What you're looking for: how did the company respond? Did they make it right, or get defensive? A graceful response to a 3-star review is a green flag.
- Check the date range. A company with all 5-star reviews from one week is suspicious. You want consistent reviews over months/years.
- Look for recurring-client mentions. Phrases like "for two years now" or "bi-weekly customer" suggest people stick with this company — the strongest possible signal.
Red flags to avoid
If you encounter any of these, walk away:
- "Cash only" or no receipts. Tax-evading businesses tend to also evade insurance, taxes, and accountability. Run.
- Refuses to provide insurance proof. Either they don't have it, or they have something to hide. Either is disqualifying.
- Pricing changes mid-job. "We didn't realize the kitchen would take this long, it's actually $X more." A reputable flat-rate quote stays the price you agreed to.
- Pressure tactics or "today only" pricing. Reputable cleaners don't use sales tactics. Their pricing is transparent and stable.
- No website, no online presence, only a Facebook page. In 2026, a real local business has a website. The lack of one is a sign of someone running a side hustle without proper business setup.
- Unmarked vehicles, no uniforms, no introduction. Reputable cleaners arrive in branded gear and introduce themselves by name. Unmarked + nameless is a sign of someone who doesn't want to be identified later.
- Asks to use your supplies. Reputable cleaners bring their own. Asking to use yours often means they're undercapitalized or new.
- Long contracts with auto-renewal. Good local cleaners earn your business each visit. They don't need to lock you in.
Yellow flags (worth asking about)
These aren't dealbreakers, but worth a clarifying conversation:
- Different cleaner each visit. Some companies rotate cleaners; others assign a consistent one. Consistency is much better — your cleaner learns your home and preferences. Ask about their policy.
- Hourly pricing only. See flat-rate vs. hourly. Hourly can work for one-off projects but is usually worse for recurring service.
- Cancellation fees. Some are reasonable (24-hour notice required). Some are predatory (50% if you cancel within 48 hours). Read the policy.
- Tipping expectations. Should be optional. If a company suggests required tip percentages, that's odd for flat-rate cleaning.
Questions to ask before booking
Quick checklist of questions to ask any Scranton cleaning company before your first visit:
- Are you insured and bonded? Can I get a COI?
- Do you background-check every cleaner?
- Do you carry workers' compensation insurance?
- Will I have the same cleaner each visit, or is it rotating?
- Is this flat-rate or hourly? If something runs longer than expected, do I owe more?
- What happens if I'm not happy with a cleaning?
- What's your cancellation policy?
- Do you require contracts or auto-renewal?
- Are products eco-friendly / pet-safe / kid-safe?
- How quickly can you start?
A reputable Scranton cleaner can answer all ten in under five minutes, in writing if you ask. If they hedge or get defensive, you have your answer.
FAQ
Should I hire an individual cleaner or a company?
Both can work. Individuals (independent cleaners) are usually cheaper but typically don't carry insurance, bonding, or workers' comp — meaning if anything goes wrong, you're exposed. Companies cost a bit more but cover those risks. For most homeowners in Scranton, the company route is the better risk/reward.
How do I check if a Scranton cleaning company is licensed in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania doesn't require a state license for residential cleaning — there's no licensing body. What you should verify instead is liability insurance, bonding, and workers' comp (see above).
Is it safe to give a cleaner a key to my home?
If they're insured, bonded, and background-checked, yes — this is the most common arrangement. Most NEPA recurring clients give the cleaner a key, garage code, or lockbox combo. The bond covers theft, the insurance covers damage. You should sign a key acknowledgment so there's a record of the handoff.
How can I check Google reviews for a Scranton cleaner?
Search for the company name + 'Scranton' on Google Maps or Google Search. Reviews show below the company info. Also check the company's response rate — businesses that respond to every review (good and bad) are usually more accountable.
What if I have something valuable I don't want touched?
Tell your cleaner up front and put it somewhere visible (or move it to a closed drawer). Reputable cleaners will explicitly avoid anything you've flagged. Better yet: take a quick photo of any high-value item before the cleaning starts, just for your own records.