
Last updated: May 3, 2026. The definitive 2026 buyer’s guide for procuring commercial cleaning services for bank branches, credit union branches, and multi-branch financial institution networks across Connecticut, Rhode Island, and southern Massachusetts.
Bank and credit union cleaning is the most operationally demanding category in commercial cleaning. Branch facilities managers face requirements that no office account has: dual-control or single-control access procedures, FFIEC and state banking regulator scrutiny, vault-area protocols, ATM lobby separation, document-destruction area maintenance, and the bonded, background-checked crews that come with all of it. Multi-branch networks add unified billing, standardized scope-of-work across geographies, and named single-point-of-contact supervision.
This guide is written by Fraser Commercial Services, the Waterford, CT-based commercial cleaning company that currently operates 100+ bank and credit union branches across CT, RI, and southern MA under standardized contracts. We wrote this guide because community bank operations leads and credit union facilities managers procuring branch cleaning consistently ask the same questions, and the available online content is generic. This is the version we wish existed when we were starting branch programs.
1. Why bank cleaning is its own category
Standard office janitorial cleans the building. Bank cleaning is closer to a security operation that includes cleaning. The defining requirements:
Background-checked crews are non-negotiable
Every cleaner with branch access (key, fob, alarm code) must be background-checked through a third-party verification service before their first shift. This is not a paid add-on. It is the default for branch work. Vendors who treat background checks as optional or who charge separately for them should be ruled out.
Dual-control vs single-control access
Dual-control means two authorized people must be present whenever the cleaning crew enters the branch. Single-control means one authorized person escorts or supervises. Each branch policy varies. The cleaning vendor must have documented procedures for both, and crews must be trained in the specific protocol for each branch they serve.
No key/fob/alarm-code duplication
Branch credentials are not transferable. A cleaner assigned to Branch A does not have keys for Branch B. Lost or compromised credentials trigger immediate alarm-code rotation and key replacement, with the vendor responsible for documentation.
Camera awareness
Crews are trained that branch interior cameras are recording at all times. Behavior, conversations, and any handling of customer-facing materials should be appropriate to that recording. This is part of crew orientation, not an afterthought.
Vault-area protocols
Vault rooms, safe deposit areas, and after-hours teller cash drawers have specific access restrictions. Cleaning crews typically do not enter these areas without dual-control supervision. Cleaning is often deferred until specific scheduled windows.
ATM lobby cleaning
ATM vestibules are typically a separate scope from the branch interior. They have public 24/7 access, different cleaning frequencies, and different supply requirements (heavier hand sanitizer use, more frequent restocking of envelopes if applicable).
Document-destruction area maintenance
Locked shred bins are emptied by a separate vendor (Iron Mountain, Shred-it, Cintas Document Management, etc.). Cleaning crews maintain the area around the bins but do not access them. Coordination with the shred vendor matters for branch cleanliness.
2. Multi-branch programs are operationally different from single-branch
If you run more than three branches, you should be procuring as a multi-branch program, not as separate accounts. The differences:
Standardized scope of work
Every branch in the network gets the same documented scope of work. Restroom programs, lobby reset, teller-area cleaning, vault-area protocol, ATM lobby cleaning, supply restocking — all defined identically. This makes performance evaluable across the network and prevents service drift at outlier branches.
Unified billing
One monthly invoice covering all branches, with a per-branch line item breakdown. Simpler reconciliation than separate invoices. Standard practice for any multi-branch program.
Named single-point-of-contact supervisor
One named supervisor responsible for the entire branch network, with a phone number reachable in real time. When the Norwich branch has an issue, you call one supervisor, not 12 different crew leads. This is the single biggest operational advantage of consolidating with one vendor.
Cross-branch crew availability
When a regular cleaner is out, the supervisor reassigns from the network rather than scrambling for emergency coverage. The vendor’s depth of trained crews matters more than the size of any individual crew.
Reporting cadence
Monthly walk-through reports per branch, signed by the supervisor and routed to the operations lead at the bank. Quarterly all-network reviews to identify systemic issues vs branch-specific issues.
3. Compliance and documentation requirements
Bank and credit union cleaning vendors must maintain documentation that holds up to FFIEC examination, state banking regulator inquiry, and internal audit. The standard package:
- Background check verification on file for every cleaner with branch access. Renewed annually.
- Bonding certificate with appropriate limits (typically $1M minimum for bank work).
- General liability insurance with the bank named as additional insured for each branch under contract.
- Workers’ compensation insurance documentation.
- Documented access procedures per branch (dual-control vs single-control, alarm code rotation policy, key handling, escort requirements).
- Cleaning logs per branch, per visit, with crew member sign-off.
- Restroom check-off sheets for branches with public restrooms.
- EPA disinfectant SDS sheets for every chemical used on-site.
- Quarterly walk-through reports documenting condition and any recommended scope adjustments.
Vendors who cannot produce this documentation package within 48 hours of request are not ready for bank work.
4. Scope of work for a typical branch
A standard 2,500 to 4,000 square foot bank branch with public lobby, teller area, two private offices, restrooms, and break room typically runs the following nightly scope:
- Lobby: floor care (sweep, mop, vacuum carpets if applicable), glass and entry door cleaning, customer-facing surface wipe-down, brochure rack tidy, trash removal
- Teller area: teller counter wipe-down, equipment surface wipe (NOT touching keyboards or screens unless requested), trash removal, floor care
- Private offices: trash, surface dusting, vacuum, glass and door cleaning
- Restrooms: EPA hospital-grade disinfection of every touch point (door handles, faucet handles, toilet flushers, paper towel dispensers, soap dispensers), toilet and urinal cleaning, mirror polish, floor mop, full restock
- Break room: counter and table wipe-down, floor mop, trash and recycling, microwave wipe
- ATM vestibule (if separate): floor care, glass cleaning, trash removal, hand sanitizer dispenser restock
- Shared touch points sitewide: all door handles, light switches, push plates, elevator buttons (if applicable)
Frequency typically runs 5 nights per week for high-traffic branches and 3 nights per week for smaller community branches.
5. Pricing benchmarks for branch cleaning in CT, RI, and southern MA
| Branch size | Frequency | Typical 2026 monthly cost |
|---|---|---|
| Small branch (1,500-2,500 sq ft) | 5 nights/week | $650 to $1,100 |
| Standard branch (2,500-4,000 sq ft) | 5 nights/week | $900 to $1,600 |
| Larger flagship branch (4,000-7,000 sq ft) | 5 nights/week | $1,400 to $2,400 |
| Standard branch (2,500-4,000 sq ft) | 3 nights/week | $650 to $1,100 |
Bank cleaning typically runs 10 to 20 percent above standard office janitorial rates due to background checks, bonding, dual-control coordination overhead, and compliance documentation. Multi-branch programs on standardized scope often achieve 5 to 10 percent better per-branch pricing than single-branch contracts due to operational efficiency.
6. Project services that pair with branch programs
- VCT strip and wax on lobby and teller-area floors, annually or every 18 months. Typical cost: $0.25 to $0.50 per sq ft per project.
- Carpet hot-water extraction on private offices and managers’ offices, annually or every 18 months. Typical cost: $0.20 to $0.40 per sq ft per project.
- Window cleaning exterior on branch glazing, quarterly or biannually.
- Pressure washing on entrance sidewalks and ATM vestibule exteriors, annually.
- Post-incident disinfection with electrostatic spray after any reported illness exposure or biohazard event.
7. How to write a branch-cleaning RFP
Multi-branch RFPs differ from single-site RFPs in several ways. The minimum sections you need:
- Branch-network profile: total branches, square footage range, types (full-service vs ATM-only vs flagship), public-facing hours per branch
- Standardized scope of work applied across all branches
- Branch-specific requirements: dual-control vs single-control per branch, special access protocols, restricted areas, after-hours-only requirements
- Compliance and documentation requirements: bonding limits, COI requirements with each branch as named insured, FFIEC documentation, training records
- Reporting cadence: monthly per-branch logs, quarterly walk-through reports, annual scope review
- Pricing format: per-branch monthly recurring, project services priced separately, supplies pass-through or included
- Onboarding plan: 30-day rollout per branch, key handover, alarm code coordination, supervisor introduction
- Backup and reliability: documented procedure when a regular cleaner is unavailable
- References: three current bank or credit union references, ideally with multi-branch portfolios of similar size
For a copy-paste RFP template covering all of the above, see our Free Commercial Cleaning RFP Template.
8. How to evaluate a branch-cleaning vendor
The standard evaluation matrix has 10 dimensions. The bank-cleaning version adds three more:
- Multi-branch experience. How many branch programs do they currently operate? Less than 25 is too small for a multi-branch RFP. More than 100 is rare and signals operational depth.
- Bonding limits. Many smaller cleaning vendors carry $250K or $500K bonding. Bank work needs $1M minimum.
- Documentation maturity. Can they produce their entire compliance package (background check verification, bonding cert, COI, training records, SDS sheets) within 48 hours? If not, they will struggle with FFIEC documentation expectations.
For the standard 10-dimension scorecard, see our Vendor Evaluation Scorecard.
9. Switching cleaning vendors at a multi-branch network
Branch cleaning vendor transitions are higher-risk than single-site transitions because the failure modes scale linearly with branch count. The playbook:
- Notify your current vendor in writing per contract terms (typically 30 to 60 days notice). Coordinate access termination dates explicitly.
- During notice period, walk every branch with the new vendor’s supervisor. Document current scope, equipment locations, supply inventory, and branch-specific quirks (alarm code rotation schedule, vault-area access windows, etc.).
- Coordinate alarm code rotation with the new vendor’s first shift dates. The new vendor must be programmed in BEFORE the old vendor’s last shift.
- Stagger the transition across the branch network if possible. Don’t transition all branches the same night. Pilot with 5 branches first, then add 10 per week.
- Have the operations lead at the bank on-site for the first transition night, walking with the new vendor’s supervisor.
- Set 14-day check-ins per pilot branch, then 30-day formal review across the full network.
A well-planned multi-branch transition takes 60 to 90 days from contract signing to full network coverage. Vendors who promise to transition 50+ branches in 30 days are setting up to fail.
10. What separates good branch-cleaning vendors from bad ones
After 39 years of operating bank programs, the consistent differentiators between vendors who succeed at branch work and vendors who fail:
- Supervisor-to-branch ratio. One supervisor responsible for too many branches means inconsistent service. The good vendors keep the ratio at 12-15 branches per supervisor maximum.
- Cleaner tenure. Industry-average cleaning turnover is above 75 percent annually. The vendors that hold turnover under 50 percent invest in wages, schedules, and supervisor structures that make crews want to stay.
- Documentation discipline. Cleaning logs filled out completely, on time, every shift. Not a sampled audit; a default behavior.
- Communication speed. When something goes wrong (no-show, equipment issue, supply shortage), the supervisor is reachable within 30 minutes during business hours and within 2 hours after-hours.
- Operational depth. Backup coverage built into the schedule, not an emergency improvisation. Trained crews available across the network.
Frequently asked questions about bank cleaning
What is the minimum bonding requirement for bank cleaning?
Most banks require $1M minimum bonding. Some larger institutions require $2M to $5M. Verify with your specific bank’s procurement requirements before vendor selection.
Can the same cleaner work at multiple branches?
Yes, with appropriate background checks, bonding, and documented credentials per branch. In multi-branch networks, vendors typically rotate trained crews across branches based on coverage needs while maintaining branch-specific access procedures.
How often should bank restrooms be cleaned and disinfected?
For branches with public restrooms, EPA hospital-grade disinfection of all touch points should happen every cleaning visit (typically nightly). High-traffic branches benefit from day-porter restroom check-ins every 1 to 2 hours during business hours.
Who is responsible for emptying the locked shred bins?
Not the cleaning vendor. Locked shred bins are serviced by a contracted document destruction vendor (Iron Mountain, Shred-it, Cintas Document Management, etc.). The cleaning vendor maintains the area around the bins but does not access them.
What happens if a cleaner damages branch property?
The cleaning vendor’s bonding and general liability insurance covers damage. The vendor’s supervisor should report the incident immediately and the bank’s facilities team should document it for insurance routing.
How quickly can a new branch program start?
Two to three weeks per branch from contract signing for a single branch. Multi-branch rollouts typically pace at 5 to 10 branches per week after the first two weeks of background check and credential coordination.
About Fraser Commercial Services
Fraser Commercial Services is a 39-year-old, family-run, veteran-owned commercial cleaning company headquartered in Waterford, CT. We currently service over 100 bank and credit union branches under contract across eastern and central Connecticut, southern Rhode Island, and parts of southern Massachusetts. Every cleaner assigned to a branch is background-checked, bonded, and trained in branch-specific access procedures before their first shift.
Helpful resources
- Bank and Credit Union Branch Cleaning Services
- Free RFP Template
- Vendor Evaluation Scorecard
- Pricing Cheat Sheet
- Cost Calculator
- Commercial Cleaning Glossary
- The Complete Guide to Commercial Cleaning in CT and RI (2026)
Procuring branch cleaning for your bank or credit union? Call (860) 373-2525 or request a free walkthrough. Written quotes within two business days for single-branch or multi-branch programs.