Villa cleaning in Ayia Napa

A villa here isn’t a flat stretched to fit more people. It’s six bedrooms off a single hallway in Nissi, a rooftop terrace above Fig Tree Bay, a walled garden in Pernera — and in peak season each turns over a fresh group every few days. More beds, more bathrooms, more bins, more sand walked through the door, and a window between check-out and check-in that rarely stretches past four hours. We clean those villas for owners reading about it on a phone a long way from Cyprus, and close every job with photos in your WhatsApp thread.

The peak-season cadence on the Nissi strip

July and August here run on a rhythm the rest of the year doesn’t recognise. Groups fly in on Friday charters, stay a week, and leave the villa at 10:00 after a night that ended at 04:00 on the strip. By 15:00 the next lot are at the door with suitcases. That’s the window we work inside — and a villa eats more of it than a flat, with more floor, more linen, and an outdoor area that’s collected sunscreen, sand, and ashtrays for seven days. Send the check-out and check-in times on WhatsApp and we fit the clean to the real gap, not a guessed 11-to-3.

What a six-bedroom reset actually covers

The scope scales with the property, and we describe it in prose because a bullet list lies about villas. Inside, every bedroom gets stripped and remade when clean linen is on site — in a six-bed that’s a dozen sets, not three. Bathrooms are sanitised top to bottom, the kitchen goes back to guest-neutral with surfaces, appliances, and bins done, and living, dining, stairs, and hallways are dusted, vacuumed, and mopped across every level. Outdoors, the patio, dining terrace, and the hard standing around the pool are swept and the furniture reset where we can reach. We finish with a walk-through, then photos on WhatsApp. It’s a villa-standard reset — not a flat clean padded out to fill the rooms.

Pools, the beach, and what stays with a specialist

We clean around the pool, not the pool itself. The loungers, the dining set, the paving, the perimeter — swept, wiped, reset where access allows. The water, the chemical balance, the filters, and the pump belong to a pool technician, and we won’t touch them. The same line holds for the beach: we sweep the sand guests track back from Nissi or Fig Tree Bay off the patio, we don’t rake the shore. If the pool water reads green or cloudy when we arrive, we photograph it and message you before we start — so a guest complaint about the water never lands on you blind.

Bedsheets, towels, and the linen cupboard maths

We don’t bring linen or towels — we swap what’s already on site when clean sets are waiting in the cupboard. In a six-bedroom Ayia Napa villa that matters more than anywhere else on the island, because peak-season groups burn through linen faster than any flat. Before we turn up, the real question is whether the cupboard holds enough clean sets for the next twelve guests. If it’s short when we arrive, we photograph what’s missing and message you before stripping a single bed — no bare mattresses, no awkward check-in.

Pricing big properties by the job

Villas are quoted per job from photos, because a 3-bed near Nissi Avenue and a 6-bed with a sea view above Fig Tree Bay are simply different amounts of work. Bedrooms, bathrooms, stairs, condition, and the outdoor footprint all move the number — and in peak season, how heavy the last group left the place moves it too. Small apartments usually start from about €45; villas sit higher and are priced individually. Send the area, the room counts, and a few photos on WhatsApp and you get one clear figure back, not a range. Same-day cover on request when our diary allows — never promised, always fast to reply.

Where we clean around Ayia Napa

Nissi, Protaras, Fig Tree Bay, and Pernera — plus the wider Cape Greco coastline down toward Paralimni. Outside these? Send the villa location on WhatsApp and we’ll confirm whether we can take it on.