Many organizations try to save money by assigning cleaning duties to office staff or hiring a single in-house janitor. On paper, it looks like the more affordable option. In practice, the hidden costs of managing cleaning internally often exceed what a professional janitorial service would charge.
Supply costs are higher than you expect
Professional janitorial companies purchase cleaning supplies, chemicals, and equipment in volume at wholesale pricing. When you manage cleaning in-house, you're buying the same products at retail or small-order rates. Paper goods, trash liners, disinfectants, floor care chemicals, and equipment like vacuums and floor machines all come out of your operating budget.
Equipment maintenance adds another layer. Commercial vacuums need regular servicing. Floor machines require pads, brushes, and periodic repair. When a piece of equipment breaks, you're responsible for replacing it. A janitorial service absorbs all of these costs within their contract price, giving you predictable monthly expenses instead of surprise line items.
The productivity cost of divided attention
When office staff are asked to handle cleaning duties, even informally, it pulls them away from the work they were hired to do. An office manager who spends 30 minutes a day tidying the kitchen, restocking restrooms, and taking out trash is losing over two hours a week of productive time. Multiply that across a year, and the salary cost of that diverted labor often exceeds the price of outsourced cleaning.
There's also the quality issue. People who aren't trained in professional cleaning techniques don't clean to the same standard. They may not know which products to use on which surfaces, how to properly disinfect a restroom, or how to maintain a floor finish. The result is a facility that looks passable but isn't truly clean.
Liability and turnover create ongoing risk
An in-house janitor is your employee, which means you're responsible for payroll taxes, workers' compensation insurance, benefits, and liability if they're injured on the job. Janitorial work involves chemical handling, lifting, and repetitive motion, all of which carry injury risk. A single workers' comp claim can cost thousands and increase your premiums for years.
Turnover is another persistent challenge. The janitorial industry has high turnover rates, and when your single janitor quits, you're left scrambling to recruit, hire, and train a replacement. During the gap, cleaning doesn't happen, or it falls back on your office staff. A professional janitorial company manages their own staffing, recruitment, and training, ensuring consistent coverage regardless of individual personnel changes.
How Delta manages this
Delta Janitorial Systems provides a fully managed cleaning program that eliminates the hidden costs of in-house cleaning. We supply all products, equipment, and labor. We handle all staffing, training, and quality oversight. Our month-to-month terms mean you're never locked into a long commitment, and our 100% satisfaction guarantee ensures you're getting the value you're paying for.
As a family-owned company with more than 50 years in the DFW market, we've helped hundreds of organizations transition from in-house cleaning to a professional program that delivers better results at a more predictable cost. If you've been managing cleaning internally and wondering whether there's a better way, a free facility walkthrough will give you a clear picture of what a structured program would look like for your space.