California Cleaning License and Registration Requirements
California imposes a layered set of licensing, registration, and regulatory requirements on cleaning businesses that vary significantly by service type, business structure, and client sector. This page details the specific licenses, registrations, and permits that apply to cleaning companies operating in California — from general janitorial contractors to specialized restoration and remediation providers. Understanding which requirements apply, and to whom, is essential for legal operation and contract eligibility across commercial, residential, and institutional markets.
- Definition and scope
- Core mechanics or structure
- Causal relationships or drivers
- Classification boundaries
- Tradeoffs and tensions
- Common misconceptions
- Checklist or steps
- Reference table or matrix
- References
Definition and scope
California's regulatory framework for cleaning businesses does not operate through a single unified "cleaning license." Instead, it functions through overlapping layers: business entity registration with the California Secretary of State, city and county business licenses, sector-specific registrations (most notably under the Janitorial Contractor Registration Act), and trade-specific contractor licenses issued by the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) when cleaning work crosses into construction-adjacent trades such as mold remediation, asbestos abatement, or water damage restoration.
Geographic and legal scope of this page: This page covers requirements imposed by California state law and administered by California state agencies, including the California Labor Commissioner's Office, the CSLB, and the California Secretary of State. Local city and county licensing ordinances are referenced but not exhaustively catalogued, as those vary across California's 58 counties and more than 480 incorporated cities. Federal requirements (EPA RRP Lead rules, OSHA federal standards) are noted where they intersect with California law but are not the primary subject. Requirements applying to cleaning businesses operating exclusively outside California are not covered here.
For a broader view of the industry landscape before examining specific requirements, the California cleaning industry overview provides sector-scale context.
Core mechanics or structure
Business entity registration
Every cleaning business operating in California must first establish a legal entity. Sole proprietors using only their legal name may operate without Secretary of State registration, but any fictitious business name (DBA) requires a Fictitious Business Name statement filed with the county clerk in the county where the business operates, per California Business and Professions Code § 17910.
Limited Liability Companies, corporations, and limited partnerships must register with the California Secretary of State and pay the associated filing fees. As of 2023, the initial LLC filing fee was $70 (California Secretary of State, LLC Filing Fees).
City and county business licenses
No statewide business license exists in California. Operating legally requires a business license or tax certificate from each city or county in which the cleaning company maintains operations or regularly performs work. Rates and renewal schedules are set locally; Los Angeles, San Francisco, and San Diego each impose distinct fee structures and renewal timelines.
Janitorial Contractor Registration
The California Janitorial Contractor Registration Act, codified at California Labor Code §§ 1420–1432, requires any employer who contracts to provide janitorial services using employees to register with the Labor Commissioner. This registration is not a license to perform cleaning but a labor compliance mechanism. It applies when the business uses employees (not independent contractors) to clean commercial buildings, offices, or multi-unit residential structures. Unregistered janitorial contractors face civil penalties of up to $25,000 per violation (California Labor Commissioner's Office, Janitorial Contractor Registration).
CSLB contractor licenses
The California Contractors State License Board requires licensure for cleaning work that constitutes a "construction project" valued above $500 in labor and materials combined. Specific cleaning-adjacent classifications include:
- Classification C-22 (Asbestos Abatement): Required for any firm removing, encapsulating, or disturbing asbestos-containing materials, governed by the Contractors State License Law (Business and Professions Code § 7026).
- Classification C-61/D-63 (Limited Specialty – Swimming Pool Service): Applies to businesses providing chemical treatment and cleaning of pools and spas.
- General B or Specialty C licenses: Required for water damage remediation or post-fire cleaning that involves structural repairs alongside the cleaning work.
Cleaning work that is purely surface-level — dusting, mopping, window washing, carpet cleaning — generally does not require a CSLB license unless structural elements are altered.
Causal relationships or drivers
California's multi-agency licensing structure emerged from three distinct regulatory pressures. First, the widespread misclassification of janitorial workers as independent contractors — documented extensively in the Legislative findings attached to the Janitorial Contractor Registration Act — drove Labor Commissioner oversight. Second, the public health risks of improper handling of hazardous materials (asbestos, lead, mold, biohazards) drove CSLB licensure requirements for restoration and abatement specialists. Third, general consumer protection concerns drove local business licensing as a baseline accountability mechanism.
The passage of AB 5 in 2019 further tightened these dynamics by codifying the ABC test for independent contractor classification, making it significantly harder for cleaning companies to treat workers as contractors, which in turn expanded the pool of businesses required to register under the Janitorial Contractor Registration Act.
Insurance requirements run parallel to licensing. The CSLB requires licensed contractors to carry a minimum $15,000 surety bond (CSLB Contractor's Bond Requirements), and the Janitorial Contractor Registration Act requires registered contractors to carry general liability insurance. Details on specific coverage thresholds are addressed in California cleaning business insurance requirements.
Classification boundaries
Not all cleaning businesses face the same regulatory requirements. The controlling variables are service type, client type, worker classification, and project value.
| Factor | Triggers Registration/License | Does Not Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Employees performing janitorial work | Janitorial Contractor Registration (Labor Code § 1420) | Independent contractors (subject to AB 5 restrictions) |
| Asbestos or lead disturbance | CSLB C-22 license | Pure surface cleaning with no material disturbance |
| Pool/spa chemical service | CSLB C-61/D-63 | Deck scrubbing only (no chemical treatment) |
| Water or fire damage restoration | CSLB license if structural work exceeds $500 | Cleaning-only restoration below structural threshold |
| Biohazard remediation | Varies; Cal/OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (CCR Title 8 § 5193) | Standard janitorial cleaning |
California biohazard and crime scene cleaning and California mold remediation and cleaning services each involve distinct licensing overlays beyond the baseline requirements described here.
Tradeoffs and tensions
Compliance cost vs. market access
Registering as a janitorial contractor and maintaining required bonds and insurance represents a real cost, particularly for small operators. The Janitorial Contractor Registration Act's penalty exposure — up to $25,000 per violation — creates an asymmetric risk for companies that delay registration, but the registration and compliance infrastructure can consume disproportionate administrative resources for a 3- or 4-person operation relative to a 50-person firm.
CSLB license scope ambiguity
The $500 labor-and-materials threshold for CSLB licensure creates interpretive tension when cleaning projects involve incidental repair work. A post-construction cleaning company removing construction debris that also patches a damaged wall crosses into contractor territory, but the line between "cleaning" and "minor repair" is not always self-evident. CSLB enforcement focuses on complaints and audits rather than pre-project screening, which means unlicensed work often proceeds until a complaint triggers investigation.
Independent contractor classification
The AB 5 framework has forced cleaning companies to re-evaluate workforce structures. The "B" prong of the ABC test — requiring that the worker perform work outside the usual course of the hiring entity's business — is nearly impossible to satisfy when a cleaning company hires cleaners. This creates pressure either toward employee classification (with its associated registration and insurance obligations) or toward genuine subcontracting arrangements with separately licensed cleaning businesses. This tension is explored in depth in California cleaning company employee vs. independent contractor.
Common misconceptions
Misconception 1: A general business license covers all California operational requirements.
A city or county business license establishes tax registration but does not substitute for Labor Commissioner registration under the Janitorial Contractor Registration Act, CSLB licensure for licensed trades, or any sector-specific requirement. Operating with only a business license while employing janitorial workers exposes a company to penalties under Labor Code § 1420.
Misconception 2: CSLB licensing is only for construction companies.
The CSLB licenses apply to any trade where labor and materials exceed $500 on a project, including cleaning-adjacent work like asbestos abatement, pool service, and water damage restoration. Cleaning companies that expand into these services without obtaining the corresponding CSLB classification operate unlicensed under California law.
Misconception 3: The Janitorial Contractor Registration Act applies only to large cleaning firms.
The Act applies to any employer that contracts to provide janitorial services using employees, regardless of firm size. A 2-person cleaning company with employees cleaning a single office building is legally required to register. There is no size exemption in Labor Code §§ 1420–1432.
Misconception 4: Using independent contractors eliminates all registration requirements.
Post-AB 5, most cleaning companies cannot lawfully classify frontline cleaners as independent contractors under California law. Misclassification does not remove registration obligations; it adds wage-and-hour liability. See California cleaning worker wage and labor laws for the connected compliance obligations.
Checklist or steps
The following sequence describes the standard compliance pathway for a new cleaning business establishing operations in California with employees performing janitorial services. This is a structural description of the required steps, not legal advice.
- Determine legal entity type. Choose sole proprietorship, LLC, corporation, or partnership based on ownership and liability structure.
- File entity formation documents with the California Secretary of State if operating as an LLC, corporation, or limited partnership.
- File Fictitious Business Name statement with the applicable county clerk if operating under a name other than the owner's legal name (California Business and Professions Code § 17910).
- Obtain federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the IRS if the business will have employees.
- Register with the California Employment Development Department (EDD) as an employer for payroll tax purposes (EDD Employer Registration).
- Register as a Janitorial Contractor with the California Labor Commissioner's Office if the business will employ workers to perform janitorial services. Registration must be renewed annually (DLSE Janitorial Registration).
- Obtain city or county business license(s) in each jurisdiction where the business operates.
- Obtain CSLB license if services include licensed trades (asbestos abatement, pool/spa chemical service, water/fire damage restoration, or any construction-adjacent work exceeding $500 in labor and materials).
- Secure required insurance and bonding. At minimum: general liability insurance (required under the Janitorial Contractor Registration Act), workers' compensation insurance (required for any employee under California Labor Code § 3700), and CSLB contractor's bond if CSLB-licensed.
- Verify Cal/OSHA compliance for any hazardous cleaning operations, including Bloodborne Pathogens (CCR Title 8 § 5193) for biohazard services and Hazard Communication (CCR Title 8 § 5194) for chemical handling.
For bonding specifics, California cleaning service bonding requirements details the thresholds and approved surety instruments.
Reference table or matrix
California cleaning business license and registration requirements by service type
| Service Category | Janitorial Contractor Registration (Labor Code § 1420) | CSLB License Required | Cal/OSHA-Specific Standard | Local Business License |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General janitorial / commercial cleaning (employees) | Yes | No (unless structural work) | § 5194 Hazard Communication | Yes — all operating jurisdictions |
| Residential house cleaning (employees) | Yes | No | § 5194 Hazard Communication | Yes |
| Carpet cleaning | Yes if employees | No (unless structural) | § 5194 | Yes |
| Window cleaning | Yes if employees | No | § 1670–1677 (suspended scaffolding) | Yes |
| Pool and spa cleaning + chemical service | No | Yes — C-61/D-63 | § 5194 | Yes |
| Asbestos abatement | No (separate regime) | Yes — C-22 | § 1529 Asbestos | Yes |
| Mold remediation | Yes if employees | Depends on scope | § 5194, § 1529 if asbestos co-located | Yes |
| Biohazard / crime scene cleaning | Yes if employees | No (unless structural) | § 5193 Bloodborne Pathogens | Yes |
| Water / fire damage restoration | Yes if employees | Yes if structural repairs ≥ $500 | § 5194 | Yes |
| Post-construction cleaning | Yes if employees | No (unless structural) | § 5194, § 1532.1 if lead dust | Yes |
References
- California Labor Commissioner's Office — Janitorial Contractor Registration
- California Labor Code §§ 1420–1432 — Janitorial Contractor Registration Act
- California Contractors State License Board (CSLB)
- California Business and Professions Code § 7026 — Contractor definition
- California Business and Professions Code § 17910 — Fictitious Business Names
- California Secretary of State — Business Entity Filings
- California Employment Development Department — Employer Registration
- Cal/OSHA — CCR Title 8 § 5193 Bloodborne Pathogens
- Cal/OSHA — CCR Title 8 § 5194 Hazard Communication
- Cal/OSHA — CCR Title 8 § 1529 Asbestos
- CSLB — Contractor's Bond Requirements
- [California Labor Code § 3700 — Workers' Compensation](https://leginfo.