Table of Contents
Introduction
Are you stressing over an end of lease inspection checklist because you’re not sure what the agent will actually flag—especially when you feel like you’ve “already cleaned”? You’re not alone. In this guide, you’ll learn what landlords and property managers focus on, how to follow the right cleaning order (dry-to-wet, top-to-bottom), and how to avoid common “fail points” that trigger bond deductions. Start here for a clear scope of what a proper move-out clean covers: end of lease cleaning, and if you want a faster, inspection-focused reset, you can book a cleaning service once and tick it off.
TL;DR: End of lease inspections focus on whether your property is “reasonably clean” compared to the entry condition report—not perfectly spotless. To pass, follow a structured cleaning order (top-to-bottom, dry-to-wet) and prioritise high-risk areas like kitchens, bathrooms, window tracks, skirting boards, and high-touch surfaces. Most failures come from missed details, not major dirt. A checklist-based clean and proper documentation help avoid re-cleans and protect your bond.
What the final inspection is really measuring
A final inspection is not a “beauty contest.” It’s a comparison. Agents and landlords compare the property’s condition at move-out against what was recorded when you moved in, allowing for fair wear and tear. The problem is most renters clean based on what looks obvious—then fail on details that inspections are designed to catch.
If you miss the high-friction areas (kitchen grease, shower screen edges, skirting lines, window tracks), you can end up doing a second clean under deadline pressure. That’s the stressful part: time runs out fast at the end of a lease, and “almost clean” often isn’t clean enough for an agent’s checklist.
Actionable takeaway: think like an inspector. Your goal is “inspection-ready,” not “Instagram-ready.”
What landlords and property managers usually check first
They typically start where problems are most common and easiest to prove:
- Kitchen: grease, oven/rangehood, splashbacks, sticky cupboard fronts
- Bathrooms: soap scum, mould risk, grout lines, shower screen clarity
- Floors: visible dust lines, corners, vacuum edges, mop streaks
- High-touch points: switches, handles, door edges, light marks
Why these areas? Because they show effort (or neglect) quickly, and agents can document them easily with photos. If a property manager can take a photo of grease, mould, or dust lines in five seconds, it’s likely to be flagged.
Mini recap (inspection psychology):
- Inspectors check “pattern areas” first: wet areas + cooking areas + floors.
- They flag what is visible + repeatable + easy to photograph.
End of Lease Inspection Checklist: the cleaning order that prevents rework
This is where most DIY move-out cleans go wrong: you clean the floor, then dust falls again; you wipe wet areas, then smear dust into paste. The professional sequence reduces cross-contamination and prevents “double cleaning.”
The core order
- Top-to-bottom: ceilings → vents → shelves → benches → floors
- Dry-to-wet: dust/crumbs first → wash/degrease next → disinfect last
- Back-to-front: start farthest from exit and finish at the door
One trust-building rule:
According to “Consumer Affairs Victoria – Condition reports & end of lease responsibilities”, renters must leave the property reasonably clean, and the exit condition report is used at the end of the tenancy to record the property’s condition—so your best strategy is a structured clean that matches what will be checked and documented.
A room-by-room final inspection checklist
1) Kitchen checklist (What + How)
Problem: kitchens fail inspections because grease hides in plain sight.
Method: work dry first, then degrease, then polish.
- Remove rubbish and wipe crumbs (dry stage)
- Degrease stovetop, splashback, and rangehood exterior
- Wipe cupboard fronts and handles (sticky fingerprints are a common flag)
- Clean sink and drain area (no grime rings)
- Finish with floors last (vacuum edges + mop)
Pain solved: you avoid the “grease shine” that shows up under inspection lighting.
2) Oven and rangehood detail
Problem: oven glass and rangehood filters are classic deduction items.
Method: treat them as separate tasks, not “part of the kitchen wipe.”
- Oven door glass: remove baked-on residue
- Racks/trays: soak and scrub until no carbon flakes
- Rangehood filter: degrease fully and dry before reinstalling
Pain solved: you reduce the risk of an agent calling it “not cleaned.”
3) Bathrooms
Problem: bathrooms look clean until you see soap scum edges and grout haze.
Method: apply product, let it dwell, then scrub and rinse top-down.
- Shower screen edges and tracks (the hidden build-up zone)
- Grout lines and corners (especially silicone edges)
- Tapware polish (water spots get flagged)
- Toilet base exterior + behind (common “missed” area)
- Mirror streak test (light angle shows mistakes)
Pain solved: you stop mould/mildew stains and streaks from being “proof photos.”
4) Floors, corners, and skirting
Problem: agents often spot-check edges and corners.
Method: vacuum edges first, then mop, then re-check corners.
- Vacuum along skirting boards and corners
- Spot-wipe skirting scuffs (don’t overpromise “magic whitening”)
- Mop hard floors in straight passes
- Recheck sticky floor patches near kitchen and entry
Pain solved: you remove the visible “border dust” that screams rushed cleaning.
5) Windows, tracks, and sills
Problem: tracks collect dust and grime; sills hold dead insects.
Method: dry brush tracks first, then wipe, then detail corners.
- Sills wiped and dry
- Tracks vacuumed/brush-cleaned, then wiped
- Fingerprints removed from glass at eye level
Pain solved: you avoid the “it’s clean except…” comment that triggers re-clean requests.
Tools_Products: The small kit that produces “inspection results”
Feature: Microfibre cloths + a proper degreaser + a narrow detail brush
Advantage: You can lift grease and dust without smearing it into streaks
Benefit: The property looks consistently clean across surfaces—especially under harsh inspection lighting
Smart tool list
- Microfibre cloths (separate kitchen vs bathroom cloths)
- Detail brush (tracks, corners, taps)
- Non-scratch scrub pad (bathroom scum)
- Vacuum with crevice tool (edges, skirting, corners)
- Glass cloth/squeegee (streak control)
Mini recap (buy less, clean better):
- A detail brush + microfibre beats “more chemicals.”
- The crevice tool is your bond-saving attachment.
Should you do it yourself or hire a cleaner?
Before: You spend two late nights cleaning, then the agent flags oven/rangehood or shower edges and requests a re-clean.
After: A structured clean hits inspection points first, so the place presents consistently across kitchen, bathroom, and floors.
Bridge: DIY can work if the property is already well maintained and you have time for a full checklist pass. Professional help is worth it when you’re time-poor, the condition is heavy (grease, mould, pets), or you want to reduce dispute risk.
If you’re comparing options, remember this: paying for cleaning is often paying for sequence + detail discipline, not just “effort.”
The “avoid these” inspection mistakes
- Cleaning floors too early (dust falls again)
- Skipping window tracks and shower screen edges
- “Wiping” the oven instead of degreasing it
- Forgetting high-touch marks (switches, handles, door edges)
- Leaving damp smell (poor ventilation reads as mould risk)
Quick action list (do this the day before inspection):
- Final walk-through with phone torch
- Touch-point wipe (switches/handles)
- Bathroom glass streak check
- Bin out + no lingering odours
FAQ
What is the standard for a final inspection clean in Victoria?
How long does a move-out clean take for a Melbourne apartment?
How often should I deep clean during the lease to make the final inspection easier?
Is it better to DIY or hire professional cleaners for the final inspection?
What’s the biggest thing agents flag that tenants miss?
Conclusion
You don’t pass a final inspection by cleaning “harder.” You pass by cleaning smarter—using an end of lease inspection checklist that matches what landlords and agents actually check, and following the right order: top-to-bottom, dry-to-wet. Once you prioritise kitchens, bathrooms, edges, and high-touch points, you stop rework and reduce the chance of bond disputes.
If you’d rather have it handled with an inspection-focused process, you can contact O2O Cleaning . And to make your next move-out easier, build a simple weekly routine using this house cleaning guide.
(For clarity: bond cleaning is often used interchangeably with end-of-lease cleaning in Australia, but always rely on the checklist and inclusions—not the label.)