Village lets at the airport’s edge
Kiti doesn’t run on the Finikoudes beach-crowd clock. Your guests are mostly Cypriot-diaspora families flying in to visit relatives, budget-airline couples who chose the village over a resort, and layover travellers who picked the closest bed to the runway. What they share is a tight schedule — a late landing, an early checkout, sometimes both the same day. That compresses the window between one guest and the next into something a distant cleaner can’t reliably hit.
We’re Larnaca-based, so the run down to Kiti is short for us. The between-guest reset gets done in the hours your guest is in the air or finishing a meal at a taverna by the church — beds remade, bathroom sanitised, kitchen reset, floors mopped, bins emptied. By check-in the let reads like nobody stayed.
Beating the flight clock
The cleanest way to lose a five-star review is a guest at the door while the place is still half-done. Around Kiti the timing often ties to a real flight, not a vague check-in time. Tell us the flight number and the ETA, or the checkout the last guest stuck to, and we plan the crew around that. A two- or three-hour gap usually covers a one- or two-bed village let end to end. When the window is razor-thin — an early-morning landing — flag it early and we’ll see if we can hold a slot. If your regular cleaner drops out the same day, we step in when the diary allows. Never a promise, always confirmed in minutes on WhatsApp.
What gets reset between guests
This is a proper between-guest reset, not a quick wipe. The bed comes apart and goes back together when clean linen is waiting at the property. The bathroom is sanitised top to bottom — basin, toilet, shower, mirror streak-free. The kitchen gets a full reset: worktops, the microwave inside, the hob, the fridge front, the bins. Floors are vacuumed then mopped, and any balcony or small courtyard gets swept where we can reach. We finish with a room-by-room walk-through to catch what a rushed tidy would miss — a stray towel, a full bin, sand from the coast road.
Linen, the way it works here
We change bedsheets and towels when clean replacements are already at the property — we don’t supply the items ourselves. A lot of Kiti village lets hold the owner’s own linen rather than a hotel-style stack, so it’s worth confirming the clean set is on site before we arrive. If it’s not there when we turn up, we photograph the bare bed and message you before changing anything — no charge for a changeover we couldn’t do, no surprise on the invoice.
Photos before the new guest arrives
Every Kiti reset closes the same way. We walk the let, then drop photos into your WhatsApp thread — the made bed, the clean bathroom, the reset kitchen, the floors. That lands before your next guest reaches the door from the airport. It’s not a paid extra; photo proof after every job is just how the crew finishes work. If anything looks off, you’ll know before the guest does, not after a bad review.
Kiti, Angeloktisti, and the airport south
We clean across Kiti village itself, the lanes around the Angeloktisti church, and the residential streets running south toward the airport perimeter. Smaller village houses, family flats above shops, and the modern blocks that have gone up for short-let near the roundabouts. It’s a different crowd from the Finikoudes seafront — fewer stag parties, more returning families and overnight air travellers. Outside these streets? We also cover Larnaca city, Limassol, Nicosia, Ayia Napa, Protaras, and Paralimni. Send the location on WhatsApp and we’ll confirm if we can take it.
What a Kiti clean costs
A small apartment in the village usually starts from about €45. The final number moves with size, condition, access, timing, and whether linen needs changing. Bigger village houses and multi-bed lets sit higher and are quoted from photos, not a flat rate. Send the let, the room count, and a couple of photos on WhatsApp — we come back with a clear figure, no guessing games.