Bigger village homes at the airport’s edge

A Kiti villa isn’t a one-bed village let stretched across more rooms. It’s a family-sized property — three or four bedrooms, a couple of bathrooms, a separate kitchen, and usually a walled courtyard or a paved patio out the back. That footprint eats more of the turnover window than a flat, and the work inside is heavier: more floors to mop across more levels, more bathrooms to sanitise, more beds to strip and reset before the next family walks through the door.

We take those villas on end to end. The reset runs across every bedroom and bathroom, the kitchen goes back to guest-neutral, floors are vacuumed and mopped throughout, and the courtyard or patio gets swept and reset. When we finish, photos land in your WhatsApp thread — the made beds, the clean bathrooms, the tidy patio. You see what the next guest will see.

Coordinating the clean with flights, not check-in times

Down here, a turnover is set by a real flight, not a vague check-in hour. A diaspora family lands at LCA on a morning charter, collects bags, and they’re at the villa in Kiti inside twenty minutes — often before a distant cleaner would even start the drive. Tell us the flight number or the landing time on WhatsApp and we plan the crew around the actual gap. We’ll hold a slot for a razor-thin window when we can, and we’ll say no in minutes when we can’t. No guessing, no leaving the place half-done with the guests at the gate.

Courtyards, patios, and the pool we don’t touch

Outdoor space is where a Kiti villa differs most from a flat-clean. Many of these homes have a walled courtyard with a dining table and shading, or a paved patio at the back with loungers and a small plunge pool. We sweep the paving, wipe down the furniture, and reset the layout where access allows. Some have a pool too — and that’s where the line sits. We clean around the pool, not the pool itself. No chemicals, no filters, no water testing; that’s a pool technician’s job. If the water looks off when we arrive, we photograph it and message you before we start, so a guest complaint doesn’t blindside you later.

Linen across several bedrooms

We don’t bring linen or towels to the property — we change what’s already there, when clean replacements are waiting on site. In a Kiti villa that’s often four or five beds’ worth across the family rooms, and a lot of these homes keep the owner’s own sets in a cupboard rather than a hotel-style stack. Confirm the clean linen is on site before we turn up. If the cupboard is short when we arrive, we photograph what’s missing and message you before we strip anything — no bare beds, no charge for a changeover we couldn’t finish.

What moves the price on a Kiti villa

There’s no honest flat rate for villas, because a 3-bed near the Angeloktisti church and a 5-bed with a big courtyard out by the airport road are simply different jobs. Bedrooms, bathrooms, stairs, condition, and the outdoor footprint all move the number, and we quote each one from photos. Small apartments usually start from about €45 — villas sit higher and are priced individually. Send the room counts, a few photos, and the location on WhatsApp, and you’ll get a clear figure back, not a range.

Kiti, Angeloktisti, and south to the airport

We clean across Kiti village itself, the lanes around the Angeloktisti church, and the residential streets running south toward the airport perimeter — the family villas and modern blocks that have gone up for short-let near the roundabouts. Beyond Kiti we also cover Larnaca city, Limassol, Nicosia, Ayia Napa, Protaras, and Paralimni. Villa somewhere we haven’t named? Send the location on WhatsApp and we’ll confirm if we can take it on.