A cleaning business runs on trust. When someone hands you a key to their home or lets you into their office, they’re already decided they trust you. Your logo is often the first thing that earns that trust, before they ever meet you.
A good cleaning logo doesn’t need to be complicated. It needs to feel reliable and a little bit fresh. Think about what your customers actually want: someone dependable who’ll leave things spotless. Your logo should feel like that promise made visual.
The most common mistake is going too generic. A mop and bubbles says “cleaning company” but it doesn’t say anything about your cleaning company. The logos below show a range of directions you can take, from tool-based marks to abstract shapes that just feel clean.
Logos Worth a Look
The Swoosh Tool Cleaning Logo uses a fluid, sweeping shape that reads as motion without being literal about it. It works well for companies that want something modern without going cold or corporate.
The Line Tool Illustration is a minimal line-art mark, the kind that stays legible whether it’s on a business card or the side of a van. Simple and direct.
Here’s one that might surprise you: the Three Layer Cake Logo. It reads as stacked layers, which translates well to a “before and after” or “top to bottom” cleaning narrative. Unexpected, but it works.
For something more traditional, the Broom Logo is a clean illustration of a broom that doesn’t feel dated. It’s recognizable immediately, which matters if you’re targeting customers who aren’t spending time decoding abstract marks.
The Crescent Moon and Telescope Logo is worth considering if you run a late-night or overnight cleaning service, or just want something that doesn’t look like every other cleaning company in your city. The moon shape reads as quiet and unobtrusive, which is actually a good feeling for a service that works while clients are away.
The Trash Can Logo is direct. Junk removal, waste management, or general cleaning services with an eco angle could all use this well. It doesn’t over-explain itself.
Editing Your Logo in Figma
All of these are SVG files, so you can open them straight in Figma (or Illustrator, or Inkscape) and start editing. A few practical notes:
- Change the color first. Swap in your brand color before you do anything else. You’ll quickly see whether the shape is working for you or not.
- Test it small. Paste it into a mockup at business card size. A lot of logo problems only show up when the mark is small, thin lines disappear, or shapes blur together.
- Don’t stretch it. If you need to resize, hold shift or use the scale tool so the proportions stay locked. A squashed logo looks unprofessional even if the original mark was strong.
Ready to Browse More?
These six are just a starting point. Head over to the cleaning service logo collection to see everything in one place. You can filter by style, download instantly, and have something ready to use today.