For most businesses, window cleaning isn't maintenance — it's marketing. Dirty storefronts cost walk-ins. Smudged office glass sends a signal to clients. Here's the honest schedule for each kind of business.
The cheat sheet
| Business Type | Recommended Frequency |
|---|---|
| Restaurant / cafe / bar | Every 2 weeks |
| Retail storefront (high-traffic) | Weekly |
| Retail storefront (low-traffic) | Monthly |
| Office building (exterior) | Monthly |
| Office building (interior) | Quarterly |
| Medical / dental | Monthly |
| Car dealership | Weekly (showroom), monthly (exterior) |
| Hotel / hospitality | Monthly exterior, quarterly interior |
| Industrial / warehouse | Quarterly |
| Gym / fitness | Bi-weekly |
Why the schedule matters for each
Restaurants
Fingerprints, nose prints from kids, grease from kitchen ventilation on the exterior glass. Dirty windows in a food business also send an unconscious "is this place clean?" signal to customers walking by. Every two weeks is the honest baseline — weekly for busy spots.
Retail storefronts
This is the one where dirty windows directly cost you money. If you're in a high-foot-traffic area (University Place in Orem, The Shops at Riverwoods, Traverse Mountain Outlets, downtown Provo), your storefront is doing half the selling. Weekly service is the norm — some high-end retail is bi-weekly or even more often.
Office buildings
What your clients see when they walk in matters. Monthly exterior cleaning is standard. Interior quarterly is enough for most — it's less about grime and more about preventing the slow buildup that makes offices feel tired after a year.
Medical and dental
Patients are looking at your waiting room. A smudged window in a dental office sends a worse message than in most other businesses — people are already a little anxious. Monthly service (inside and out) is worth it for the patient perception alone.
Car dealerships
Showroom glass needs weekly or more to look clean. The exterior is usually a massive glass facade that shows hard water and dust fast — especially in places like Lehi where Point of the Mountain dust is relentless.
Industrial and warehouse
Different game. Exterior is about basic upkeep — quarterly is usually fine. Interior depends entirely on what you manufacture; call us for a walk-through.
How to actually budget for this
Commercial customers get discounted per-visit pricing when they book recurring contracts. A monthly-service office we quote at, say, $200/visit might be $350+ for a one-off. The math favors the schedule — and it also means you stop thinking about it.
When we onboard a commercial client in Utah County, we set up:
- Fixed schedule — same day of the month, same crew
- Locked-in pricing — known cost for your budget
- After-hours service if needed — works around your customers
- One invoice per month — simple accounting
The Utah County commercial context
Utah County businesses face some local quirks:
- Hard water overspray from building irrigation is aggressive. Storefronts near irrigation systems need proactive service to avoid permanent etching.
- Point of the Mountain dust coats Lehi, Draper, and Bluffdale commercial glass faster than the rest of the valley. Monthly minimum up there.
- Snow and salt in winter turns exterior glass cloudy fast. Mid-winter cleanings (February) are worth the investment for customer-facing businesses.
Ready to set up a commercial schedule?
We quote commercial jobs on-site — it's faster and more accurate. No charge for the walk-through.
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