Smart Cleaning Scheduler

Create a personalized cleaning schedule assigning tasks by frequency and responsibility to maintain a balanced, manageable home cleaning routine.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install smart-cleaning-scheduler

Smart Cleaning Scheduler

Create a personalized cleaning schedule that maps tasks to the right frequency, assigns responsibilities, and prevents burnout.

When to Use

  • You clean reactively (only when things look dirty) and want a proactive system.
  • Cleaning feels overwhelming because everything seems urgent at once.
  • You share a household and need clear task ownership.
  • You want to establish cleaning as a light, predictable rhythm rather than a marathon.
  • You are setting up a new home or resetting an existing cleaning routine.

Workflow

Phase 1: Home Inventory

List every space that needs regular cleaning attention. Be specific:

  • High-traffic daily zones: Kitchen counters, dining table, entryway, bathroom sink.
  • Weekly zones: Bathrooms (full clean), floors, bedrooms, living areas.
  • Monthly zones: Windows, appliances (fridge, oven, microwave), cabinets, baseboards.
  • Seasonal/annual zones: Deep cleaning, curtains, vents, garage, attic, outdoor areas.

For each zone, note how long a typical cleaning session takes (be realistic — 5 min, 15 min, 30 min, 1 hr).

Phase 2: Frequency Assignment

Assign each task to a frequency tier:

  • Daily (≤5 min each): Make bed, wipe kitchen counters, quick floor sweep, dishes, tidy clutter hotspots.
  • 2–3 times per week: Bathroom quick-clean, vacuum high-traffic areas, laundry, take out trash/recycling.
  • Weekly: Full bathroom clean, full floor clean (mop/vacuum all rooms), change bedding, dust surfaces, wipe mirrors.
  • Bi-weekly / Monthly: Appliance deep-clean, window cleaning, baseboards, cabinet fronts, declutter one zone.
  • Seasonal: Deep clean one major area per season, wash curtains/rugs, clean vents, rotate and clean seasonal items.

Phase 3: Task Distribution

If you share the household:

  1. List all household members and their available time blocks for cleaning.
  2. Match tasks to preferences: some people prefer quick daily tasks, others prefer one longer weekly session.
  3. Rotate less-desirable tasks monthly so no one gets permanent bathroom duty.
  4. Create a "fairness check": does each person's total weekly cleaning time feel roughly balanced?

If you live alone:

  1. Spread tasks across the week to avoid a single cleaning marathon.
  2. Pair cleaning with existing habits (e.g., wipe the bathroom mirror while brushing teeth).
  3. Build in one "rest day" with zero cleaning expectations.

Phase 4: Schedule Construction

Produce a concrete weekly template:

  • Monday: Quick pickup (10 min), kitchen deep-wipe (15 min).
  • Tuesday: Bathroom quick-clean (15 min), vacuum (15 min).
  • Wednesday: Laundry (20 min), dust surfaces (10 min).
  • Thursday: Floor clean (20 min), trash/recycling (5 min).
  • Friday: Declutter hotspot (15 min), weekend prep tidy (10 min).
  • Saturday: One monthly task (30 min), change bedding (10 min).
  • Sunday: Rest day — no cleaning.

Total weekly cleaning time should stay under 3 hours for a typical household. If it exceeds this, re-evaluate frequency assignments or negotiate standards.

Phase 5: Maintenance and Adjustment

  1. Run the schedule for two weeks, then review: what worked, what was skipped, what felt like overkill?
  2. Adjust frequencies — a task that feels unnecessary can move to bi-weekly; a task that always feels urgent should move up.
  3. Keep a "Cleaning Log" with one line per week: what changed, what was celebrated, what needs a tweak.
  4. Revisit the schedule seasonally (use with seasonal-home-refresh).

Output Template

  1. Zone Inventory: List of spaces with estimated cleaning time per session.
  2. Frequency Map: Daily / 2–3x week / Weekly / Bi-weekly / Monthly / Seasonal tasks.
  3. Task Assignment (if multi-person): Name → tasks, with a fairness balance note.
  4. Weekly Schedule Template: Day-by-day plan with time estimates.
  5. Monthly Rotating Tasks: Which deep-clean task falls on which week.
  6. First Two-Week Review Date: When to check in and adjust.

What This Skill Does Not Cover

  • Decluttering strategy: Use seasonal-declutter-framework or home-organization-blueprint for deciding what to keep, donate, or store.
  • Home repair and maintenance: Use home-repair-navigator or home-maintenance-calendar for structural and appliance upkeep.
  • Family task negotiation: Use family-meeting-guide for facilitated family discussions about chore distribution.
  • Professional cleaning recommendations: This skill does not recommend specific cleaning products, services, or chemical safety advice.

Safety Boundaries

  • This skill provides organizational frameworks only. It does not recommend specific cleaning chemicals, tools, or techniques that could cause harm.
  • All task frequency recommendations are suggestions; adjust based on your household's actual needs, health conditions, and energy levels.
  • For households with allergies, asthma, pets, or accessibility needs, consult relevant professionals for cleaning safety guidance.
  • This skill is not a substitute for professional housekeeping, pest control, or mold remediation services.