A cleaning plan that actually fits your home.

Stop guessing what needs doing this week. Add your rooms and tasks, pick a frequency, and get a simple rotation you can print and share. Everything stays in your browser.

Last updated March 2026. Works offline after first load.

Your rotation

Add at least two rooms and one task each to see a schedule.

Rooms and tasks

Quick presets

Example rotations

Three common setups to show how the planner adapts to different homes. Use them as a starting point and adjust from there.

Small apartment

One person, limited space, focus on the basics. Kitchen counters and the sink daily, bathroom twice a week, floors weekly, and a deeper clean of the oven and windows once a month.

Rooms
Kitchen, bathroom, living area, bedroom
Cadence
Light daily, deep monthly

Family home

Two adults, kids, a dog. High traffic surfaces get attention several times a week. Laundry and toy rotation become their own entries so nothing hides in the corners.

Rooms
Kitchen, two bathrooms, playroom, bedrooms, laundry, entry
Cadence
Daily tidying, weekly reset, monthly deep clean

Shared house

Roommates with different schedules. A shared rotation keeps things fair. Common areas rotate weekly between households, private rooms stay personal, and a short checklist sits by the back door.

Rooms
Kitchen, shared bath, living room, hallway, bins area
Cadence
Weekly rotation, monthly review

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

Most cleaning plans fail in the first two weeks. They are either too ambitious or too vague. These notes come from people who have tried and adjusted their own rotations.

Starting too big

Listing thirty tasks for every room looks thorough on paper. In practice, it becomes a list you ignore. Pick the five to eight tasks that actually change how the home feels and add more later.

Forgetting the hidden jobs

Cleaning the sink is obvious. Cleaning the bin, the shower hose, the fridge seals, or the dryer vent is not. Write the hidden jobs down early or they will not make it into the rotation.

Tasks like "clean the kitchen" are too broad. Break them into smaller steps. "Wipe counters", "scrub sink", "sweep floor", and "take out bins" are easier to assign and check off.

Not adjusting after the first month

The first draft is a guess. After four weeks you will know which tasks happen too often and which are not happening at all. Change the frequency and keep going.

Leaving no room for busy weeks

Some weeks are heavier than others. A good rotation has a few quick tasks each day rather than one monster day. If a day is packed, move a non urgent task forward.

Skipping the printout

Digital plans are easy to forget. A printed sheet on the fridge or near the cleaning caddy works better for most households. Use the Print button at the bottom of the planner.

What this planner assumes

  • You are planning for a single household, not a team of cleaners.
  • Frequencies are estimates. Real life will change them.
  • The plan does not track who did what. It only shows what is due.
  • Your data stays in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server.