Heavy-duty cleaning for distribution centres, manufacturing plants, 3PL facilities, and logistics hubs. Ride-on floor scrubbers, high-bay dusting, loading dock cleaning — scheduled around your operations. For active 3PL and last-mile facilities, see our dedicated distribution center cleaning services page.
All crews trained
High-bay capable
Audit-ready records
Full liability coverage
Certificates on request
Around your operations
Dedicated warehouse cleaning crews for every major industrial corridor in the Greater Toronto Area. Choose your location for local pricing, corridor details, and availability.
Comprehensive industrial cleaning for every zone of your facility — from loading docks to mezzanine levels
Transparent pricing for industrial facilities across the GTA
Up to 10,000 sq ft
10,000 – 50,000 sq ft
50,000+ sq ft
Prices reflect standard GTA warehouse cleaning rates. Your final quote is confirmed after a free on-site walkthrough — we assess facility size, ceiling height, floor conditions, equipment density, cleaning frequency, and any specialized requirements like heavy degreasing or high-bay work.
18+ years cleaning the GTA's industrial corridors — the equipment, training, and reliability that large facilities require
WHMIS trained, forklift-awareness certified, and trained in lockout/tagout, confined space awareness, and PPE requirements. We understand industrial facility protocols — not just cleaning.
Ride-on floor scrubbers, industrial sweepers, boom lifts for high-bay cleaning, and heavy-duty degreasing systems. We bring the right equipment for large-scale facilities.
We clean during shifts, between shifts, weekends, or overnight. Our crews work safely around active forklift traffic, loading operations, and 24-hour facilities without slowing your team down.
Cleaning logs, safety reports, and compliance records for audits, insurance inspections, and client facility reviews. WSIB, health department, and customer audit readiness year-round.
Specialized dust suppression for manufacturing and distribution — HEPA vacuums, dust control sweeping compounds, and air quality maintenance that protects inventory, equipment, and staff.
Full $5M general liability, WSIB clearance, and bonded crews. Certificates of insurance on request. Month-to-month service — no long-term lock-ins, no penalties for scaling up or down.
Specialized warehouse cleaning for every type of industrial space across the GTA
On-site walkthrough, same-week starts available. WSIB clearance and insurance certificates provided before the first clean.
Warehouse cleaning is not a bigger version of office cleaning. The square footage is on a different order of magnitude, the surfaces are different (sealed and unsealed concrete, epoxy coatings, painted line markings, rubber dock plates), the soils are different (forklift tire rubber, hydraulic oil drips, shrink-wrap dust, cardboard fines, road salt tracked in from the dock apron), and the consequences of doing it wrong are different too — a streaky office desk is a complaint, a slippery dock plate is a WSIB claim.
That is why our warehouse cleaning services run as a specialized program, not a janitorial route. The equipment is built for scale — ride-on auto-scrubbers with 28-inch deck widths and 20-gallon recovery tanks for production-floor coverage, walk-behind scrubbers for narrow racking aisles, industrial sweepers for dust pickup on rough concrete, and boom lifts or scissor lifts for high-bay work up to 50 feet. The chemistry is calibrated for industrial soils: alkaline degreasers for the dock zone, neutral pH detergents for sealed concrete and epoxy, and dust-control compounds that bind fines instead of just relocating them. Crews are WHMIS-trained, lift-certified, lockout/tagout aware, and equipped with steel-toe boots, hi-vis vests, and ANSI-compliant eye protection on every visit — not a "we'll be careful" promise.
The other difference is documentation. Warehouse and distribution facilities answer to customer audits, insurance inspections, and increasingly to SQF, BRC, GMP, or AIB food-safety auditors. A cleaning program that cannot produce dated logs, chemical SDS sheets, scrubber maintenance records, and trained-staff certifications fails the audit even if the floor is spotless. Every visit on our warehouse programs is logged with start time, zones covered, chemicals used, and supervisor sign-off — same documentation standard whether the building is 8,000 sq ft or 800,000.
"Warehouse" covers facility types with very different cleaning realities. Scoping a program correctly starts with knowing which one you run.
Distribution centres and 3PL facilities turn inventory fast. Heavy forklift traffic leaves black tire marks on sealed concrete, shipping operations generate cardboard dust that drifts onto pallet racking and rests on top of inventory, and dock plates take a beating from constant trailer loads. These sites usually need a daily porter pass for dock and aisle hot-spots, weekly auto-scrubbing on the production floor, and a quarterly high-bay dust knockdown so accumulated dust does not eventually fall on shipped goods.
Manufacturing-adjacent storage is harder. Soils carry over from production — machine oil, coolant overspray, welding-flux residue, polymer dust — and cleaning has to coordinate with shift changes and lockout/tagout schedules. A scrubber cannot pass through an area an operator is working in. Programs are built around production calendars, not the cleaner's calendar.
Cold storage and refrigerated warehouses require a different chemistry entirely. Standard quat disinfectants lose efficacy below 10°C, water freezes on the floor, and condensation cycles drive biofilm growth in drains and door seals. Programs use cold-rated chemistry, dry-method floor cleaning where possible, and door-seal sanitization on a documented schedule. See our blog deep-dive on cold storage warehouse cleaning in Ontario for the full breakdown.
E-commerce fulfilment centres have the dust problem of a distribution centre plus the human density of a small office — pickers walking the aisles, packing stations, automated conveyor lines, and break rooms running across multiple shifts. Cleaning is continuous and zone-rotated rather than nightly. See our blog on e-commerce fulfilment cleaning for the programmatic pattern.
Food, pharma, and cannabis-adjacent storage sit under their own audit regimes — SQF, BRC, GMP, AGCO. Cleaning is not just hygienic, it is documented to a standard a third-party auditor will photograph. Chemistry is restricted to food-safe or pharma-grade lists, no fragrance, no aerosol residue, and verification swabs are not unusual.
We scope warehouse cleaning by zone, not by total square footage. A 50,000 sq ft building is not one cleaning job — it is a stack of zones with different frequencies, different equipment, and different risk profiles.
The production and storage floor is the largest zone by area but usually the lowest-frequency in terms of touch points. Auto-scrubbing every 1–2 weeks holds it; dust mopping in between if there is heavy cardboard handling. Aisles and racking need sweeping more often than scrubbing — fines and small debris are the recurring problem, not stains. Dock plates and the dock apron are the highest-risk zone — degreasing on a daily-to-weekly cycle depending on inbound volume, plus immediate spill response for hydraulic leaks. Mezzanines and office areas inside the warehouse are essentially commercial cleaning embedded in an industrial shell — desks, washrooms, kitchenettes, all on a nightly or 2–3x weekly cadence. Restrooms and break rooms serving shift workers run the highest sanitation requirements on the building, regardless of how clean the production floor looks.
High-bay and overhead is the zone most programs neglect until inventory shows up dusty. We schedule rafter and beam dust knockdown quarterly for most facilities; more often for food-grade or sensitive-electronics storage. HVAC ductwork dusting, sprinkler-head cleaning, and skylight cleaning go on the same cycle when access is already booked — boom-lift mobilization is the cost, the actual cleaning is incremental.
Frequencies are not symmetrical across the building, and the documentation has to reflect that. Our shift logs record which zones were cleaned, which chemicals were used, and which equipment ran — so when an auditor asks "when was the mezzanine washroom last serviced" or "what disinfectant was used in the cold storage anteroom on March 14," the answer is in the log, not a memory. That documentation is the difference between a warehouse cleaning vendor and a janitorial route, and it is built into every program we run — from 8,000 sq ft to large-format distribution.
Common questions from GTA warehouse managers, operations directors, and facility coordinators
Warehouse cleaning starts at $800/month for small facilities up to 10,000 sq ft, $2,900/month for medium warehouses (10,000–50,000 sq ft) with 2–3x weekly cleaning, and $6,500/month for large distribution centres (50,000+ sq ft) with daily coverage. Final pricing confirmed after a free on-site walkthrough assessing ceiling height, floor conditions, and any specialized requirements.
Yes. We provide high-bay cleaning for warehouses with 20–50+ foot ceilings — dust removal from rafters, structural beams, HVAC ductwork, overhead lighting, sprinkler heads, and skylights. Our teams use boom lifts and scissor lifts and carry fall-protection certification for elevated work.
Yes. We schedule around your operations — during shifts, between shifts, after hours, weekends, or on a 24/7 basis. Our crews are trained to work safely around active forklift traffic, loading operations, and shipping/receiving without disrupting your workflow.
Yes. We operate commercial ride-on scrubbers for large warehouse floors and walk-behind machines for tighter areas and narrow aisles. We clean concrete floors, epoxy coatings, and polished concrete — including oil stain removal, heavy degreasing, and anti-slip treatments.
Yes. All warehouse cleaning staff carry WHMIS certification, forklift awareness training, lockout/tagout awareness, and PPE compliance training. We carry $5M general liability and current WSIB clearance — certificates available on request before the first clean.
Yes. Dedicated warehouse cleaning crews for the Markham 407 corridor, Vaughan Highway 400 industrial zone, Concord Keele/Highway 7 industrial park, Buttonville, Woodbridge, and Mississauga/Brampton near Pearson. Based at 7030 Woodbine Ave in Markham — no travel charges for core service areas. Same-week starts available.
Join 200+ satisfied businesses across Markham & the GTA. Tell us about your facility and we'll send a custom proposal fast — no obligations, no pushy sales calls.
Online | Cleaning Specialist