If you’ve ever tried to figure out what a cleaner actually costs in Myrtle Beach, you know the range is all over the place. One company quotes $100. Another wants $300. Nobody explains why. This guide fixes that.

Here’s what house cleaning actually costs in Myrtle Beach in 2026, broken down by service type with real market context — not generic national averages that don’t account for sand, humidity, or the Grand Strand’s seasonal booking chaos.

House Cleaning Pricing Table — Myrtle Beach, SC (2026)

Service TypeTypical Price RangeNotes
Standard recurring clean (2,000–2,500 sq ft)$120–$220 per visitWeekly, biweekly, or monthly
Standard clean — condo / townhome (under 1,500 sq ft)$90–$150 per visitNorth Myrtle Beach, Surfside, Garden City common sizes
Deep clean (standard home)$200–$350 per visitFirst-time clean or quarterly reset
Deep clean (large home, 3,000+ sq ft)$300–$500 per visitCarolina Forest, Pawleys Island, Barefoot Resort
Move-in / move-out clean (condo/townhome)$150–$300Empty home, full scope
Move-in / move-out clean (single-family home)$250–$500Includes garage sweep, inside cabinets
Hourly rate (most companies)$50–$90/hourMinimum 2–4 hours typical
Vacation rental turnover clean$100–$200 per unitSmaller units, 24–48 hr turnaround
Post-construction clean (light)$300–$600 per jobAfter reno, no major debris removal
Post-construction clean (full)$600–$1,200+ per jobAfter major renovation, debris removed

Note: Prices reflect the Myrtle Beach / Grand Strand metro area as of mid-2026. Summer peak season pricing may run 10–20% higher. Most companies require a minimum of 2–3 hours or a flat-rate minimum of $100–$150 per visit.

Local Factors That Affect Your Cleaning Bill

Myrtle Beach isn’t a generic suburban market. Here are the three factors that specifically drive pricing here, and what to do about each one.

1. Sand, Sand, and More Sand

If your home is anywhere within a mile of the ocean — and most of the Grand Strand is essentially beach-adjacent — you’re dealing with sand as a constant factor. It settles in kitchen floors, entryways, garage floors, and the grout lines of any tiled surface. Cleaning crews in Myrtle Beach spend significantly more time on sand-related cleanup than a cleaner in, say, Raleigh or Charlotte. This is normal and expected. Don’t be alarmed when Myrtle Beach prices look slightly higher than generic online calculators — those calculators don’t account for the sand tax.

What to do: If you’re near the beach, ask the cleaning company if they include entryway and garage detailing in their standard rate. Many don’t unless you request it specifically.

2. Humidity and Mold Pressure

Myrtle Beach averages 70%+ humidity for most of the year. South-facing walls, bathroom grout, shower stalls, and crawl space vents develop mold and mildew faster here than in drier inland markets. A cleaner who spends 15 minutes on a Raleigh bathroom might spend 45 minutes on the same bathroom in Surfside. This is why “standard clean” in Myrtle Beach costs more than the same description in the Upstate.

What to do: If you’re buying a home that’s been unoccupied (seasonal property, vacation rental), expect the cleaner to need extra time on bathrooms and any area with poor ventilation. Budget for a deep clean rather than a standard clean for those situations.

3. Seasonal Demand and Booking Lead Time

The Grand Strand is a deeply seasonal market. Between May and September, every cleaning company on the beach is booked 2–3 weeks out. Snowbirds return in October, vacation rentals need weekly turnovers through March, and availability tightens across the board.

What to do: If you need cleaning on a specific timeline (say, the day before listing your home for sale), you need to book at least 2 weeks in advance during peak season. Companies with availability on 24-hour notice during summer are often either new, desperate for business, or overextended. Established companies book ahead.

What You Actually Get at Each Price Point

Standard Recurring Clean ($120–$220)

A standard clean typically includes: dusting all surfaces, vacuuming and mopping all floors, kitchen counters and exterior appliance cleaning, bathroom sanitization (toilet, sink, shower/tub, mirror), trash removal, making beds (if linens are provided), and general tidying.

Does NOT typically include: Inside cabinets, inside ovens, baseboards, ceiling fan blades, window sills, inside the refrigerator, garage cleaning, or laundry.

Deep Clean ($200–$400+)

Everything in a standard clean, plus: inside cabinets and drawers, inside the oven and refrigerator, baseboards, door frames, light switch plates, ceiling fan blades, window sills and blinds, bathroom grout and tile detailing, and behind furniture (if accessible).

Deep cleans are what you want before: listing a home for sale, hosting a major event, buying a new home, or after a long period without professional cleaning (6+ months).

Move-In / Move-Out Clean ($150–$500)

The full scope: everything in a deep clean, plus garage sweep-out, inside all closets, light fixtures, ceiling fans, all cabinet interiors, inside all appliances, window sills, and any debris left behind by the previous occupant. This is the highest-scope standard clean you can order.

For sellers: budget for this. Your listing photos and buyer walk-through will thank you. For buyers: if you’re getting a mortgage with an inspection contingency, a clean home is one less thing that surfaces as a “deferred maintenance” flag.

How to Get the Best Price Without Getting Burned

Book a Cleaner Through ProPulse

ProPulse connects Myrtle Beach homeowners with verified, insured cleaning companies offering transparent pricing. No lead-gen middlemen — you see real reviews, real pricing, and connect directly.

Use our AI booking assistant to get a quote in under 2 minutes, or browse cleaning services in Myrtle Beach to find a pro that fits your timeline and budget.