The boxes are packed, the removalist is booked, and you’re already thinking about keys, meter reads, and the first night in the new place. Then the last hurdle lands in front of you. The final clean. That’s the part many renters underestimate, especially when they’ve kept the home reasonably tidy and assume a quick wipe-over will do the job.
It usually won’t.
An end of lease cleaning checklist matters because the inspection standard is different from your normal living standard. Property managers don’t look at the home the way you did while you lived there. They look at edges, tracks, grout lines, oven racks, fan blades, switch plates, and carpet condition. In Australia, cleaning disputes are a leading cause of bond deduction claims, with the Queensland Residential Tenancies Authority reporting that about 25% of bond disputes in 2022 to 2023 involved cleaning-related issues, across more than $5.2 million in disputed amounts over 14,000 claims, as cited by Resident.
Melbourne renters feel that pressure too. Local standards are high, and a missed detail can become an avoidable deduction. The smartest way to handle it isn’t with a random Saturday panic clean. It’s with a timeline.
Start one week out by getting the property empty, clearing cupboards, wiping high areas, and booking any specialist work. Then use the final few days for heavy jobs like ovens, bathrooms, grout, and carpets. Leave the last 24 hours for your finishing pass. Floors, glass, touch points, and your own inspection.
That sequence saves time and stops you from cleaning the same area twice.
What follows is a practical end of lease cleaning checklist based on what gets picked up at handover in Melbourne rentals. It’s organised by priority, not theory, so you can decide what to do yourself, what to book out, and what absolutely can’t be left until the final hour.
Your End-of-Lease Cleaning Timeline
One week before vacating
This is the planning stage. The property should start getting emptier every day.
- Remove personal items first: Empty wardrobes, cupboards, shelves, and storage areas so you can see the dust, marks, and crumbs properly.
- Clean high spots early: Ceiling corners, fans, light fittings, tops of doors, and upper skirting edges are easier to handle before the frantic final days.
- Deal with wall marks and minor repairs: Scuffs, adhesive residue, and small patch jobs need time to dry and settle.
- Book specialist services: Carpet steam cleaning, upholstery cleaning, tile and grout work, or odour treatment should be locked in now.
If your lease mentions steam cleaning, treat that as a contracted requirement, not an optional upgrade. Properties with carpets often make that a lease trigger, and it’s one of the most scrutinised items at handover, according to Scrub and Sort.
Two to three days before vacating
The heavy work takes place.
- Deep clean the kitchen: Oven, rangehood, splashback, cooktop, cupboards, and drawer runners.
- Deep clean bathrooms and laundry: Grout, shower glass, drains, vanity, toilet bases, taps, and exhaust covers.
- Bring in professionals where needed: Empty rooms give carpet, upholstery, tile, and stain technicians clear access.
A standard 2-bedroom unit often needs 6 to 8 hours of work for a professional end-of-lease clean, based on 2024 service benchmarks cited by SAS Cleaning Service. That gives you a good reality check. If you’re trying to do everything yourself after work on the last night, you’re setting yourself up for missed details.
The final 24 hours
This isn’t the time for oven degreasing or attacking old grout stains.
This is your finishing day.
- Wipe all final surfaces: Benches, shelves, switches, taps, sills, and inside empty cabinets.
- Do floors last: Vacuum and mop after everything else is done.
- Check windows and tracks: Especially where morning light shows dust.
- Walk the property like an agent: Open every drawer, look behind doors, crouch to inspect floor edges, and sniff for odours.
Practical rule: If a room looks clean from standing height but fails when you open, slide, lift, or switch something on, it’s not ready for inspection.
1. Deep Carpet Steam Cleaning
Carpets can make an otherwise clean property fail the inspection. That’s because they hold the history of the tenancy. Dirt, oils, odours, pet residue, and old spills stay buried in the pile long after the surface looks acceptable.
In Melbourne, carpet steam cleaning isn’t just a nice extra in many rentals. The Real Estate Institute of Victoria notes that 75% of rental properties in Greater Melbourne mandate steam carpet cleaning in leases, with more than 250,000 rental units in 2023, according to the same SAS Cleaning Service article. If your lease says steam clean, hand vacuuming and supermarket hire gear usually won’t satisfy the standard.
What property managers actually notice
They notice traffic lanes first. Hallways, lounge walkways, bed edges, and the strip in front of the sofa.
They also notice whether the carpet feels recently cleaned. Fresh pile lift, no sticky residue, and no stale smell all matter. Domestic machines can leave carpets too wet and can struggle with embedded grime. Professional equipment removes 80 to 90% of moisture post-cleaning, reducing drying time to 4 to 6 hours compared with 24+ hours from domestic machines, according to Scrub and Sort.
That drying time matters when you’re juggling key return, final photos, and removalist timing.
What works and what doesn’t
What works:
- Book the clean after furniture is out: Technicians can reach edges and corners properly.
- Lift or remove small items beforehand: Don’t waste the booked window shifting lamps, side tables, or boxes.
- Ventilate well after the clean: Open windows where possible to help drying.
What doesn’t work:
- Cleaning too early: If tradies, movers, or family walk back through, you’ll re-soil the carpet.
- Spot scrubbing random stains the night before: Many DIY treatments set stains or create bright patches.
- Skipping the invoice: Some property managers ask for proof the carpet was steam cleaned.
If you’re timing the job, book it close enough to handover to stay fresh, but not so late that the carpet is still damp. This guide on how long carpet takes to dry after steam cleaning is worth checking before you lock in your final day schedule.
A common Melbourne scenario is a tenant who leaves carpets until the very end, then discovers the room can’t be walked on, windows need closing for weather, and the key handover is only hours away. A better sequence is to schedule carpet steam cleaning shortly before handover, then spend the final block of time on windows, hard floors, and your inspection pass.
2. Tile and Grout Deep Cleaning
Bathrooms and laundries often look “fine” until the inspection light hits the grout. Then every dark line, soap build-up patch, and mould stain shows up at once.
Grout is where basic cleaning usually falls apart. Tiles can shine while the grout still looks neglected. That contrast is exactly what agents pick up, especially in showers, splashbacks, and wet area corners.
A good Melbourne end of lease cleaning checklist should treat grout as a separate task, not just part of a mop and wipe.


Where most tenants lose time
They scrub the visible floor area first. The main issues are usually elsewhere:
- Shower corners: Soap scum and mould build-up where water sits.
- Floor-to-wall joins: Dirt settles into edges and grout lines.
- Kitchen splashback grout: Grease catches here and discolours fast.
- Laundry tiles: Detergent splash and foot traffic leave dull film behind.
Bathrooms are one of the spaces where “detail clean” beats “quick clean” every time. Property managers often look at the lower half of the shower screen, tile edges around the drain, and the grout line behind taps because those spots tell them whether the job was thorough or rushed.
The trade-off between DIY and specialist work
DIY grout cleaning can work if the staining is light and you start early. It usually doesn’t work well when the grout is heavily darkened, mould-marked, or greasy. At that point, scrubbing harder often means more labour without much visual improvement.
Professional tile and grout cleaning is useful when the room has built-up discolouration that normal products won’t lift evenly. If you’re comparing options, these tile cleaner hire options can help you decide whether the job is realistic to tackle yourself or whether a specialist visit will save time and rework.
Clean grout before your final floor wash. If you leave it until the end, you’ll splash residue back onto already-finished surfaces.
A real-world example is the older Melbourne apartment with a small bathroom that has white wall tiles and greyed grout around the shower base. The room may smell fresh and the mirror may sparkle, but if the grout still looks dirty, the whole bathroom reads as unfinished. That’s why this job belongs in the 2 to 3 day window, not the last night.
3. Upholstery and Sofa Cleaning
If the rental includes furnished pieces, or if you’re leaving approved furniture behind, upholstery condition matters more than many tenants expect. Sofas, dining chairs, and fabric bedheads trap dust, skin oils, pet hair, and odours. Even when they don’t look heavily stained, they can carry a dull, used smell that stands out once the room is otherwise empty.
This is one of those areas where the empty-property effect works against you. As soon as the clutter is gone, the fabric condition becomes easier to judge.
What gets picked up at inspection
Visible marks are the obvious issue, but they’re not the only one.
Inspectors notice:
- Armrest darkening: Common on fabric sofas.
- Seat cushion staining: Food, drink, or general body oil transfer.
- Pet hair in seams: A frequent problem even after vacuuming.
- Odour retention: Cooking smells, smoke residue, or pet smell caught in fabric.
A lounge that looked acceptable in daily use can suddenly look tired in a bare room with bright natural light. If you’ve had pets on the furniture, don’t assume a lint roller and deodoriser will finish the job. Those methods improve surface appearance, but they don’t remove what’s settled deeper into the fabric.
The right order matters
Upholstery cleaning should sit close to your carpet work, but not in a random sequence.
A practical order is:
- Empty the room
- Vacuum loose debris first
- Clean carpets and upholstery within the same service window
- Leave drying time before final photos or handover
That avoids dragging loose dust from furniture back onto fresh carpet, and it gives the room a more even result. If a technician is already onsite for carpets, adding sofa or chair cleaning can make the whole inspection standard more consistent.
“If the sofa smells clean and the carpet smells clean, the whole room feels looked after.”
One common move-out scenario is a tenant who’s cleaned every hard surface but forgotten the furnished lounge chair in the corner. The chair has no dramatic stain, just a grey headrest patch and a stale smell. That single item can change the impression of the whole room.
Take before-and-after photos if upholstery is part of the handover condition. It’s useful proof if there’s any later disagreement about marks, pet history, or general wear. And if the fabric is delicate, tell the technician before the job starts. The right method for a durable synthetic couch isn’t always right for a lighter woven fabric or leather piece.
4. Mattress Cleaning and Sanitisation
Mattresses are easy to overlook because they don’t sit in the usual “cleaning list” category for most renters. But in furnished rentals, rooming properties, or homes where a mattress is staying behind, hygiene becomes part of the handover standard.
A mattress can hold dust, odour, body oils, and old spotting even when the sheet-covered surface looked acceptable during day-to-day living. Once stripped and inspected in a near-empty bedroom, those issues become much more obvious.
When mattress cleaning matters
This usually comes up in a few situations:
- Furnished rentals: The mattress is part of the property condition.
- Pet-related accidents: Even minor incidents can leave odour behind.
- Guest room use: Infrequent use can still mean long-term dust build-up.
- Storage or poor ventilation: Musty smell develops even without visible staining.
The mistake tenants make is leaving mattress assessment too late. If there’s an odour problem, you want time to clean, dry, and reassess it. Trying to treat it the morning of handover is risky, especially if moisture is still trapped.
Practical handling on move-out week
A good approach is to strip the bed one week out and inspect the mattress in daylight. Look at corners, side panels, and the head end. Smell it up close. If there’s any issue, book treatment before your final day.
For DIY maintenance, basic vacuuming can remove surface dust, but it won’t do much for old spotting or embedded smell. If you need a reference point for home care, this guide on how to effectively clean a mattress covers sensible basics.
A few practical rules help:
- Stand it up only if safe to do so: That improves airflow during drying.
- Don’t cover it while damp: Plastic over residual moisture can trap odour.
- Keep records if it’s lease-relevant: A receipt or photo can help if the landlord queries condition later.
The bedroom often feels like the easiest room in the property. Less grease than the kitchen. Less moisture than the bathroom. That’s exactly why forgotten mattress condition can surprise people. The rest of the room may pass, but one stale or marked mattress can still trigger a complaint.
If you’re not leaving one behind, this item is simple. Remove it, vacuum the base area, and make sure there’s no dust shadow, debris, or old spill mark underneath. If you are leaving it, treat it as part of the presentation standard, not an afterthought.
5. Bathroom and Kitchen Deep Cleaning
If you only have enough energy to be fussy in two parts of the home, make it the kitchen and the bathroom. These rooms decide a lot of inspections because they show use quickly and hide grime in obvious places.
They’re also where many bond deductions start. Oven degreasing is required in 90% of disputes per 2023 RTA data cited by SAS Cleaning Service. That lines up with what cleaners see every week. Tenants do the visible wipe-over, but racks, trays, rangehood filters, and the oven lip still hold baked-on residue.


Kitchen details that actually matter
The kitchen should be attacked early because grease spreads. If you leave it late, you end up touching clean surfaces with dirty cloths and hands.
Focus on:
- Oven interior and racks: Including the glass edge and door seal area.
- Rangehood filter and cover: Grease builds here even in homes that look clean.
- Cooktop and burner surrounds: Lift removable parts and clean underneath.
- Cupboards and drawers: Empty them and wipe inside, not just fronts.
- Sink and tap base: Limescale, food residue, and dark edges stand out.
The same goes for the fridge cavity if the appliance belongs to the property. Pull it forward if you can do so safely and clean behind and underneath.
Bathroom trouble spots
Bathrooms fail on detail.
Check:
- Shower screen edges
- Tap bases and handles
- Exhaust fan covers
- Drain covers and hair build-up
- Toilet hinges and base edges
- Vanity cupboard interiors
A bathroom can smell like bleach and still fail if mould remains in corners or soap scum sits along the shower frame.
Inspection mindset: Agents often check the room from the doorway first, then move straight to the shower, oven, and exhaust fans.
A realistic example is the tenant who spends an hour polishing the sink and mirror but ignores the underside of the toilet rim, the bathroom fan cover, and the rangehood mesh. Those hidden spots are exactly where a property manager’s report can turn from “clean” to “additional cleaning required”.
Use the 2 to 3 day window for these rooms because they’re labour-heavy and messy. Once they’re done properly, the final day becomes manageable.
6. Floor Cleaning Non-Carpet Surfaces
Hard floors don’t get the same attention as carpet at end of lease, but they still shape the final impression of the property. If the timber is dusty along the edges, the vinyl is sticky near the kitchen kickboards, or the laundry floor has old detergent marks, the place won’t read as properly finished.
The trick with non-carpet floors is to match the method to the surface. One product and one mop for everything usually creates streaks, residue, or dull patches.
Different surfaces, different problems
Timber and laminate often show:
- Fine dust on edges
- Scuffing near doors
- Residue from over-wet mopping
Vinyl and kitchen hard flooring often show:
- Grease film
- Heel marks
- Staining near bins or fridges
Concrete garage or outdoor-adjacent areas often show:
- Dust migration
- Leaf debris
- Oil spotting
The common mistake is doing hard floors too early. By the time carpets, bathrooms, and window tracks are finished, you’ve walked fresh dust and grit back over them.
Best sequence for the final result
Hard floors should be one of the last jobs, but not the absolute last if they need more than a quick pass. You still need time for drying and a proper visual check.
A solid move-out order is:
- Vacuum edges and corners first
- Spot-treat marks
- Mop with the correct product for the surface
- Recheck in side light once dry
This matters in mixed-floor Melbourne rentals, where a property may have carpeted bedrooms, timber in living zones, and vinyl in the kitchen and laundry. If one area looks freshly done and another looks neglected, the contrast makes the whole clean feel inconsistent.
A practical example is the apartment where the tenant steam cleans the carpet and wipes every benchtop, but leaves mop haze on dark timber boards near the balcony. The room smells clean, but the floor still reads poorly in afternoon light.
Don’t flood laminate or engineered timber. Too much water can swell edges and leave a dull finish. On the other hand, don’t try to “dry mop” greasy vinyl and expect it to pass. Surface type decides method. That’s the whole game with hard floors.
7. Stain Removal and Spot Treatment
Stains cause arguments because people use the same word for different things. A tenant sees “one old mark”. An agent sees “damage”. A technician sees a stain type, fibre type, age, and whether anyone has already made it worse.
That’s why spot treatment deserves its own place on an end of lease cleaning checklist. It isn’t the same as general carpet or upholstery cleaning. Some marks lift easily with the right process. Others set deeper because they’ve oxidised, spread into underlay, or been hit with the wrong supermarket spray.
The biggest mistake tenants make
They panic-treat the stain in the final 24 hours.
That often leads to:
- Bleached patches
- Water rings
- Sticky residue that attracts more soil
- Partially removed marks that look larger than before
Fresh spills are one thing. Old move-out stains are another. Pet accidents, red drink spills, makeup, ink, and greasy marks all behave differently.
If you’re dealing with carpet spots and want a practical overview first, this guide to common carpet stains and how to remove them in 2024 gives a useful breakdown of what responds to home treatment and what usually needs specialist attention.
How to handle stains strategically
Treat stain work as an early identification task, not a last-minute cleaning task.
Walk through the property one week out and mark anything visible:
- Bedroom corners with pet accidents
- Lounge areas with drink spills
- Hallway marks from shoes or makeup
- Kitchen edges with oil or food staining
Then decide what’s realistic. Some stains improve with standard steam cleaning. Some need targeted treatment. Some won’t disappear completely, but can still be improved enough to avoid a major issue at inspection.
A real-world example is the pale carpet in a rental bedroom where a pet had repeated accidents near the window. The stain isn’t only visual. There’s usually odour and underlay contamination involved too. Standard cleaning can freshen it, but if the smell remains, the problem hasn’t been solved from the agent’s point of view.
Don’t promise yourself a stain is “probably fine” unless you’ve checked it in daylight after the room is empty.
Photograph stain areas before treatment and after. If a mark is permanent wear rather than cleanable soil, those photos can help distinguish condition from damage caused at move-out.
8. Air Quality and Odour Elimination
Some properties look clean and still fail the handover test because the air tells a different story. Odour is one of the fastest ways for a property manager to decide a clean wasn’t thorough enough.
That smell might come from pets, cooking, smoke, dampness, old spills, or soft furnishings that have absorbed months of indoor air. Once the home is empty, those smells can become stronger, not weaker, because there’s no furniture, linen, or general household activity masking them.
Why odour needs its own plan
Odour elimination isn’t solved by opening a window for ten minutes or spraying fragrance through the rooms.
That approach usually backfires. Artificial scent can make a property manager suspect you’re covering something up.
The source needs to be addressed:
- Carpets with pet contamination
- Sofas or mattresses holding body or smoke odour
- Kitchen fabrics and surfaces carrying grease smell
- Damp areas causing mustiness
For high-traffic Melbourne rentals, professional services achieve 99% dirt removal via truck-mounted systems versus 60% for DIY, with drying times cut to 2 hours and allergens reduced by 87%, according to SAS Cleaning Service. That matters because odour often rides along with the dirt and residue buried in fibres.
What actually helps
Ventilation matters, but only after the underlying cleaning is done.
Good practice looks like this:
- Deep clean soft surfaces first
- Treat specific odour zones directly
- Air the property well after treatment
- Return for a smell check once the place is shut up again
If pet smell is part of the problem, this guide on how to get rid of carpet smell is a practical reference for understanding what surface deodorising can and can’t fix.
A common example is the apartment where the tenant has cleaned every hard surface well, but the living room still carries a faint dog smell when the windows have been closed overnight. The next morning inspection picks it up immediately. In that case, the visible cleaning wasn’t the issue. The hidden odour source was.
Before handover, shut the property up for a little while, then re-enter and smell each room cold. That’s much closer to what the agent will experience than your nose after hours of cleaning with windows open.
End-of-Lease: 8-Point Cleaning Comparison
| Service | 🔄 Implementation complexity | ⚡ Resource requirements | ⭐ Expected outcomes | 💡 Ideal use cases | 📊 Key advantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deep Carpet Steam Cleaning | Medium, requires truck-mounted setup and trained operator | High, truck unit, hot water extraction, trained crew; 4–6h drying | High, restores carpets to near-new; removes deep dirt & allergens ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | End-of-lease carpets, pet-occupied homes, heavy soiling | Deep extraction, improves air quality, cost-effective vs replacement |
| Tile and Grout Deep Cleaning | Medium–High, targeted protocols for grout and tiles | Moderate, hot water, specialised cleaners, grout tools; optional sealing | High, restores grout colour, removes mould/mildew ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Bathrooms, kitchens, tiled entryways inspected at lease end | Improves hygiene, prevents water damage, strong visual impact |
| Upholstery and Sofa Cleaning | Medium, fabric assessment and careful technique required | Moderate, fabric-safe extractors, leather treatments; ~24h drying | High, removes allergens, odours, stains; refreshes furniture ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Furnished rentals, pet-stained furniture, visible upholstery stains | Prevents deposit deductions, extends furniture life, hygienic results |
| Mattress Cleaning and Sanitization | Medium, requires mattress removal/positioning and sanitization | Moderate, HEPA extraction/steam, antimicrobials; 12–24h drying | High, removes dust mites, bodily fluids, odours; improves hygiene ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Lease-mandated mattress cleaning, pet/biological stains, allergy concerns | Health-focused, often required by landlords, reduces disputes |
| Bathroom and Kitchen Deep Cleaning | High, labour-intensive with varied surface protocols | Moderate, specialised cleaners/tools; time-consuming for heavy buildup | Very high, critical for pass-through inspections; removes limescale/mould ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Showers, toilets, kitchen benches, stovetops at inspection time | Most visible impact on inspections; removes health hazards and grease |
| Floor Cleaning (Non-Carpet Surfaces) | Medium, method varies by floor type (timber, vinyl, laminate) | Moderate, pH-neutral cleaners, protection treatments; possible buffing | Good, restores appearance, removes scuffs and marks ⭐⭐⭐ | Mixed-floor properties, timber/laminate areas, high-traffic zones | Consistent finish across property; extends floor lifespan |
| Stain Removal and Spot Treatment | Medium, requires stain identification and targeted protocols | Variable, specialty chemicals, multiple passes possible; technician skill | High for fresh stains; variable for set-in stains ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (conditional) | Pet urine, wine/ink spills, isolated visible stains risking deposit | Prevents deposit deductions; targeted and often cheaper than replacement |
| Air Quality and Odour Elimination | High, needs source identification and tailored treatments | High, HEPA filtration, enzymatic or ozone options, ventilation time | High when sources addressed; eliminates persistent odours ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Pet/smoke-affected homes, musty or water-damaged properties | Eliminates odours rather than masking; improves indoor air quality |
Beyond the Clean Securing Your Deposit and Final Steps
Finishing the clean feels like the hard part, and in one sense it is. But the last few admin steps often decide whether the handover stays smooth or turns into a back-and-forth over condition.
A proper end of lease cleaning checklist doesn’t stop when the mop goes back in the bucket. It ends when you’ve protected yourself with evidence, paperwork, and one final objective walkthrough.
Start with documentation. Take clear, well-lit photos and short videos after the job is complete and the property is empty. Don’t just shoot wide room photos. Get close-ups of the areas that cause the most friction. Carpeted rooms. Oven interior. Shower grout. Window tracks. Inside drawers and cupboards. If there’s ever a dispute, broad “the place was clean” statements don’t help much. Specific images do.
Receipts matter too. In Victoria, where lease terms often call for steam carpet cleaning, proof of service can be as important as the cleaning itself. Consumer Affairs Victoria data from 2023 indicates that 68% of renters who followed a detailed checklist, including steam cleaning carpets, received their full bond back without deductions, compared to 42% for those who skipped professional deep cleans, as cited by Resident. You don’t need to argue that point at inspection if you can produce the invoice.
If you can attend the final inspection, do it. Being there lets you answer questions immediately and fix small issues before they become formal notes. Sometimes the “problem” is minor. A dusty blind edge. A missed drawer crumb. A couple of marks on a sliding door track. If you’re present with wipes, paper towel, and your phone gallery of final-condition photos, you’re in a much stronger position than if the report lands later by email.
Pay special attention to the detail items that commonly get missed in the rush:
- Empty drawers and cupboards: No crumbs, liners, or forgotten items.
- Light switches and power points: Fingerprints show up badly on white plates.
- Balconies, patios, and garages: Sweep them properly and clear debris.
- Bins and bin areas: Empty, rinsed if needed, and not smelling.
- Blinds and tracks: Dust here is one of the easiest marks against an otherwise solid clean.
The best final walkthrough is done slowly, with the property quiet and empty. Stand in the doorway of each room first. Then move in like a property manager would. Open everything. Slide windows. Check behind doors. Look down at skirting. Crouch to inspect floor edges. Smell the air with windows closed.
For Melbourne renters, the practical takeaway is simple. Don’t leave the whole job to the final day, and don’t assume visible neatness equals inspection-ready condition. Kitchens, bathrooms, carpets, grout, stains, and odour need planning. The strategic timeline makes the job smaller because it puts each task in the right window.
If you want a printable version of this end of lease cleaning checklist, use the structure above as your move-out sheet. One week out for emptying, repairs, and bookings. Two to three days out for ovens, bathrooms, grout, and professional services. Final 24 hours for surfaces, floors, glass, and your evidence pass.
For renters who need help with carpets, upholstery, mattresses, or tile and grout, Right Price Carpet Cleaning is one Melbourne option. The company has operated since 2007 and offers truck-mounted steam cleaning across Greater Melbourne. For end-of-lease jobs, the main advantage is simple. You can line up the specialist work in the right part of the timeline, keep the invoice for your records, and reduce the number of risky last-minute jobs left on your plate.
If you want help with the carpet, upholstery, mattress, or tile-and-grout parts of your move-out, Right Price Carpet Cleaning offers end-of-lease cleaning services across Greater Melbourne. You can check pricing, book online, and line the job up to fit your final inspection schedule.


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