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I still remember the first time I hired a regular cleaner, standing in my kitchen with a £20 note, genuinely unsure whether to hand it over or pretend I hadn’t noticed her brilliant work. Twenty years of managing households and advising clients later, I’ve learned that this small moment of hesitation is something almost everyone shares.
So let’s clear it up properly.
Below we’ll look at how much cash makes sense, how to actually leave it without the awkwardness, whether skipping it counts as rude, and what to give your regular cleaning lady. I’ll share the practical numbers and the genuine etiquette I’ve picked up from years of being both an employer and an adviser.
Leaving money for housekeeping properly means using visible cash, a clear thank-you note, and the right placement so the correct person receives it. Tips left on beds or nightstands risk being lost or mistaken for discarded items.
Placement genuinely matters more than people realise. Make sure the tip is visible, like on the dresser or next to the bathroom sink, and avoid leaving your housekeeping tips on the bed or nightstand. A tenner tucked under a pillow during a busy stay can vanish into the laundry, and then your kind gesture has simply enriched a washing machine. NerdWallet
Frequency is the detail most travellers miss. In a hotel, leave a little each day rather than a lump sum at the end. A daily tip more closely ensures your gratitude goes to the specific worker who services the room each day. Different housekeepers are often assigned to different floors throughout your stay, so the person who cleaned on Monday deserves Monday’s thanks. NerdWallet
The note is the part I never skip. A scribbled “Thank you, this is for housekeeping” removes all doubt about whether the cash is a tip or simply forgotten change. If you just leave money out, teams aren’t going to take it, because a careful cleaner won’t assume stray notes are theirs. This same principle of clear, respectful communication runs through good household practice, and you’ll find more of it in these dos and don’ts for cleaning. CompanyClean
For a private cleaner, cash in an envelope or a tip added through the booking app both work perfectly well.

Deciding a housekeeping tip involves assessing the setting, the service quality, and your budget, then leaving the cash visibly with a note. Most situations call for between £2 and £20 depending on whether you are in a hotel or a private home.
This checklist walks through the steps for leaving money for housekeeping confidently.
Follow these in order and the whole business stops feeling awkward almost immediately.
Cash amounts for housekeeping typically range from £1 to £5 per day in hotels and 10 to 20 percent of the bill for private cleaners. Luxury hotels and deep cleans warrant the higher end, sometimes £10 to £20 per visit.
The hotel figure has a clear benchmark behind it. The American Hotel and Lodging Association suggests leaving a $1-to-$5 tip per day for the housekeeping staff. In British terms, think £2 to £5 a night for a standard room. I tend to nudge toward the upper end after a stay where the room needed proper attention, because the person sorting out a chaotic family room has earned it. NerdWallet
For private cleaners, the maths follows percentages. If you hire an individual, it is customary to tip 10 to 20% of the cleaning price, assuming you are pleased with the quality of work. A one-off deep clean is the moment to be generous. After my own post-renovation clean a few years ago, when two cleaners spent six hours removing what felt like a decade of plaster dust, I doubled the usual amount without a second thought. Consider tipping double for a one-time deep cleaning or seasonal cleaning. The MaidsThe Maids
Larger spaces, pets, children, and special requests all push the figure up. If you’re not sure when a paid cleaning service is even worth it, there’s helpful guidance on knowing when to hire a cleaning service.
A quick honesty check, though: only tip what genuinely sits comfortably with your budget. A modest, consistent gesture beats an extravagant one-off every time.

The table below sets out sensible ranges I recommend to clients. It shows clearly that hotels follow per-day amounts whilst private cleaning follows percentages, with deep cleans and the festive season justifying the most generous figures.
| Situation | Typical Amount | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard hotel room | £2 to £5 | Per night | Leave daily, not at checkout |
| Luxury hotel or suite | £10 to £20 | Per night | Higher for turndown service |
| Regular private cleaner | 10% to 20% of bill | Occasional or holidays | Not expected every visit |
| One-off deep clean | 20% to 30% of bill | Per service | Double the usual gesture |
| Holiday or year-end bonus | One cleaning session’s cost | Once yearly | The most common time to tip |
As the figures show, there’s no single “correct” number. Context does most of the work, so match the amount to the effort and the setting.
So, are you supposed to leave money for housekeeping? In a hotel, yes, a daily tip of £2 to £5 is the decent and expected thing to do. For a regular private cleaner you pay fairly, no, not every visit, though 10 to 20 percent for special jobs and a year-end bonus are lovely ways to show you’ve noticed their work.
The throughline across every situation is simple: match your gesture to the effort and the setting, leave cash visibly with a clear note, and tip daily in hotels so the right person benefits. Get those three things right and the awkwardness I felt with that £20 note in my kitchen all those years ago disappears entirely.
Start by deciding which category your situation falls into, set aside small notes in advance, and you’ll never be caught hesitating again.
Three quick takeaways to act on:
Special jobs: tip 20 to 30 percent for deep cleans and one-offs, since these demand far more effort.
Hotels: leave £2 to £5 in cash daily on the dresser with a thank-you note, never on the bed.
Regular cleaners: skip per-visit tips if you pay fairly, but give a year-end bonus worth one cleaning session.
Do I have to tip hotel housekeeping every day? Tipping daily is the recommended practice because different housekeepers may service your room throughout your stay. Leaving one lump sum at checkout often means only the final day’s cleaner receives anything.
Is tipping a private cleaner from an agency different? Yes, agency cleaners are more likely to be on minimum wage, so tipping is more appreciated than with well-paid independent cleaners. You can learn more about how cleaner employment works in this guide on whether housekeepers are self-employed.
Where should I leave a tip in a hotel room? Place the cash visibly on the dresser or bathroom counter, ideally with a short note saying it is for housekeeping. Avoid the bed or nightstand, where money can be lost or mistaken for rubbish.
Can I tip with a gift instead of cash? A gift, gift card, or handwritten note is a kind gesture, especially for a regular cleaner you know well. However, gifts should never replace fair pay, only supplement genuine appreciation.
How much should I give as a holiday bonus? A festive bonus equal to the cost of one full cleaning session is the widely accepted custom for regular cleaners. This applies whether or not you have tipped throughout the year.
What if the cleaning was poor quality? You are under no obligation to tip for genuinely substandard work, since tipping reflects appreciation for good service. Withholding a tip in that case is reasonable feedback rather than rudeness.
Do tipping customs vary by country? Yes, tipping expectations differ considerably worldwide, and some countries do not expect housekeeping tips at all. The broader background on this practice is well covered on the Wikipedia page for gratuity.
Is it ever fine not to leave any money at all? For recurring private cleaners paid a fair wage, skipping a tip is perfectly acceptable and not considered rude. The legal and employment side of domestic cleaning is explored in this piece on whether maids are legal in the US.