You take over a building from the GC and inherit whatever condition it’s in. If the close-out cleaning was rushed, underdocumented, or done by a vendor without construction-specific experience, you’re the one fielding complaints from leasing agents, prospective tenants, and ownership — not the contractor who left six months ago.
This guide covers everything a property manager needs to know about post-construction cleaning: what to expect when you take over a new build, how to sequence cleaning for lease-up, what standards individual units and common areas need to meet, how to work with a cleaning vendor directly, and what documentation protects you when something is disputed.
The handover from GC to property management is where most post-construction cleaning issues surface. The GC’s Phase 3 Final Clean is designed to pass a CO inspection — not necessarily to meet leasing-ready standards. Those two bars are related but not identical.
A space can pass CO inspection and still have:
None of these fail a building inspection. All of them affect leasing velocity. The property manager’s turnover standard is higher than the GC’s CO standard, and it’s important to communicate that distinction clearly when coordinating with your cleaning vendor or with the GC’s cleaning sub during close-out.
The order in which you clean matters as much as the cleaning itself. Cleaning units before all trade work is complete means re-cleaning units. Cleaning common areas before the elevator installation crew wraps up means re-cleaning common areas. Getting the sequence right is the single highest-leverage thing a property manager can do to keep the lease-up on schedule.
Here is the correct sequencing framework for a multifamily or mixed-use new construction lease-up:
Step 1 — Confirm trade completion, floor by floor or section by section. Do not release any floor for turnover cleaning until every trade is 100% complete on that floor. This includes paint touch-ups, caulking, hardware installation, appliance connections, AV and technology trim-out, and any punch-list items. One trade still active re-soils everything behind them.
Step 2 — Clean units first, in batches. Work floor by floor or in delivery batches based on your leasing schedule. Clean the units closest to your first lease dates first. A unit that is cleaned six weeks before first occupancy will need a touch-up regardless — prioritize unit cleaning to align with your leasing pipeline.
Step 3 — Clean common areas and amenities after all trade work in those spaces is done. The lobby, corridors, elevator cabs, leasing office, club room, and fitness center all need to be cleaned after every trade working in those spaces has finished. Cleaning the lobby before the mailbox installation crew wraps up, or the fitness center before equipment delivery and setup, guarantees a re-clean.
Step 4 — Touch-up immediately before first move-ins and grand opening. Schedule a targeted touch-up of the lobby, entry glass, corridors, leasing office, and amenity spaces within 2–4 hours of the first residents arriving or the grand opening event. Construction activity and building access between cleaning and move-in day will re-soil high-traffic areas.
| Milestone | Cleaning Action | Timing |
| All trades complete in unit | Schedule unit turnover clean | 1–2 days after confirmed completion |
| Unit cleaned and approved | Photography / virtual tour | Within 24 hours of approval |
| Lease signed | Touch-up before key handoff | 24 hours before move-in |
| Common areas trade-complete | Common area and amenity clean | Immediately after last trade done |
| First move-in / grand opening | Lobby and entry touch-up | 2–4 hours before residents arrive |
Post-construction turnover cleaning for property managers covers two distinct scopes — individual units and building common areas. Both must meet leasing-ready standards before you hand keys to a leasing agent or a resident.
Every unit requires a full detail clean that goes beyond what a move-out clean covers. Construction residue — grout haze, compound smears, adhesive, protective film, paint overspray — requires construction-specific products and protocols that standard cleaning services are not equipped for.
Key areas where new construction turnovers most commonly fall short:
Common areas drive leasing decisions as much as unit finishes do. A prospective resident sees the lobby, amenity spaces, and corridor before they see the unit. The standard for these spaces is the same as for model units.
| Common Area | Key Cleaning Standards |
| Lobby & Entry | Glass streak-free at oblique angle; floor scrubbed per surface type; signage clean |
| Corridors | Walls wiped full length; floor scrubbed or vacuumed; unit door thresholds polished |
| Elevators | Cab walls, floor, ceiling, buttons, and threshold fully detailed |
| Leasing Office | Move-in ready — same standard as model unit; every surface, glass streak-free |
| Club Room / Lounge | Glass walls streak-free; floors done; built-ins cleaned; restroom fully detailed |
| Fitness Center | All equipment wiped and film removed; mirror walls streak-free; rubber floor cleaned |
| Pool Deck | Deck power-washed; furniture film removed; outdoor kitchen and restroom detailed |
| Mailroom / Package Room | Floor mopped; surfaces wiped; lockers cleaned |
Property managers are in a unique position at new construction handover — you’re accountable for unit condition from the moment you take possession, but you didn’t control the conditions that produced it. Good documentation at turnover creates a clear baseline that protects you if a resident disputes move-in condition, if ownership questions leasing pace, or if a trade damage claim surfaces months later.
At minimum, document the following for every unit before releasing to leasing:
For common areas, maintain a photo log per area with date stamps and confirm in writing when each space is released as leasing-ready. This creates a timeline that clearly separates cleaning completion from any subsequent soiling by construction activity, deliveries, or building access.
If you are coordinating the cleaning vendor directly — rather than through the GC — here is what you need to communicate clearly before work begins:
What the vendor needs from you before mobilizing:
What you should require from the vendor:
For mixed-use buildings or standalone commercial office projects, the turnover process is structurally the same as multifamily — but the standard is driven by tenant expectations and lease commencement dates rather than resident move-in.
A commercial tenant suite turnover must cover:
Timing matters for commercial turnovers the same way it does for multifamily. A tenant’s first day in a new suite is a significant moment for them — and for the impression your building makes on their team. A suite that is not fully cleaned before their walk-in on day one is a relationship that starts poorly.
Our project managers handle full lease-up cleaning programs — unit by unit, common areas, amenities — with dedicated PM oversight, unit-by-unit sign-off documentation, and photo logs for every space. We serve multifamily and mixed-use projects across Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, South Carolina, and North Carolina.