Cleaning Services Listings
The listings compiled on this resource cover carpet cleaning service providers operating across the United States, organized to help property managers, facility operators, and residential clients locate qualified contractors by geography, service type, and certification status. Each entry reflects publicly available business information and is structured to support comparison across independent operators and national franchise networks. Understanding how these listings are built — and what they deliberately exclude — is essential to using them accurately.
What each listing covers
Every provider entry in this directory captures a defined set of operational data points drawn from public business records, trade association membership databases, and verifiable service descriptions. A standard listing identifies the company's legal trade name, primary service area expressed as city or county coverage, and the cleaning methods the provider offers commercially.
Method classification follows the taxonomy detailed in types of carpet cleaning methods, which distinguishes hot water extraction, dry compound, encapsulation, bonnet cleaning, and carpet shampooing as distinct process categories — each with different dwell times, moisture introduction, and residue profiles. A listing that claims "steam cleaning" without specifying whether the process meets the hot water extraction standard described by the IICRC (Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification) is flagged accordingly.
Certification status is recorded where the provider has documented IICRC firm certification or technician-level credentials. The IICRC maintains a publicly searchable firm registry, and listings cross-reference that registry rather than relying solely on provider self-reporting.
Geographic distribution
Listings span all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Density varies significantly by population: metropolitan statistical areas with populations above 1 million — including Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Houston — account for a disproportionate share of indexed providers. Rural counties with fewer than 25,000 residents are underrepresented, a gap that reflects real provider scarcity rather than an indexing omission.
The directory distinguishes between providers by their operating radius:
- National franchise networks — chains operating in 40 or more states under a unified brand, with standardized equipment, training protocols, and pricing structures. The national carpet cleaning franchises and chains page details the dominant operators in this category.
- Regional independents — single-owner or small-fleet operations serving a defined metro area or multi-county region, typically with 1 to 5 trucks.
- Specialty-only providers — contractors whose listings are limited to a specific niche, such as healthcare facility carpet cleaning or water damage response, and who do not offer general residential service.
The contrast between national chains and regional independents is explored in depth at independent vs franchise carpet cleaning providers, which covers differences in pricing variability, warranty structures, and technician training standards.
How to read an entry
Each listing entry is structured in a consistent format to allow side-by-side comparison. Reading left to right across a standard entry:
- Provider name and legal entity type — trade name followed by LLC, Inc., or DBA designation where public records confirm it
- Primary service zip codes — up to 10 zip codes representing the core operational area; extended coverage zones are noted separately
- Methods offered — coded to the 5-method taxonomy (HWE, DC, ENC, BON, SHM) with a notation if the provider offers only a subset
- Certifications — IICRC firm certification (yes/no/pending), plus any state-level contractor license number where applicable; carpet cleaning certifications and standards explains what each credential signifies
- Specializations — tags for pet stain treatment, allergen protocols, commercial contracts, or area rug handling
- Insurance notation — whether the provider carries general liability coverage of $1 million or more per occurrence, based on certificate of insurance on file
Entries do not include star ratings or review aggregates within the listing card itself. Consumer review data and complaint history are handled separately under carpet cleaning service reviews and ratings.
What listings include and exclude
Included:
- Providers with a verifiable US business address and at least one documented service transaction within the past 36 months
- Both residential-focused and commercial-focused contractors; the distinction is explained at commercial carpet cleaning services vs residential carpet cleaning services
- Providers offering ancillary services such as carpet protector treatments or flood response, where carpet cleaning is the primary business
- Franchise locations individually listed where the franchisee operates as a distinct legal entity
Excluded:
- General janitorial companies for whom carpet cleaning represents less than 20% of documented revenue
- Providers operating without a US business address, including cross-border Canadian operators serving border-state markets
- Solo operators who do not carry liability insurance with a minimum $500,000 per-occurrence limit
- Providers with an unresolved formal complaint on file with the Better Business Bureau or a state attorney general consumer protection division at the time of indexing
The exclusion criteria reflect the minimum thresholds for accountability that a property owner or facility manager can reasonably expect when engaging a contractor for work inside an occupied building. Carpet cleaning insurance and liability details the specific coverage structures that reputable providers maintain and what gaps in coverage expose the client to financial risk.
Listings are not endorsements. The presence of a provider in this directory confirms that publicly verifiable information meets the inclusion criteria — it does not constitute a performance guarantee, warranty, or referral. The full context for how this resource is maintained is documented in cleaning services directory purpose and scope.