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Salary data · Bespree

Janitor and Cleaner Salary in Miami

Janitors and Cleaners in the Miami area earn a median of $16.43/hr — based on BLS OEWS May 2025.

At median pay, that's roughly $34,174/year, $657/week, or $2,846/month (40-hour week, before taxes).

Adjusted for local prices, the median $16.43/hr wage is about $14.39/hr in national-average purchasing power, and HUD's one-bedroom FMR equals about 121.4 hours of work, or 70% of gross monthly pay.

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About janitors and cleaners

Job duties, work environment, and education based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

What janitors and cleaners do

Janitors and cleaners keep buildings in clean and orderly condition. They perform heavy cleaning duties such as sweeping, mopping, and vacuuming floors; scrubbing and cleaning restrooms; emptying trash; replacing supplies; and performing minor maintenance like changing light bulbs and repairing fixtures. Some janitors may shovel snow, mow lawns, or maintain exterior areas.

Work environment

Janitors work in schools, offices, hospitals, hotels, retail stores, and other buildings. Many work evening or overnight shifts when buildings are less occupied. The work is physical and involves standing, walking, bending, and lifting. Janitors use cleaning chemicals and equipment and must follow proper safety procedures. Some may work independently while others are part of a cleaning team.

How to become one

No formal education is typically required. Most janitors learn on the job from an experienced worker. Some positions may require a high school diploma. Knowledge of cleaning chemicals, equipment operation, and safety protocols is learned through training. Advancement may lead to supervisory roles.

Source: BLS Occupational Outlook Handbookbls.gov/ooh. BLS content is in the public domain.

Hourly wage ranges

PercentileHourlyAnnual (est.)
Entry level (10th)$13.77$28,642
25th percentile$14.22$29,578
Median (50th)$16.43$34,174
75th percentile$18.03$37,502
Top earners (90th)$20.76$43,181

Source: BLS OEWS May 2025 · Annual estimate = hourly × 2,080 hrs · Actual annual income varies by hours worked and schedule.

How Miami compares

Janitors and Cleaners pay by metro

MetroMedian/hr
Miami$16.43
New York City$20.60
Los Angeles$18.62
Bridgeport-Stamford$18.57
Chicago$18.49
New Haven$18.21
Trenton-Princeton$18.10
Philadelphia$17.75
Houston$14.74

What pay means locally

A broad purchasing-power view using BEA regional price data.

BEA Regional Price Parities compare broad local price levels with the U.S. average. They help explain how far a median hourly wage may go in Miami.

Cost-adjusted wage using BEA Regional Price Parities
BLS median wage$16.43/hr
BEA all-items RPP114.2
Local price level14.2% higher than the U.S. average
Cost-adjusted median$14.39/hr

HUD Fair Market Rent benchmark

HUD Fair Market Rent is a 40th-percentile gross rent benchmark by bedroom size, not average rent. The one-bedroom value is the default comparison for hourly worker affordability.

HUD FY 2026 Fair Market Rent and hours of work at the local median wage
Bedroom sizeHUD FMRHours at median
Studio$1,828/mo111.3 hours
1 bedroom$1,995/mo121.4 hours
2 bedroom$2,436/mo148.3 hours

At the local BLS median wage, HUD's one-bedroom FMR equals about 121.4 hours of work, or roughly 70% of gross monthly pay before taxes.

Methodology: cost-adjusted median = BLS median hourly wage ÷ (BEA all-items RPP ÷ 100). An RPP above 100 means local prices are higher than the U.S. average.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis MARPP 2024, line 1 (RPPs: All items); BEA area 33100: Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL (Metropolitan Statistical Area).

HUD rent source: FY 2026 HUD Fair Market Rents, 40th percentile gross rent. HUD area: Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, FL HMFA. HUD row is the Miami-Dade HMFA subset of the broader BLS/BEA South Florida metro.

This is broad metro-level context, not a personal budget, tax, or take-home-pay estimate.

Compare affordability for janitor / cleaner

Compare the same role across metros using cost-adjusted pay and rent context.

Where janitor / cleaner pay goes furthest

  • New York City

    $18.30/hr cost-adjusted median

    BLS median: $20.60/hr

  • Chicago

    $17.85/hr cost-adjusted median

    BLS median: $18.49/hr

  • Trenton-Princeton

    $17.54/hr cost-adjusted median

    BLS median: $18.10/hr

  • New Haven

    $17.42/hr cost-adjusted median

    BLS median: $18.21/hr

Affordability questions

What is the cost-adjusted wage for janitor / cleaner in Miami?
The BLS median wage is $16.43/hr. After adjusting by the BEA all-items RPP of 114.2, that is about $14.39/hr in national-average purchasing power.
How many hours does one-bedroom Fair Market Rent take at the median wage?
HUD's one-bedroom FY 2026 Fair Market Rent for Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, FL HMFA is $1,995/mo. At $16.43/hr, that equals about 121.4 hours of work, or 70% of gross monthly pay before taxes.
Is this a personal budget estimate?
No. These are broad metro-level comparisons from public datasets. They do not include taxes, benefits, household size, commuting choices, or actual housing costs.

Job outlook for Janitors and Cleaners

National employment projections from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

🔴 Declining

-2.2% projected growth, 2024–2034

Employment change

-51,000

2024–2034

Annual openings

~290,500

New + replacement

Current employment

2,294,300

2024 estimate

Typical education

No formal credential

Entry-level

On-the-job training: Short-term on-the-job training

Source: BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034. Published August 2025. National-level projections — local growth may differ.

Skills & qualifications

Key skills and knowledge areas from O*NET OnLine, plus representative tools compiled by Bespree for janitors and cleaners.

Top skills
  • Operation and Control
  • Monitoring
  • Active Listening
  • Critical Thinking
  • Time Management
Key knowledge
  • Customer and Personal Service
  • English Language
  • Chemistry
  • Public Safety and Security
  • Mechanical
Tools & technology
  • Floor scrubbers
  • Industrial vacuum cleaners
  • Pressure washers
  • Snow removal equipment
  • Carpet extractors

Skills and knowledge data from O*NET OnLine, sponsored by U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration. Used under CC BY 4.0. O*NET® is a trademark of the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration. Bespree has selected and summarized a subset of this information. USDOL/ETA has not approved, endorsed, or tested these modifications. Tools & technology listed are representative examples compiled by Bespree.

Commute-adjusted effective wage

What you actually earn after subtracting the cost of getting to work.

Effective hourly wage after estimated commute costs, based on a 40-hr work week.

Commute modeMonthly costHourly impactEffective wage
No commute cost (baseline)$16.43
Public transit (regional estimate)~$120/mo$0.69/hr$15.74/hr
Driving (gas + wear)~$280/mo$1.62/hr$14.81/hr

Methodology: Commute cost is deducted from median hourly wage assuming 2,080 working hours per year (52 weeks × 40 hrs). Costs are directional estimates based on published transit fares or AAA average variable driving costs. Actual costs vary by distance, schedule, vehicle, and commute days.

Public transit (regional estimate): Estimated regional monthly transit cost.

Driving (gas + wear): AAA avg variable cost estimate.

Local job market

Local demand in Miami

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BLS estimates 41,890 janitors and cleaners employed in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL area, or 2.7 per 1,000 jobs. (BLS OEWS May 2025)

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Data source: Wage data is from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program, BLS OEWS May 2025. Regional price context uses U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Price Parities (MARPP 2024, all-items RPP). Rent context uses HUD Fair Market Rents (FY 2026, 40th percentile gross rent). Job outlook data is from the BLS Employment Projections program (BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034). BLS data is in the public domain. Occupation profile content summarized from the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook. Skills and knowledge data from O*NET OnLine, sponsored by U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, used under CC BY 4.0. O*NET® is a trademark of USDOL/ETA. Bespree has selected and summarized a subset of this information; USDOL/ETA has not approved, endorsed, or tested these modifications. Tools & technology listed are representative examples compiled by Bespree. BLS.gov cannot vouch for the data or analyses derived from these data after retrieval. Wage figures are estimates and do not constitute a guarantee of earnings. Actual pay depends on employer, experience, certifications, and hours worked. Weekly and monthly earnings shown assume a 40-hour work week and are pre-tax estimates. Commute cost figures and regional price adjustments are directional estimates; actual commute costs, purchasing power, and budgets vary.