You make glass disappear. Your website makes customers disappear.
Window cleaning is a price-first, friction-hating purchase on both sides of the business. The homeowner wants a number by window count and a date they can book online; the storefront and office buyer wants a route quote, proof of insurance, and one clean invoice. Most window cleaning sites offer a contact form and silence instead. We rebuild them around instant pricing, recurring plans, and a clear split between the $250 house and the twelve-storefront route.
Residential window cleaning is won on speed and clarity, because the customer sees it as a commodity until somebody gives them a reason not to. They search 'window cleaning near me,' open two or three tabs, and book whichever company shows a real price — most houses land between $150 and $400 inside-and-out depending on window count and stories — and lets them pick a date without a phone call. Everyone else's voicemail loses by default. The real profit isn't the one-off job anyway; it's the plan. Spring and fall service on a card on file, plus the add-ons that fatten the ticket — screens, tracks, skylights, gutters, a pressure-wash while the crew's there. A site built for one-time quotes undersells every customer who would've happily been on a route.
The commercial side is a different business wearing the same squeegee. Storefronts, restaurants, gyms, and office fronts buy weekly, biweekly, or monthly service — quiet contracts that stack into route density, the steadiest revenue in the trade. The people who buy it — store owners, franchise operators, property managers — vet online first: are you insured, do you show up on schedule, can you service six locations on one invoice. Most window cleaning websites never even mention commercial, so the route work defaults to the regional players. A single well-built storefront page, speaking that buyer's language, is often the highest-return page on the whole site.
The four ways cleaning websites lose money
We've audited hundreds of window cleaning company sites. The same problems show up over and over — and every one of them costs you a customer who was ready to pay.
No price without a phone call
Window cleaning prices cleanly by count and stories, which means it's one of the easiest trades in existence to quote online — and almost nobody does. The customer comparing three tabs books the company that showed a number and a calendar, while your contact form sits unopened.
Built for one-offs, blind to plans
The one-time clean is the sample; the spring-and-fall plan is the business. A site with no recurring option, no plan discount, and no card-on-file booking leaves the lifetime value of every customer on the table and starts every season hunting strangers.
Commercial doesn't exist on the site
Storefront routes are the steadiest money in the trade, and the buyers — store owners, franchisees, property managers — check websites before they'll hand over a route. If your site is all suburban houses, you've silently told them you're not set up for their work.
The ticket never grows
Screens, tracks, skylights, hard-water stain removal, gutters, pressure washing — the crew is already on the property and the site never offers any of it. Add-ons are the difference between a $180 stop and a $340 stop, and a quote flow without them is a discount you didn't mean to give.
The vibe we'd build for a window cleaning company
Window cleaning sells light itself — the room after the glass disappears. The vibe: sun pouring through spotless panes, crisp sky blue against warm interiors, water-bead sparkle — with a price band and a booking calendar doing the work most competitors still make a phone call do.
Built for how a window cleaning company actually wins work
A window cleaning website wins by giving the price up front, selling the plan instead of the visit, and opening the commercial lane. Everything we build does one of the three.
Instant pricing and online booking
Price bands by house size and window count, a date picker, and a card on file — the customer goes from search to scheduled without touching a phone. In a trade this comparable, being the bookable one is the whole competitive advantage.
Plans sold as the default
Spring-and-fall (or quarterly) service with a plan discount, framed as how most customers buy. Plans build route density, smooth the season, and turn a $200 stranger into a multi-year account — so the site presents the plan first and the one-off as the exception.
A storefront and commercial route page
Weekly, biweekly, and monthly service for storefronts, restaurants, and offices — with insurance stated, scheduling reliability front and center, and multi-location consolidated billing offered. Written for the property manager and franchise operator, not the homeowner.
An add-on menu inside the quote flow
Screens, tracks, skylights, hard-water stains, gutter cleaning, pressure washing — offered as checkboxes at booking, priced honestly. The crew's already there; the site's job is to make sure the ticket reflects it.
Proof that shows, reviews that rank
Streak-free glass in good light, before-and-afters of hard-water stains, and your Google reviews pulled onto the page. It's a visual trade with a trust component — show the shine and the star count together.
Suburb-by-suburb service pages
A page per community you route through, so 'window cleaning near me' resolves to you across the whole service area instead of just your home ZIP — and so plan customers cluster into the dense routes that make the schedule profitable.
Old site gone, new site live, in 7 days.
Audit & quote
60-minute call. We tell you exactly what's broken and lock a fixed price before you hang up.
Design + copy + SEO
You watch the real site take shape in the browser. We write the copy and wire the schema.
You review, we polish
One round of revisions, applied the same day. No tickets. No project-manager relay.
Launch — you keep the keys
Your domain, your hosting, your code. No platform lock-in, no retainer, no hostage situation.
Window Cleaning websites, built market by market
Everything happens over a call and a shared screen — no office visit, no markup for geography. These are the markets we focus on:
Before you call
Every house is different. Can I really put prices online?
Yes — window cleaning is one of the most price-able trades there is. Bands by window count and stories ('most single-story homes run $150–$250 inside and out; two-story homes $250–$400') cover the honest range, and the crew confirms the exact count on arrival. You're not locking in a blind number; you're removing the reason the customer didn't call. The company that publishes bands and takes online bookings wins the comparison-shopper every time, and window cleaning customers are almost all comparison-shoppers.
How do I actually get storefront and commercial accounts from a website?
With a page that speaks route language instead of house language. Store owners and property managers want three things a homeowner never asks about: proof of insurance, a service schedule that never slips, and one invoice across locations. A commercial page that states all three, shows a couple of storefront photos, and offers a fast route quote makes you look like the operation the regional players claim to be — and it works around the clock, including when a franchisee gets fed up with their current vendor and searches for the next one.
Do recurring plans really work for window cleaning, or do customers just want one-offs?
They work when the site sells them as the normal way to buy, not a fine-print upsell. Spring-and-fall with a plan discount, card on file, and a reminder email is an easy yes for the customer who just watched their windows get perfect — the pitch is simply 'want us to keep them this way?' Plan customers cost nothing to re-acquire, cluster into tighter routes, and say yes to add-ons at twice the rate. The one-off customer pays for today; the plan customer pays for the next five years.
What does it cost, exactly?
Three fixed packages: $1,500 for a 5-page rebuild with full SEO in 7 days, $3,800 for up to 20 pages with a blog, lead forms and integrations in 14 days, and $8,000 for 100+ page builds with a custom hero video, calculators and lead funnels. The quote we send before you sign is the number on the final invoice — no scope-creep charges, ever.
Ready to bulldoze your window cleaning company's website?
Tell us your domain. We'll send a brutal audit of what's broken, with a fixed quote to fix it. No sales call required.
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