Housing

Where to Find a Deep Cleaner or Organizer in HBC and Central Seoul

Whether you are recovering from surgery, overwhelmed after a move, or simply need a nonjudgmental fresh start, here is how to find cleaning and organizing help in HBC and nearby Seoul.

Quick Answer
  • English-friendly cleaning services in Seoul can be found through expat Facebook groups, Lulu, and direct referrals
  • Be specific about the job when messaging — size of apartment, type of cleaning needed, and timeline
  • Services range from one-time deep cleans to weekly or monthly ongoing arrangements
  • Sending photos of the space before requesting a quote saves time and avoids surprises
  • For medically sensitive situations, explaining the context briefly helps cleaners bring the right approach and supplies
  • Rates vary widely — confirm total cost and what is included before anyone arrives

Finding a cleaner or professional organizer in Seoul as an English speaker is not as hard as it used to be — but it does require knowing where to look and how to ask. This is especially true if you need someone on short notice, someone kind and nonjudgmental, or someone who can handle a space that has become overwhelming due to health, recovery, or a difficult period.

Types of Help Available

Deep cleaning — A thorough clean of the whole apartment including areas that regular cleaning skips: inside cupboards, bathroom grout, behind appliances, windows, and floors. Takes several hours to a full day depending on size.

Professional organizing — Sorting through belongings, decluttering, creating storage systems, and making a space functional and manageable again. This is different from cleaning — it takes longer and requires more interaction with the resident.

Combined service — Some providers do both. Ask upfront whether they clean and organize or only one.

Regular cleaning — Weekly, fortnightly, or monthly cleaning once the initial deep clean is done. Many cleaners are happy to set up an ongoing arrangement if the first session goes well.

Where to Find Help

Expat Facebook groups — The EEIK group, Expat Women in Korea, and neighborhood-specific groups (HBC/Haebangchon, Itaewon, Yongsan) regularly have cleaning recommendations. Post your request with your area and what you need — responses come quickly.

Lulu — Lulu’s Helper feature connects foreigners in Korea with local assistance for tasks that are difficult to arrange through Korean-only platforms. The community skews toward Yongsan, Itaewon, and nearby neighborhoods, making it well-suited for HBC requests.

Word of mouth from neighbors — If you live in an expat-heavy building or neighborhood, your building group chat or immediate neighbors may have a cleaner they already use and trust.

Korean cleaning platforms — Services like Cleaning Hero (청소히어로) and similar apps operate in Seoul and can send Korean-speaking cleaners. If language is a barrier, having a Korean-speaking friend help you book can open this option up.

How to Ask for Help Well

When reaching out, be specific. Vague requests get vague responses. A message like this works well:

“I am looking for a deep cleaner for a one-room apartment in HBC. I am recovering from a health issue and the space has become overwhelming. I need someone nonjudgmental who can do a thorough clean — maybe 4 to 6 hours. If it goes well, I may want monthly or fortnightly help. Can you share your rates and availability this week?”

Sending photos before a quote is standard practice for deep cleaning requests. It helps the cleaner understand the scope and quote accurately.

What to Confirm Before Anyone Arrives

  • Total cost and what is included (supplies, trash removal, laundry)
  • Whether the cleaner brings their own supplies or needs you to provide them
  • How they prefer to be paid (cash, bank transfer, Kakao Pay)
  • Whether they work alone or bring a team
  • Cancellation or rescheduling policy

A Note on Sensitive Situations

If you are recovering from surgery, dealing with a health condition, or going through a difficult period, it is completely fine to mention this briefly when requesting help. Most professional cleaners approach their work without judgment — it is part of the job. Framing it simply (“I have been unwell and need a fresh start”) is enough to set the right tone without over-explaining.

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