When procurement decisions come down to price and availability, it is easy to overlook one of the most reliable indicators of contractor quality: accreditation. A cleaning company can present well, price competitively and promise excellent results, but without independent verification of their standards, those claims are difficult to substantiate.
Third-party accreditation changes that. It provides objective evidence that a contractor operates to defined standards in health and safety, quality management and environmental responsibility, assessed and confirmed by an external body rather than declared by the contractor themselves.
For facilities managers and office managers responsible for procuring office cleaning services, understanding what accreditations mean in practice makes it significantly easier to compare providers and make a defensible decision.
This guide sets out the key accreditations to look for, what each one signals and why they should feature in any cleaning contractor evaluation.
The Key Accreditations to Look for in an Office Cleaning Contractor
What Accreditation Does Not Guarantee
It is worth being clear-eyed about what accreditation does and does not tell you. Accreditation confirms that a contractor has the right systems and processes in place. It does not guarantee the quality of the cleaning you will receive on a Tuesday morning or how a problem will be handled when it arises. A company can hold all the right accreditations and still provide a poor day-to-day service.
This is why accreditation should function as a baseline filter rather than the sole criterion. Use it to build a shortlist of contractors who meet a minimum standard of compliance and operational rigour, then assess the remaining candidates on references, contract terms, account management structure and their approach to performance reporting. The combination of verified compliance and strong service delivery evidence is what gives you genuine confidence in a contractor.