How to Start a Cleaning Business in Utah (2026)





Last updated: April 30, 2026. Sales tax rules verified against R865-19S Utah Administrative Code; ABC test verified against Utah Code 35A-4-204.3; UOSH state-plan OSHA verified through Utah Labor Commission.

How to Start a Cleaning Business in Utah (2026)

Cleaning services are among the most accessible small-business launches in Utah. There is no state-level cleaning license, the LLC structure runs $59 to form plus $18 annual renewal (the lowest in the United States), and cleaning services applied to real property — homes, offices, commercial buildings — are not subject to Utah sales tax under R865-19S. The borderline that catches operators is the split between real property and tangible personal property: cleaning a wall-to-wall installed carpet is real-property work and non-taxable; cleaning a removable area rug is tangible-personal-property work and taxable. Same business, same crew, two different sales-tax treatments.

Utah’s other operating realities for cleaning businesses are uniformly business-friendly. No state Domestic Workers Bill of Rights (versus California, Oregon, Washington, New York, Massachusetts which all have one). Federal $7.25 minimum wage with statewide preemption — Salt Lake City and Park City cannot raise local floors. No state PFML — federal FMLA only applies at 50+ employees. Workers’ compensation is required at the first W-2 employee with no threshold, but the market is competitive (Workers Compensation Fund plus private carriers compete on rates). Utah’s ABC test under UCA 35A-4-204.3 governs IC classification — most cleaning workers are employees under prong B because cleaning is the cleaning business’s usual course of business; hiring crews as 1099 contractors when they should be W-2 is one of the most-audited misclassification patterns by Workforce Services.

Utah Cleaning Business Requirements at a Glance

Requirement Agency Cost Timeline
LLC formation Utah Division of Corporations (OneStop) $59 online Same day
LLC annual renewal Utah Division of Corporations $18/year (lowest in US) Last day of anniversary month
Local business license City or county clerk $50-$300/year 1-3 weeks
Sales tax account (TAP) Utah State Tax Commission Free Same day online
Workers’ comp (NCCI 9014/9015/0917) WCF or private carrier 2-4% of payroll typically Effective at first hire
Janitorial surety bond ($10K-$25K) Surety company $100-$500/year premium 1-3 days
General liability insurance ($1M) Private insurer $400-$1,500/year 1-2 weeks
UOSH compliance (HazCom + PPE + SDS) Utah Labor Commission UOSH Internal training cost Ongoing
State cleaning license None — Utah does not license cleaning $0 n/a
Specialty certifications (optional) ISSA, IICRC, GreenSeal $100-$1,500 per cert Varies

How to Start a Cleaning Business in Utah (Step by Step)

Step 1: Form a Utah LLC Through OneStop

Register an LLC through the OneStop portal at osbr.utah.gov. The Articles of Organization filing fee is $59 (same-day online); the annual renewal is $18, the lowest annual fee of any U.S. state. The cost gap compounds: a 10-year LLC life in Utah costs $237 in formation + maintenance versus California’s ~$8,000 (driven by the $800/year minimum franchise tax) — meaningful structural advantage for a margin-tight cleaning operation.

For sole owners, an LLC taxed as a sole proprietor (default) is fine until revenue justifies an S-election. Most cleaning businesses are good candidates for the S-corp election once net earnings exceed ~$50K-$60K because the FICA savings on distributions cover the additional payroll-administration cost.

Step 2: Apply for the City or County Business License

Utah has no statewide general business license. Each city or county sets its own. The Wasatch Front jurisdictions you most commonly encounter:

  • Salt Lake City — SLC Business Licensing Division. ~$100-$200/year scaled by employee count.
  • West Valley City / West Jordan / South Jordan / Sandy / Murray — each has its own city business license, similar fees.
  • Provo / Lehi / Orem / American Fork — Utah County jurisdictions, ~$50-$200/year. Lehi tech-corridor demand is strong; Provo BYU-area dorm and apartment cleaning is steady.
  • Ogden / Layton / Bountiful — Davis and Weber County jurisdictions, ~$50-$150/year. Hill AFB cleaning contracts run separately under federal procurement.
  • Park City — Park City Business License ~$140-$300/year. Vacation-rental turnover cleaning is the dominant Park City concept; coordinate with the major rental platforms (Vacasa, Airbnb, VRBO property managers).
  • St. George — Washington County license processing can run 4-6 weeks during peak. Retiree-serving residential cleaning is a fast-growing local market.

If the business operates across multiple jurisdictions — which is common for a Wasatch Front cleaning operation — Utah Code 11-56-104 prevents duplicate general business license requirements: a current business license in good standing from one Utah political subdivision satisfies the general license obligation in others.

Step 3: The Real-Property vs. Tangible-Personal-Property Sales Tax Split

Register a sales tax account at tap.utah.gov (free). Then internalize the R865-19S split:

Service Sales Tax Treatment Reasoning
Residential house cleaning NOT taxable Real property cleaning
Commercial office janitorial NOT taxable Real property cleaning
Window cleaning (interior + exterior) NOT taxable Real property cleaning
Floor stripping/waxing/buffing (installed floors) NOT taxable Real property cleaning
Carpet cleaning (installed wall-to-wall) NOT taxable Treated as cleaning installed carpet = real property
Carpet cleaning (removable area rug picked up + returned) TAXABLE Cleaning of tangible personal property
Drapery and upholstery cleaning (off-site) TAXABLE Cleaning of tangible personal property
Vehicle detailing TAXABLE Cleaning of tangible personal property
Equipment cleaning (commercial kitchens, machinery) TAXABLE Cleaning of tangible personal property
Cleaning supplies sold or billed separately to client TAXABLE Sale of tangible personal property
Service contract / membership program (real property cleaning) NOT taxable Tracks underlying service classification

For a typical residential or janitorial business, this means most service revenue is exempt. For a carpet-and-upholstery shop or vehicle-detailing operation, a meaningful share of revenue is taxable. Track each invoice line carefully — Utah State Tax Commission audits sample by line item.

Step 4: Workers’ Compensation at First Employee

Utah requires workers’ compensation insurance from the moment a cleaning business hires its first W-2 employee. Coverage is available through Workers Compensation Fund (WCF) at wcf.com or any licensed private carrier. Cleaning falls under several NCCI class codes:

  • 9014 — Building Cleaning (commercial offices, retail, schools)
  • 9015 — Buildings — Operation by Owner (when cleaning is part of broader property management)
  • 0917 — Domestic Workers Inside Residence (residential cleaning)

Premiums typically run 2%-4% of payroll. Specialty work — biohazard cleanup, mold remediation, post-construction cleaning — may map to higher-rate codes. Operating uninsured triggers fines from the Utah Labor Commission and personal liability for any workplace injury claim — meaningful exposure given the slip-and-fall and chemical-exposure risk profile of cleaning work.

Step 5: Janitorial Bond and General Liability

The State of Utah does not legally require a janitorial bond, but most commercial cleaning contracts require one as a contract precondition. The bond protects the client from theft or property damage caused by cleaning crew members. Typical bond face values:

  • $10,000 — sufficient for residential and small-office work; premium $100-$200/year
  • $25,000 — typical for medical office, law firm, retail; premium $200-$500/year
  • $50,000+ — required for some HOA, federal, and large-corporate contracts; premium scales accordingly

General liability insurance ($1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate) is the de facto standard for commercial bidding. Premium for a small cleaning company runs $400-$1,500/year. Add commercial auto if crews drive company vehicles and umbrella coverage for higher-stakes commercial contracts.

Step 6: UOSH and Hazard Communication

Utah operates a state-plan OSHA program through UOSH (Utah Occupational Safety and Health Division) at the Labor Commission. Cleaning businesses must comply with:

  • Hazard Communication Standard — Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for every chemical product on file (digital is fine), all secondary containers and dispensers labeled with current contents, employee chemical-hazard training annually
  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) — gloves, eye protection, masks where chemicals or aerosolized particulates are involved; documented PPE assessment
  • Bloodborne Pathogens Standard — applies to crews performing biohazard cleanup, medical office cleaning, trauma scene work, or any setting where exposure to blood or body fluids is reasonably anticipated; requires annual training, exposure control plan, hepatitis B vaccination offer
  • Respiratory Protection — applies if crews use respirators (mold remediation, post-construction silica dust, certain commercial chemicals); requires fit testing and medical evaluation
  • Reporting — work-related fatalities reported to UOSH within 8 hours; in-patient hospitalizations, amputations, eye losses within 24 hours

Inspections are uncommon for general janitorial work but a workers’ comp claim involving chemical exposure, eye injury, or fall triggers a UOSH review. Maintain training records.

Step 7: Worker Classification Under UCA 35A-4-204.3

The most expensive mistake a Utah cleaning business can make is misclassifying employees as 1099 contractors. Utah’s ABC test under Utah Code 35A-4-204.3 presumes a worker is an employee unless the principal proves all three of:

  • A — The worker is free from control or direction in the performance of the service, both under contract and in fact
  • B — The service is outside the usual course of the principal’s business OR the work is performed outside all places of business of the principal
  • C — The worker is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business

For a cleaning business, prong B is the killer. Cleaning is the usual course of a cleaning business. Hiring “subcontractor cleaners” who clean clients on the company’s schedule, with company-supplied product, in company shirts, fails the ABC test almost automatically — even if the worker has signed a 1099 contract. Utah Workforce Services audits this pattern aggressively in cleaning, landscaping, food service, and construction. Misclassification penalties include retroactive UI tax (3 years), retroactive workers’ comp premium, and possible Department of Labor wage-and-hour claims for unpaid overtime.

Genuine IC relationships in cleaning typically look like: a one-time deep-cleaning specialist hired for a single specialty job (post-construction cleanup, hoarding remediation), a janitorial sub hired by a property-management company that also operates cleaning crews internally for multi-tenant properties, or a route-cleaning licensee operating under a brand affiliation but with their own equipment, schedule, clients, and tax filings.

Step 8: Specialty Certifications That Win Premium Bids

None of these are state-required, but several materially affect bid eligibility for premium commercial work:

  • ISSA Cleaning Industry Management Standard (CIMS) — operational and management certification, often required for K-12 school district contracts and multi-site corporate accounts
  • IICRC certifications — Carpet Cleaning Technician, Water Damage Restoration, Mold Remediation; typically required for insurance-paid restoration work
  • OSHA bloodborne pathogen training — required for any crew performing biohazard cleanup; also opens medical and dental office contracts
  • GreenSeal certified or EPA Safer Choice product use — meaningful for green-cleaning bids, hospital systems, university contracts (BYU, Utah State, U of U), and some corporate ESG-focused tenants
  • OSHA 30-Hour General Industry — required for some federal and DoD contracts (Hill AFB)

Utah Cleaning Market: Where the Demand Is

Salt Lake County (Year-Round Anchor)

Salt Lake County is Utah’s highest-volume cleaning market by sheer population. Major demand segments: residential-recurring cleaning along the Wasatch Front (weekly/bi-weekly contracts), Class A office janitorial in downtown SLC and along the I-15 corridor, multi-family apartment turnover cleaning across Sandy/Murray/West Jordan, healthcare/medical office janitorial (Intermountain Healthcare, U of U Health), and post-construction cleanup tied to the high-volume housing pipeline.

Park City / Summit County (Premium Vacation Rental Turnover)

Park City’s vacation-rental economy produces structurally higher-margin cleaning work than the Wasatch Front. Vacasa, Airbnb-listed properties, condo rental managers, and lodge-style properties drive turnover-cleaning demand keyed to weekly check-in/check-out cycles. Premium pricing — $40-$80/hour billable to property managers and direct owners — and the seasonal volume swing (Sundance peak in late January, summer peak July-August, ski season Dec-Feb) is workable for crews willing to travel from the Wasatch Front. Cottage-cleaning, after-event recovery, and second-home open-and-close cleaning are recurring revenue lines.

Utah County / Silicon Slopes

BYU off-campus housing turnover (April-August), apartment-complex turnover work, Silicon Slopes corporate office cleaning (Adobe, Pluralsight, SAP/Qualtrics, Domo, Entrata, Lucid Software), and a growing population-driven residential market. Lehi/American Fork/Pleasant Grove suburbs sustain strong residential-recurring contracts.

Davis and Weber Counties (Hill AFB + Suburban)

Hill AFB anchors federal and military-tenant cleaning contracts. Davis Hospital and Ogden Regional Medical Center carry steady medical-office cleaning demand. Davis County’s family-oriented suburban market supports residential-recurring contracts.

Washington County (St. George Retiree Demand)

The retiree migration into Washington County is producing rising demand for residential cleaning, vacation-rental turnover (Zion-area short-term rentals), and small medical-office cleaning. Washington County’s mild winters mean year-round operating windows without the snow-shutdown stretches that shorten the Wasatch Front’s working day in December-February.

Utah Cleaning Business Startup Cost Estimates

Solo Owner-Operator (Residential)

Item Cost
LLC formation + first-year renewal $77
Local business license $50-$200
Sales tax account (TAP) $0
General liability ($1M) $400-$800/year
$10K janitorial bond $100-$200/year
Cleaning supplies + equipment startup $300-$1,500
Vehicle (used or personal use) Existing or $5,000-$15,000
Marketing (website + Google Business + flyers) $200-$1,000
Scheduling/CRM software $0-$60/month
First-year cash needed (solo) $1,500-$5,000

3-Crew Commercial Cleaning Operation

Item Cost
Three crew vehicles $30,000-$75,000 (capital)
Equipment (vacuums, buffers, autoscrubbers) $8,000-$25,000
$25K janitorial bond $200-$500/year
$1M GL + commercial auto + umbrella $3,500-$8,000/year
Workers’ comp (8 employees, $300K payroll, NCCI 9014) $6,000-$15,000/year
Office space $800-$2,000/month
Dispatch/CRM/quoting software $200-$600/month
Working capital (3-6 months) $30,000-$75,000
First-year cash needed (3 crews) $80,000-$200,000+

Related Utah Business Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a state license to start a cleaning business in Utah?

No. Utah does not require a state-level license for residential or commercial cleaning services. The standard cleaning business operates with: a Utah LLC ($59 + $18 annual renewal), a local city or county business license ($50-$300/year depending on jurisdiction), workers’ compensation insurance from the first W-2 employee, and general liability + janitorial bond on most commercial bids. Specialty cleaning categories — carpet/upholstery, biohazard, hazmat — may require federal or industry-recognized certifications, but Utah does not regulate cleaning service licensure at the state level.

Are cleaning services taxable in Utah?

Utah’s sales tax rule for cleaning has a meaningful split. Cleaning services applied to real property — buildings, homes, offices, commercial spaces — are NOT subject to Utah sales tax under R865-19S. Cleaning services applied to tangible personal property — rugs, drapes, furniture, vehicles, equipment — ARE taxable at the full combined state and local rate (4.85% state + local option, typically 6.35%-9.35% combined). For most residential and janitorial operations, this means service revenue is non-taxable. Carpet cleaning has the trickiest borderline: cleaning of installed wall-to-wall carpet is generally treated as cleaning of real property (non-taxable); cleaning of removable area rugs is cleaning of tangible personal property (taxable).

When is workers’ compensation required for a Utah cleaning business?

Utah requires workers’ compensation insurance from the moment a cleaning business hires its first W-2 employee — no minimum-employee threshold, no industry exemption, no carve-out for part-time or family workers. Coverage is available through Workers Compensation Fund (WCF), Utah’s quasi-governmental insurer of last resort, or any licensed private carrier. NCCI class codes for cleaning typically run 9014 (building cleaning), 9015 (commercial cleaning), or 0917 (residential domestic), with premiums in the 2-4% of payroll range. Operating uninsured triggers fines and personal liability for any workplace injury claim.

Do I need a janitorial bond to clean commercial properties in Utah?

The State of Utah does not legally require a janitorial bond. However, most commercial clients — offices, retail, medical offices, HOAs, property management companies — require proof of bonding as a contract precondition. A typical $10,000 janitorial bond runs $100-$200/year in premium; $25,000 bonds run $200-$500/year. The bond protects the client from theft or property damage caused by cleaning crew members. Listing “bonded and insured” on marketing materials is also a meaningful trust signal for residential clients.

Does Utah have a Domestic Workers Bill of Rights?

No. Utah does not have a state Domestic Workers Bill of Rights. This contrasts with neighbor states like California, Oregon, Washington, New York, and Massachusetts, all of which have enacted statutes governing minimum wage, overtime, day-of-rest, and meal-break protections specifically for in-home domestic workers. In Utah, residential cleaning workers fall under standard FLSA federal coverage and Utah’s Wage Payment Act (UCA 34-28). The federal $7.25 minimum wage applies; Utah preempts cities from raising local minimums. For owners of residential cleaning businesses, this is operational simplification — but it does not eliminate the IC misclassification risk under the Utah ABC test.

What chemical handling rules apply to Utah cleaning businesses?

Utah operates a state-plan OSHA program through UOSH (Utah Occupational Safety and Health Division) at the Labor Commission. Cleaning businesses must comply with the Hazard Communication Standard: maintain Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for every chemical product, label all secondary containers and dispensers, conduct annual chemical-handling training for staff, and provide appropriate PPE (gloves, eye protection, respirators where indicated). Bloodborne pathogen training applies to crews performing biohazard, medical office, or trauma cleanup. Inspections are uncommon for general janitorial work but a workers’ comp claim involving chemical exposure or eye injury triggers a UOSH review.

How does Utah’s IC test affect cleaning business operations?

Utah uses the ABC test under Utah Code 35A-4-204.3 for unemployment-tax classification. A worker is presumed an employee unless the principal proves all three: (A) freedom from control or direction in performance, both under contract and in fact; (B) the service is outside the usual course of the principal’s business OR the work is performed outside all places of business of the principal; (C) the worker is customarily engaged in an independently established trade. Most cleaning workers fail prong B because cleaning IS the cleaning business’s usual course of business. Hiring crews as 1099 contractors when they really should be W-2 employees is one of the most-audited misclassification patterns by Utah Workforce Services. Penalties include retroactive UI tax, workers’ comp premium, and possible Department of Labor wage-hour claims.

Utah-Specific Resources

Resource Use Where
R865-19S Utah Administrative Code Sales tax rule on real-property vs. tangible-personal-property cleaning rules.utah.gov
Utah Code 35A-4-204.3 Utah ABC test for IC classification le.utah.gov
OneStop Business Registration LLC formation + tax + UI osbr.utah.gov
Utah Tax Commission TAP Sales tax registration tap.utah.gov
Utah Workforce Services UI tax + IC misclassification audits jobs.utah.gov
Workers Compensation Fund (WCF) Workers’ comp coverage wcf.com
UOSH Utah state-plan OSHA, hazard communication laborcommission.utah.gov/divisions/uosh
ISSA CIMS certification, industry resources issa.com
IICRC Carpet cleaning, water/mold restoration certifications iicrc.org
Robert Smith
About the Author

Robert Smith has run a licensed private investigation firm for 8 years from the Florida-Georgia state line - where he learned firsthand how wildly business licensing rules differ between states just miles apart. He personally researched requirements across all 50 states and D.C., reviewing hundreds of government sources over hundreds of hours to build guides he wished existed when he started. Not a lawyer or accountant - just a business owner who has done the research so you don't have to.