You've driven to the property, knocked on the door, and nobody's home. It happens — and how you handle it in the next ten minutes determines whether you keep the client or lose them for good. This guide gives you the right message to send and explains why staying professional in this moment pays off every time.
A no-show isn't just an inconvenience — it's a direct cost. You've allocated time in your schedule, possibly turned down another job to be there, and now you've got a gap that's hard to fill at short notice. For cleaning businesses running tight schedules across multiple clients, a single no-show can throw off your whole day.
But here's what's just as important: most no-shows are accidents, not deliberate. The client forgot to leave a key, got stuck at work, or simply lost track of the date. How you respond to that situation — calmly and professionally, or frustrated and accusatory — shapes the entire future of that client relationship. A warm follow-up recovers the booking. An angry one loses the client.
You've arrived at the property for a scheduled clean and the client isn't home or isn't responding. You need to follow up in a way that's professional, recovers the booking, and sets the right tone for the conversation about preventing it happening again.
Hi [Name], it's [Your Name] from [Business Name]. We arrived for your scheduled clean at [time] today but weren't able to access the property. No worries — these things happen! Can we rebook? I have [day/time option 1] or [day/time option 2] available. Just let me know what works. — [Your Name]
Send the follow-up message within 15 minutes of the missed appointment — while you're still in the area or just after leaving. The quicker you respond, the more likely the client is to feel the urgency of rebooking. Waiting hours or until the next day reduces the chance of recovery significantly. If you don't hear back within 24 hours, send one more follow-up and then move on.
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Wait 10–15 minutes, then send a brief, non-accusatory message to let them know you arrived and ask whether they'd like to reschedule. Don't assume the worst — most no-shows are genuine mix-ups. A calm, professional follow-up recovers the booking far more often than an angry one.
Only if it was clearly stated in your booking terms upfront. If a client booked with you knowing there's a no-show fee, you're within your rights to charge it. If they didn't know about it, introducing a fee after the fact creates conflict. Use the first no-show as a reminder to update your terms for future bookings.
Send a reminder message 24 hours before every scheduled clean — even for regular clients. A simple "Just confirming your clean tomorrow at [time]" dramatically reduces no-shows. It also gives clients an easy opportunity to reschedule if something has come up, so you can fill the slot.
After two no-shows, it's worth having a direct conversation — not aggressive, but honest. Let them know that missed appointments impact your schedule and that you need to be able to rely on bookings. If it continues, it may be time to part ways with that client or require a deposit upfront.
Keep it factual and reference your terms: "Hi [Name], as per our booking terms, a cancellation fee of [amount] applies for appointments where we're unable to access the property. I've attached an invoice for this — please let me know if you have any questions." Firm but professional gets better results than frustrated.
One no-show is usually a genuine mistake. Two is a pattern. Three is a choice. Unreliable clients cost you more than just the missed booking — they take up schedule space that could be filled by clients who value your time. Use your judgement, but don't be afraid to prioritise clients who respect your schedule.
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