Spring cleaning vs fair wear and tear: Where tenants stand Spring cleaning vs fair wear and tear: Where tenants stand

Spring cleaning vs fair wear and tear: Where tenants stand

Moving out creates anxiety about deposit returns, with cleaning standards representing one of the most common dispute causes.

No. 14835 from our magazine|2 min read| Published in Magazine on 25 March 2026 by our Marketing Team

Understanding the difference between required cleanliness levels and fair wear and tear helps you prepare properties appropriately whilst protecting deposits from unjustified deduction claims.

Legal standards for cleanliness

You must return properties in similar cleanliness to when you moved in, accounting for reasonable wear from normal use. This doesn’t mean professional cleaning standards unless tenancy agreements specifically require professional services with receipts provided.

Check your inventory and move-in photographs. These documents establish baseline conditions against which move-out standards are judged. If properties were spotless at tenancy start, similar standards apply when leaving. If they were reasonably clean but not immaculate, match those original standards.

What counts as fair wear and tear

Fair wear and tear describe natural deterioration from reasonable use over time. This includes carpet wear in normal traffic areas, minor scuffs on walls from furniture, faded curtains or blinds from sunlight exposure, and general dulling of decorative finishes through age.

Worn carpets after five-year tenancies represent fair wear. However, carpet stains from spills, burns, or pet damage exceed normal wear, potentially justifying cleaning or replacement costs.

Similarly, walls showing minor marks from picture hanging or light furniture contact represent fair wear. Large holes, significant damage, or extensive marking beyond normal contact points exceed fair wear standards.

Kitchen cleanliness expectations

Kitchens require thorough cleaning focusing on areas accumulating grease, grime, or food residue. Ovens should be clean inside and out, hobs free from burnt-on food, and extractor filters degreased properly.

Clean inside cupboards, removing any food items, crumbs, or spills. Wipe down all surfaces including tops of cupboards often overlooked. Appliances including fridges, freezers, and microwaves should be defrosted, cleaned, and sanitised.

However, worn worktop surfaces, faded cupboard finishes, or appliance scratches from normal use represent fair wear rather than damage requiring replacement.

Bathroom standards

Bathrooms need thorough sanitising including toilets, sinks, baths, showers, and tiles. Remove limescale buildup, mould, and soap scum through proper cleaning products and effort. Clean grouting, though discolouration from age rather than neglect represents fair wear.

Replace worn shower curtains as these cost minimal amounts yet significantly impact bathroom presentation. However, bath enamel dulling or minor tile wear from years of use represents acceptable deterioration.

Living areas and bedrooms

Vacuum carpets thoroughly, clean windows inside, dust all surfaces including skirting boards and light fittings, and wipe down doors and frames. Remove any blu-tack marks, drawing pin holes, or minor wall damage you caused.

However, carpet compression under furniture, minor paint wear, or slight colour fading from sunlight all represent fair wear rather than damage requiring rectification or charges.

Gardens and outdoor spaces

Leave gardens reasonably tidy with lawns mowed, beds weeded, and pathways swept. Remove any rubbish, personal items, or accumulated debris. However, established garden growth, seasonal variations, or natural lawn wear represent fair conditions rather than damage.

Documentation protects your position

Take comprehensive move-out photographs matching angles used in move-in documentation. These prove property conditions if disputes arise about cleanliness or damage claims.

Photograph every room, all appliances, outdoor spaces, and any areas where previous damage existed at move-in. These images provide crucial evidence supporting your position during deposit adjudication.

Professional cleaning considerations

If tenancy agreements require professional cleaning, obtain services from reputable companies providing receipts proving completion. However, many agreements don’t mandate professional services despite landlord preferences.

If agreements simply require returning properties in clean condition without specifying professional services, thorough personal cleaning meeting reasonable standards should suffice for deposit protection.

Challenging unjustified deductions

If landlords claim deductions you consider unfair, challenge them through deposit protection scheme dispute resolution. Provide evidence including move-in and move-out photographs, inventory documents, and explanations of why claimed damage represents fair wear rather than tenant responsibility.

Adjudicators understand fair wear and tear principles, generally supporting tenants when landlords attempt charging for normal deterioration or demanding unrealistic standards.

Preparing strategically

Start cleaning several days before moving out rather than attempting everything in final hours. Systematic room-by-room approaches ensure thoroughness without overwhelming rushes missing important areas.

Focus effort on areas landlords scrutinise most carefully including kitchens, bathrooms, and overall cleanliness rather than obsessing over minor fair wear issues beyond your responsibility.

Contact us to understand your obligations and property protection

This article was originally published by BriefYourMarket and is reproduced here with their permission.

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