Bond Cleaning vs End of Lease Cleaning — What’s the Difference?

Bond Cleaning vs End of Lease Cleaning — What’s the Difference?

There is no difference. Bond cleaning and end of lease cleaning are the same service with two different names. Both describe a full professional clean of a rental property at the end of a tenancy, carried out to inspection standard before the outgoing condition assessment.

You’ll also hear it called a vacate clean, move-out clean, or exit clean. Same scope, same standard. The terminology varies by who’s talking — agents tend to say “end of lease clean,” tenants often say “bond clean,” and cleaning companies use both interchangeably.

Why the Confusion Exists

The term “bond cleaning” comes from the expectation that a professional clean is the key to getting your bond back. This is true in practice but not technically — your bond is held by the Residential Tenancies Bond Authority (RTBA) and returned based on the outgoing inspection, not simply on whether you hired a professional cleaner.

“End of lease cleaning” is the more accurate term because it describes when the clean happens rather than its assumed outcome. Property managers typically use this language in their inspection forms and tenancy agreements.

What Both Services Include

Whether a company calls it bond cleaning or end of lease cleaning, the scope should be the same:

  • Full kitchen including oven interior, rangehood, and all cupboards
  • All bathrooms — shower glass descaled, grout scrubbed, toilet sanitised
  • All bedrooms — walls spot-cleaned, wardrobes, skirting boards
  • Windows, tracks, and sills throughout
  • Floors vacuumed and mopped
  • All light fittings, ceiling fans, exhaust fans
  • Laundry area

Optional add-ons that differ by company: carpet steam cleaning, external windows, balcony, garage, blind cleaning.

What Actually Determines Your Bond Return

The Victorian bond return process works like this:

  1. Property manager conducts outgoing inspection and compares against the entry condition report
  2. Any cleaning items not meeting the entry standard are documented
  3. Bond deduction claim is submitted to the RTBA if disputes arise
  4. Tenant can contest at VCAT if they disagree — and often win, particularly on subjective “cleanliness” claims

The clean matters, but so does documentation. Photograph every room after cleaning. Get a completion certificate from your cleaning company. Keep your RTBA receipt number. These are your evidence if a dispute arises.

Does the Name Affect the Price?

It shouldn’t — but some companies charge a premium for “bond cleaning” as a label. There’s no industry definition that makes bond cleaning more thorough than end of lease cleaning. If you’re getting quotes, compare what’s included in the scope, not what it’s called.

Watch for: quotes that seem cheap but exclude carpet steam cleaning, oven cleaning, or window tracks — these are the items most likely to cause inspection failures.

Melbourne Pricing — What to Expect

Property Size Bond / End of Lease Clean + Carpet Steam
Studio / 1BRFrom $265From $325
2BRFrom $320From $395
3BRFrom $380From $465
4BRFrom $440From $535
5BR+From $499From $610+

Get an end of lease cleaning quote from Deep Clean King →

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