Bond & End of Lease
End of Lease Cleaning: What Your Property Manager Actually Checks
Here's a frustrating reality of renting: you can spend an entire weekend cleaning, and still lose part of your bond because you cleaned the wrong things. Property managers don't inspect a home the way most tenants clean it. They have a trained eye for specific high-risk areas, and they compare what they see against your entry condition report. This guide pulls back the curtain on what they actually check, so you can clean strategically and pass first time.
How a final inspection really works
When you hand back the keys, the property manager walks through with your entry condition report and, usually, the move-in photos. Their job is to confirm the property has been returned in the same condition, allowing for fair wear and tear. They're not looking for 'clean enough', they're looking for evidence that every surface has been addressed. In Queensland, cleaning disputes are among the most common bond-claim reasons, which is why managers document everything with photos.
Fair wear and tear means the normal deterioration from everyday living, like slightly worn carpet in walkways. It does not cover dirt, grease, mould or marks you could have cleaned. Knowing the difference helps you focus your energy.
The areas property managers check first
The oven and kitchen
The oven is the number one flagged item, full stop. Managers open it, pull out the racks, and check the glass door and grill. Baked-on grease is obvious and is almost always considered a cleaning failure rather than wear and tear. They'll also check the rangehood filter, cooktop, splashback, and inside every cupboard and drawer. (Cleaning the oven is the job tenants dread most — here's how to clean it naturally overnight.)
Bathrooms
Mould on grout and silicone, soap scum on screens, and limescale on taps are immediate red flags, especially in the Gold Coast's humid climate. Managers check the exhaust fan cover, behind the toilet, and inside the vanity. A bathroom that looks clean at a glance but has mould in the corners will still be flagged.
Walls, skirting boards and switches
Scuff marks, fingerprints around light switches, and dusty skirting boards are easy for managers to spot and photograph. These are considered cleaning items, not wear and tear, when they can be wiped away.
Windows, tracks and flyscreens
This is where tenants lose easy points. Managers run a finger along window and sliding-door tracks and check flyscreens for dust. Tracks packed with grime are one of the most reliably missed areas.
Floors and carpets
Managers check carpet edges and corners (where vacuums miss), look for stains, and sniff for odours from pets or smoke. If your lease requires professional steam cleaning, they'll want to see the receipt.
The most common reasons bonds get deducted
- Oven and rangehood not properly degreased
- Mould and soap scum left in bathrooms
- Window and door tracks not cleaned
- Carpets not steam cleaned where the lease required it
- Walls and skirting boards left with marks and dust
- Exhaust fans, light fittings and ceiling fans left dusty
- Outdoor areas, garages and balconies overlooked
How to pass your final inspection first time
Clean against your entry condition report, not your own standard. Work room by room with a checklist, photograph the property once you're done as your own evidence, and pay special attention to the high-risk list above. If your lease mandates carpet or pest treatment, get it done and keep the receipts. If you're not confident, a professional bond clean with a bond-back guarantee removes the risk entirely. Our full room-by-room bond cleaning checklist walks through every task.
Want to skip the stress and pass your inspection first time? Our Gold Coast end of lease cleans are done to a property-manager-approved checklist, with a bond-back guarantee and free re-clean.
Book your exit cleanFrequently asked questions
Can a property manager refuse my bond over cleaning alone?
They can claim against your bond for cleaning if the property isn't returned reasonably clean. You have the right to dispute a claim through the RTA if you believe it's unfair, which is why photos and receipts matter.
Do I have to use the agent's recommended cleaner?
No. You're free to choose any reputable cleaner or to clean yourself, as long as the result meets the standard in your agreement.