Best Free Cleaning Business Software in 2026: What's Actually Free
TLDR
Truly free cleaning business software doesn't exist for commercial operations. What you'll find are free trials (SweepOps, Swept), free tiers with limited features (Connecteam for under 10 users), or free generic tools (Google Sheets, Google Calendar) that don't understand janitorial workflows. For a growing cleaning company, the right question isn't 'what's free?' -- it's 'what pays for itself fastest?'
| Tool | Free or Free Trial? | Key Limitation | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| SweepOps | Free trial | Paid after trial ($20-$99/mo) | Commercial operators who bid frequently |
| Connecteam | Free for under 10 users | No bidding, thin features in free tier | Micro-teams needing basic scheduling |
| Google Workspace | Free (personal) | Manual everything, no cleaning-specific logic | One-person operations |
| Swept | Free trial | Paid after trial ($77-$247/mo), no bidding ever | Crew scheduling and communication |
| Clockify | Free (basic) | Time tracking only, no other operations features | Adding GPS time tracking to existing stack |
SweepOps
Full-featured commercial cleaning operations platform with an ISSA-standard bidding engine. Free trial, then paid.
Pros
- ✓ Full feature access during trial including ISSA bidding engine
- ✓ Designed for commercial cleaning -- not a general FSM tool
- ✓ Bidding alone can recoup the subscription cost on the first new contract
Cons
- × Not permanently free
- × $99+/month after trial
Pricing: Free trial, then $20-$99/month by number of client sites
Verdict: Best value for what you get. A single accurate bid can cover several months of subscription cost.
Connecteam
Mobile-first team management platform with a genuine free tier for small teams.
Pros
- ✓ Free for teams under 10 users with no time limit
- ✓ Mobile scheduling, time tracking, and messaging
- ✓ Easy to set up, works on any smartphone
Cons
- × Not built for cleaning operations
- × No bidding tool at any tier
- × Free tier features are limited compared to paid
Pricing: Free for under 10 users, $29+/month after
Verdict: Good for a solo operator or a micro-team managing schedules. You will outgrow it once you have multiple client sites.
Google Workspace
Google Calendar, Sheets, Drive, and Docs used together as a free operations stack.
Pros
- ✓ Free for personal accounts, $6/user/month for Business Starter
- ✓ Flexible: Sheets for bids, Calendar for scheduling, Drive for checklists
- ✓ No software to install or learn
Cons
- × Zero automation -- every update is manual
- × No GPS tracking or crew check-in
- × No inspections, no janitorial-specific logic
- × Breaks down fast with multiple crews
Pricing: Free (personal) or $6/user/month (Business Starter)
Verdict: Works for a one-person operation. Falls apart when you manage multiple crews and need accountability records.
Swept
Purpose-built commercial cleaning workforce management platform. Free trial, then paid.
Pros
- ✓ Built specifically for janitorial companies
- ✓ Cleaning-specific scheduling and multilingual crew communication
- ✓ Mobile check-in for cleaners in the field
Cons
- × $77+/month after the trial -- not cheap for small operators
- × No bidding engine at any price tier
Pricing: Free trial, then $77-$247/month
Verdict: Good product for crew management. You will still need a spreadsheet or separate tool for bids at every price tier.
Clockify
Free time tracking tool with GPS check-in option, used across many industries.
Pros
- ✓ Genuinely free for basic time tracking
- ✓ GPS-enabled clock-in on mobile
- ✓ Works on any device, no per-user cost for the free tier
Cons
- × Single-function tool -- time tracking only
- × Not cleaning-specific
- × No scheduling, no bidding, no site management
Pricing: Free (basic), paid plans from $3.99/user/month
Verdict: Solves time tracking only. You will need separate tools for everything else a cleaning operation requires.
Q&A
What is the cheapest software for a commercial cleaning company?
The cheapest cleaning-specific option is Connecteam's free tier for teams under 10 users, which covers scheduling and messaging. Swept starts at $77/month after its free trial. SweepOps starts at $20/month for up to 10 client sites. Google Workspace is the cheapest option that can handle bids and scheduling, but it requires manual work for everything and has no cleaning-specific features.
Q&A
Can I run a cleaning business with Google Sheets?
Yes, for a solo operation or a very small crew. Google Sheets handles bid calculations if you build the formula logic yourself. Google Calendar handles scheduling. The system breaks down when you need crew accountability: there is no GPS check-in, no inspection records, and no automated reminders. Operators managing more than a few sites spend too much time on manual updates to keep it reliable.
Q&A
Does Connecteam work for cleaning companies?
Connecteam handles scheduling, time tracking, and crew messaging. The free tier works for teams under 10 users with no time limit. It is not built for cleaning operations: there is no bidding tool, no site management for client locations, and no inspection workflow. It is a general workforce management app. Cleaning companies use it for the scheduling and communication layer while using spreadsheets or other tools for bids.
Q&A
What happens after a SweepOps free trial?
After the trial, SweepOps runs $20/month for up to 10 client sites, $49/month for 11-40 sites, or $99/month for up to 75 sites. Pricing is per site, not per user, so adding cleaners to existing accounts does not raise the monthly cost. The ISSA bidding engine, GPS tracking, inspections, and scheduling are all included at every tier.
The Real Cost of Free
Free tools for cleaning businesses exist, but none of the purpose-built options are permanently free. What the search results call “free cleaning software” is almost always one of three things: a free trial that expires, a free tier with meaningful feature limits, or a generic tool that handles scheduling but nothing specific to janitorial operations.
That matters because commercial cleaning has specific software needs that generic tools don’t address: ISSA-based bid calculations, site-level crew check-ins, inspection documentation for client disputes, and per-site scheduling across multiple accounts. Google Calendar handles one part. Clockify handles another. Stitching them together works until it doesn’t.
What Each Tool Actually Covers
The tools on this list cover different parts of the operations stack. None of the free or freemium options cover all of it.
Scheduling and communication: Connecteam (free tier), Google Calendar (free), Swept (trial then paid).
Time tracking and GPS clock-in: Clockify (free tier), Connecteam (paid), Deputy (paid per user).
Bidding: SweepOps (trial then paid). No free tool handles ISSA-standard bidding. Google Sheets comes closest if you build the logic yourself.
Inspections: SweepOps (trial then paid). No free tool provides structured inspection workflows with client-facing documentation.
When Free Tools Make Sense
Free tools are a reasonable starting point for a one-person cleaning operation or a company with two or three accounts. At that scale, Google Calendar for scheduling and Google Sheets for bid estimates keep things simple. The manual work is manageable.
Once you have multiple crews across more than a handful of sites, the gaps become expensive: a crew that didn’t check in, a bid that was priced on guesswork, an inspection dispute with no documentation. At that point, the software subscription is cheaper than the mistakes.
When to Move to Paid Software
The decision to pay for cleaning software usually comes from one of three triggers:
A missed bid that cost you a contract because your numbers weren’t credible. A client dispute about whether a site was cleaned, with no record to back you up. A crew accountability problem where you’re spending more time tracking attendance than running the business.
If any of those apply, a $20-$99/month subscription pays for itself faster than most operators expect.
Our Take
We built SweepOps because the free and low-cost options leave a real gap for commercial cleaning operators. Google Sheets can calculate a bid if you build it yourself, but it doesn’t know ISSA production rates. Swept handles crew communication well but has no bidding at any price. Connecteam’s free tier works for small teams but it’s a general workforce tool, not a cleaning operations platform. The goal with SweepOps was to close that gap for operators managing 5-75 client sites, at a price that makes sense before you hit enterprise scale.
Is there free software for cleaning businesses?
What do small cleaning companies use to manage their business?
When should I pay for cleaning business software?
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