
Going self-employed as a cleaner is straightforward — but there are some essential admin steps that are worth getting right from the start. Here's what you need to know.
You must register with HMRC as self-employed if you earn more than £1,000 in a tax year outside of employment. Do this via the HMRC website. You'll need a Government Gateway account and a UTR (Unique Taxpayer Reference) number.
As a self-employed cleaner, you'll file a Self Assessment tax return each year. Keep records of all income and allowable expenses — cleaning products, travel to clients, equipment, and platform fees are all potentially deductible. Simple accounting software like QuickBooks Self-Employed or FreeAgent makes this manageable.
Not a legal requirement, but strongly advisable. Public liability insurance covers you if a client claims damage to their property while you're working. Policies start from around £50–£80 per year for cleaners. Simply Business and Superscript both offer competitive self-employed cleaner policies.
Self-employed people pay Class 2 and Class 4 NICs depending on profitability. Class 2 builds your entitlement to the State Pension, so it's worth paying even if not legally required at lower profit levels.
join myCleanerHub and let us handle the booking and payment admin.
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