Two lettings, two rhythms, one crew
Walk Neapolis any afternoon and the divide is obvious. North towards the CUT campus and the old town edge, it’s student country — shared flats, longer tenancies, heavy wear over a term. A block or two south, on the seafront side, the same postcodes are short-let territory: holiday flats cycling guests every three or four nights through the warmer months. The cleaning rhythm for those two is nothing alike, and we run both.
The student place gets the deeper reset between academic tenants — grubby cookers, limescaled showerheads, scuffed skirtings, the kind of grime a semester builds up. The seafront let gets the quick, sharp turnaround between check-out and check-in — fresh surfaces, beds remade, salt-dust off the balcony, ready for the next booking photos. Tell us which one you’ve got and we’ll quote accordingly.
What the reset covers, in plain terms
We don’t hand you a checklist and call it a service. Every Neapolis turnover covers the kitchen reset — fridge, cooker, splashbacks, bins — the bathrooms sanitised top to bottom, beds stripped and remade when a clean linen set is already at the property, all floors vacuumed and mopped, and the balcony swept where it’s safe to reach. Then a final walk-through by the crew before we message you photos. You see the flat, ready, before the next guest walks in.
Bedsheets and towels: we change them when clean replacements are already at the property - we don’t supply the items ourselves. No clean set waiting when we arrive? We photograph the bare bed and check with you first, not after.
Seafront salt, student grime — the real mess we clean
Neapolis is close enough to the water that the front-line blocks take salt spray and fine sand on every balcony, every week. Shower glass clouds up. Tiles hold a gritty film the sea breeze never lifts. That’s the everyday mess on the seafront side, and it’s a different job from the campus-side flats — where the issue is cooked-on grease, bathroom limescale from hard water, and floors that have taken a full term of foot traffic.
We clean for both, because the postcode runs both. Send a couple of photos with your WhatsApp message and we can see immediately which kind of job it is.
Midday windows and term-end clear-outs
Timing is the thing hosts worry about most here. On the seafront, guests leave at 11:00 and the next arrive at 15:00 — a four-hour window where everything has to look untouched. Send both times and we tell you honestly if it fits the diary. Around the university, the pressure is different: end-of-term clear-outs where you’ve got days, not hours, but the job is bigger. Fridges defrosted, ovens degreased, walls wiped down. Both are normal work for us.
If your usual cleaner falls through on a turnaround, message us. We can often step in the same day — conditional on the diary, never a promise we can’t keep.
What it costs, and where we cover
Pricing is per job, not a flat rate. Small apartments usually start from about €45, and the final figure moves with size, condition, how tight the window is, and any linen changeover. Send the block, the bedroom count, and two photos on WhatsApp and you get a number back, not a range.
We work Neapolis, the CUT university area, and the seafront blocks — plus the rest of Limassol, and Larnaca, Nicosia, Ayia Napa, Protaras, and Paralimni. A unit just off the neighbourhood we haven’t named? Send the pin and we’ll confirm.