How to Dispute Cleaning Charges on Your Deposit
Updated April 2026 · 5 min read
Cleaning deductions are the number one reason for deposit disputes in England and Wales. According to the TDS 2023/24 adjudication statistics, cleaning accounts for the largest single category of deposit claims. The good news: tenants receive a favourable outcome in the majority of cleaning disputes when they present proper evidence.
The Key Legal Principle
You are required to return the property in a reasonably clean condition — not a professionally cleaned condition. Unless your tenancy agreement contains an explicit professional cleaning clause AND you received the property in a professionally cleaned state (with an invoice to prove it), your landlord cannot insist on professional cleaning at your expense.
The Citizens Advice position is clear: "Your landlord can only make you pay for cleaning if you left the property in a worse condition than when you moved in — allowing for fair wear and tear."
Common Cleaning Deductions That Fail
Oven cleaning after 2+ year tenancy: Adjudicators routinely accept that ovens will accumulate grease and residue through normal cooking. After a longer tenancy, this is considered fair wear and tear.
Carpet cleaning without stains: If a carpet shows no specific stains or damage beyond general use, a cleaning deduction is hard for a landlord to justify. Normal foot traffic and slight flattening are wear and tear.
Full professional clean when not in the contract: Without a specific clause AND evidence that the property was professionally cleaned before your tenancy, this deduction almost always fails.
Cleaning charges exceeding the cost of the original clean: Even if cleaning is justified, the amount must be reasonable. A landlord claiming £300 for cleaning a one-bedroom flat will face heavy scrutiny.
Evidence That Wins Cleaning Disputes
The strongest evidence for disputing a cleaning charge includes: dated photos of the property on your final day (especially kitchen, bathroom, and floors), a copy of the check-in inventory showing the condition when you moved in, your tenancy agreement (to check whether a professional cleaning clause exists), and any photos or receipts showing you did clean before leaving. Our guide to proper inventory evidence explains exactly how to document your case.
Step-by-Step: How to Challenge It
Step 1: Send a formal demand letter to your landlord citing the specific legal reasons the deduction is unfair. Reference the tenancy length, lack of a professional cleaning clause (if applicable), and the fair wear and tear principle.
Step 2: If they refuse, raise a dispute through your deposit protection scheme. DPS, TDS, and MyDeposits all offer free adjudication.
Step 3: Submit your evidence pack — the adjudicator will compare the check-in report with your move-out evidence and determine whether the deduction is fair.
Fighting a cleaning charge?
Our Starter Pack (£14.99) includes a professional demand letter that specifically addresses cleaning deductions with the relevant legal citations for your tenancy length.
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