Disclosure: This article is written by Shaun McManus, founder of SmartPubTools and creator of the Restaurant Console. All operational claims reflect genuine experience at Teal Farm Pub, Washington.
What Does a UK Restaurant Kitchen Cleaning Schedule Need to Include?
Key Takeaway: A UK restaurant kitchen cleaning schedule must cover daily tasks (surfaces, equipment, floors), weekly deep cleans (extraction filters, behind equipment, drains) and periodic tasks (full extraction clean every 3 months, pest control quarterly). EHO inspectors check for documented cleaning schedules. Without records, your food hygiene rating is at risk.
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By Shaun McManus | Last Updated: May 2026
A kitchen cleaning schedule is a legal requirement under the Food Safety Act 1990 and Food Hygiene Regulations 2006. It is also a practical tool for maintaining hygiene standards, protecting your food hygiene rating, and passing EHO inspections. This guide gives you the complete schedule framework and explains what inspectors look for.
Legal Requirements for Restaurant Cleaning Records UK
Under Regulation (EC) 852/2004 (retained in UK law post-Brexit) and the Food Hygiene (England) Regulations 2006, food businesses must implement cleaning and disinfection procedures based on HACCP principles. This requires written cleaning schedules that specify: what is to be cleaned, how often, with what products, and who is responsible.
EHO inspectors use the SFBB (Safer Food, Better Business) framework as a reference standard. If you cannot produce a cleaning schedule during an inspection, you will receive a lower confidence score in management of food safety — which feeds directly into your food hygiene rating.
Daily Kitchen Cleaning Checklist
| Area/Item | Frequency | Method | Chemical |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cooking surfaces (griddles, ranges, fryers) | After each service | Degrease, wipe, sanitise | Food-safe degreaser |
| Prep surfaces (stainless steel counters) | After each use and end of service | Clean, rinse, sanitise | Antibacterial sanitiser |
| Chopping boards | After each use | Wash, rinse, sanitise, air dry | Sanitiser solution |
| Floors (kitchen) | End of each service | Sweep, mop with hot water | Floor cleaner |
| Sinks (prep and wash-up) | End of service | Scrub, rinse, sanitise | Antibacterial cleaner |
| Fridges (exterior, handles, door seals) | Daily | Wipe with sanitiser | Food-safe sanitiser |
| Waste bins and areas | End of each service | Empty, clean, sanitise bin | Disinfectant |
| Hand wash basins | Throughout service and end of day | Clean and sanitise | Antibacterial soap and sanitiser |
Weekly Kitchen Cleaning Tasks
| Area/Item | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fridge interiors (all units) | Weekly | Remove all stock, wash shelves, sanitise, check seals |
| Oven interiors | Weekly | Full degrease including racks and door seals |
| Extraction canopy (visible surfaces) | Weekly | Degrease exterior and visible baffles |
| Behind and under equipment | Weekly | Pull out moveable equipment, clean floors and walls |
| Drains | Weekly | Clear traps, flush with drain cleaner |
| Walls and tiles (around cooking range) | Weekly | Degrease and sanitise |
| Dishwasher/glasswasher | Weekly | Clean filters, spray arms, interior, descale if needed |
Monthly and Periodic Deep Clean Schedule
| Task | Frequency | Compliance notes |
|---|---|---|
| Full extraction duct and canopy clean | Every 3 months (minimum) | Document with TR19 certificate — insurers require this |
| Pest control inspection | Quarterly | Use licensed contractor, retain all reports |
| Fridge/freezer coil cleaning | Every 6 months | Required for temperature efficiency |
| Gas safety check (kitchen appliances) | Annually | Gas Safe registered engineer — retain certificate |
| Electrical inspection (PAT testing) | Annually for catering equipment | Retain PAT records |
| Full kitchen deep clean (all surfaces, equipment moved) | Monthly | Document with cleaning log |
What EHO Inspectors Check in Your Cleaning Schedule
Environmental Health Officers inspect cleaning schedules against five criteria: Is there a written schedule? Are responsibilities allocated? Are cleaning products named and dilution rates specified? Is there a record of cleaning being carried out? Are there any recent corrective actions noted where cleaning was missed?
A schedule that exists but is not being completed is worse than no schedule — it demonstrates a management failure. Completed, signed cleaning logs are your evidence of compliance. At Teal Farm Pub I treat the cleaning log as a legal document — because it is.
For more on EHO inspection preparation see our complete EHO inspection checklist and the HACCP temperature log guide.
Track Cleaning Compliance Digitally
The Restaurant Console includes a Cleaning Schedule module covering daily, weekly, and deep clean tracking. Staff complete the schedule digitally, records are stored automatically in your Google Drive, and the system is EHO-ready — all records are dated, signed, and retrievable instantly during an inspection.
The Restaurant Console also includes the Safety Deck (full compliance — licensing, H&S, EHO ready), HACCP compliance logs, and Fire Safety Log — giving you complete operational compliance in one system. £97 one-time, no monthly fees.
Run Your Restaurant From One System — £97 One-Time
✓ Cleaning Schedule module: daily, weekly, deep clean tracking
✓ EHO-ready records stored in YOUR Google Drive
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is a kitchen cleaning schedule a legal requirement in UK restaurants?
Yes. Under the Food Hygiene Regulations 2006, food businesses must implement documented cleaning procedures based on HACCP principles. EHO inspectors check for written cleaning schedules with completion records.
How often should a restaurant kitchen be deep cleaned UK?
Full kitchen deep clean monthly, extraction canopy and duct cleaning every 3 months minimum (document with TR19 certificate), and quarterly pest control inspections.
What happens if a restaurant fails an EHO cleaning inspection?
A failed cleaning inspection lowers your confidence in management score. This can drop your food hygiene rating and in serious cases trigger a Hygiene Improvement Notice requiring urgent action before trading continues.
How often should extraction canopies be cleaned in a restaurant?
Every 3 months minimum. A TR19 certificate from a licensed contractor is required as documentary evidence — also required by most commercial kitchen insurers.
What cleaning chemicals should a restaurant kitchen use?
Food-safe degreasers for cooking surfaces, antibacterial sanitisers (EN1276 standard) for food contact surfaces, and separate chemicals for toilets and non-food areas. Dilution rates must be specified in your cleaning schedule.
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