What Should a Cleaning Company Time Tracking Policy Include?
Tell cleaners what to record while the job is still fresh.
Start with the route
A cleaning company time tracking policy should match how crews actually work.
The policy should cover:
- When cleaners clock in and out.
- Whether they choose a client, job, or location.
- What to do when they move between sites.
- How supply stops or travel notes are handled.
- How missed punches and wrong-job entries are corrected.
- Who approves final time before payroll.
If the office needs job detail later, the policy should capture it during the work, not after everyone forgets the route.
GPS is context, not the whole policy
GPS can help a manager review where a clock-in happened, but it does not always explain the job.
A cleaner may be in the parking lot, inside a building with poor signal, on a changed schedule, or assigned to the wrong client by mistake. The policy should say how those exceptions get reviewed and corrected.
Keep corrections simple
Require a short reason for missed punches, wrong clients, and late edits.
That reason is not an accusation. It keeps payroll from becoming the first person to investigate the time card.
Keep reading
- Quick-read1 min
When Do You Owe Overtime?
When employers owe overtime, which states add daily or 7th-day rules, and why salaried misclassification creates the biggest exposure.
- Quick-read1 min
Why Overtime Isn't Just the Base Rate
Why overtime isn't just 1.5× base pay, the 'discretionary' bonus trap, and the math that compounds into back-pay liability.
- Quick-read1 min
Do Salaried Employees Get Overtime?
Why paying a salary doesn't make an employee exempt from overtime, what counts as 'exempt' under federal law, and the tracking that keeps you defensible.
About this guide
Clockspot has been making time-tracking software for small businesses since 2007. Every quick-read article we publish is fact-checked. Each claim is verified against the underlying laws and court cases, with a dated report published alongside the piece so any reader can audit it.