Your restrooms get "cleaned" every night. But are they actually disinfected? There's a critical difference, and most facility managers don't realize their provider is only doing one of the three.
Cleaning vs. sanitizing vs. disinfecting
Cleaning removes visible dirt, debris, and some surface germs using soap or detergent. It makes surfaces look clean but doesn't kill most pathogens.
Sanitizing reduces bacteria on surfaces to levels considered safe by public health standards. It's a step above cleaning but doesn't eliminate all harmful organisms.
Disinfecting kills virtually all bacteria, viruses, and fungi on surfaces using EPA-registered products with specific contact times. This is the level of protection your restrooms actually need.
Why the distinction matters
A restroom that looks clean can still harbor dangerous pathogens on high-touch surfaces: faucet handles, door pulls, flush levers, and dispensers. If your janitorial provider is wiping these surfaces with a general-purpose cleaner and moving on, they're cleaning. They're not disinfecting.
Proper disinfection requires the right products applied at the right concentration for the right contact time. Spray and wipe is not disinfection. The product needs to remain wet on the surface for the manufacturer's specified dwell time to actually kill pathogens.
What to expect from a managed program
In a Delta Janitorial managed restroom program, disinfection protocols are documented in your custom cleaning plan. Our staff are trained on proper product application, contact times, and high-touch point identification. We verify compliance through scheduled and surprise quality audits.
Your restrooms don't just look clean. They are clean. That's the difference.
Schedule a free walkthrough and let us assess your current restroom program.