Complete guide to permits and licenses required to start a cleaning service in Kansas City, KS. Fees, renewal cycles, and agency contacts.
Required for all LLCs. Annual Report required thereafter ($50 fee, due April 15 annually).
Mandatory for all LLCs to maintain good standing.
Renewal every 5 years ($25). Not required if using exact LLC name.
Most cleaning services are nontaxable unless selling products. File if applicable.
Required if paying wages to employees.
Quarterly reports and payments required.
Not required at the state level, but many cities require a local business license or occupancy permit. Check with your city clerk.
Most cleaning services provided to residential customers are not subject to sales tax in Kansas. However, if the service involves supplying cleaning materials (e.g., selling cleaning supplies as part of the service), those materials may be taxable. Commercial cleaning contracts are generally not subject to sales tax unless tied to taxable tangible goods. Confirm with KDR for specific service classification.
Employers must register with the Kansas Department of Labor to obtain an unemployment insurance tax account number. New employers pay a standard rate for the first few years, then rates are experience-rated.
LLCs taxed as pass-through entities (default) do not pay corporate income tax; instead, income flows to owners' personal returns. However, if the LLC has elected corporate tax treatment, it must file Form K-20S or K-20C. Most cleaning service LLCs are pass-throughs and file informational returns only.
While not a tax per se, this is a mandatory annual obligation for LLCs. The report includes basic business information and confirms active status. Must be filed online via the Kansas Business Center.
Many Kansas cities (e.g., Wichita, Topeka, Overland Park) require a local business license or privilege tax. Fees and requirements vary. For example, Wichita requires a Business Tax Certificate (https://www.wichita.gov/CityHall/Finance/Pages/BusinessTax.aspx). Research local city/county websites for specific rules.
Even single-member LLCs without employees may need an EIN to open a business bank account or file certain taxes. Obtained via IRS Form SS-4 or online application.
LLCs treated as pass-through entities must file Form K-100 (Partnership Return) or K-100S (S Corporation) even if no tax is due at the entity level. Owners report income on personal Kansas returns (Form K-40).
Cleaning services using chemicals regulated under TSCA or FIFRA (e.g., antimicrobial pesticides) must follow labeling instructions and may need to report usage. Most commercial cleaning products are exempt if used as directed, but bulk or industrial use may trigger reporting. Proper disposal of hazardous waste is regulated under RCRA if applicable.
FTC enforces against deceptive advertising (e.g., false claims about "green" or "eco-friendly" cleaning, guaranteed results). The "Green Guides" apply to environmental marketing claims. The FTC’s "Do Not Call" rules apply if telemarketing. The Telemarketing Sales Rule requires honoring the National Do Not Call Registry.
All employers, including LLCs, must verify identity and work eligibility of employees using Form I-9. E-Verify is not mandatory unless federal contract requires it or state law mandates (not currently in Kansas).
Applies to all employers with employees. Requires payment of federal minimum wage ($7.25/hour), overtime (1.5x regular rate after 40 hours/week), and proper recordkeeping. Cleaning services often face scrutiny for misclassifying workers as independent contractors. Must display FLSA poster.
Requires eligible employees to be granted up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for qualifying medical or family reasons. Must post notice and maintain health benefits during leave.
No federal license is required for general residential or commercial cleaning services. Specialized services (e.g., mold remediation, crime scene cleanup, or medical facility disinfection) may require state or federal certifications, but these are not general federal requirements. FDA, ATF, FCC, and DOT do not regulate standard cleaning operations.
Employers with 10 or more employees must maintain OSHA Form 300 (Log of Work-Related Injuries), Form 301 (Incident Report), and post Form 300A annually. Electronic submission required for certain industries and business sizes. Cleaning services may be subject if they meet size thresholds.
All Kansas LLCs must file an Annual Report each year to remain in good standing. The report can be filed online through the Kansas Business Center portal.
Cleaning services may be subject to Kansas sales tax if they provide taxable services (e.g., janitorial services for industrial or manufacturing facilities may be exempt, but commercial cleaning may require tax collection depending on contract). Registration is a one-time requirement but must be maintained. No annual renewal, but accounts must be kept active.
Employers must withhold Kansas income tax from employee wages. Filing frequency (monthly, quarterly) is determined by the state based on payroll volume. Form KS-9 (Reconciliation of Withholding) is due annually by January 31.
Required for all employers. Form 941 (Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return) filed each quarter. Form 940 (Federal Unemployment Tax) filed annually. EIN is obtained once but ongoing filings are mandatory.
Employers must register with the Kansas Department of Labor within 20 days of hiring their first employee. Quarterly reports and payments are required.
Mandatory for all employers with employees in Kansas. Coverage must be obtained from a private insurer or through the Kansas Workers Compensation Fund. Proof may be required upon inspection.
Employers must post Form K-1 (Notice to Employees) in a conspicuous place where employees can see it. Available for download from the KDOL website.
Most cleaning services to residential customers are not subject to sales tax. However, if cleaning supplies are sold (e.g., as part of a package), those sales are taxable. Must register if making taxable sales. Confirm classification with KDR.
All businesses must obtain; cleaning services classified under general business
Cleaning service qualifies if no on-site storage of chemicals/equipment visible; limits on employees/traffic
Verify zoning district allows cleaning service (most commercial/home occ OK)
Freestanding/wall signs require plan review
Annual for hazardous storage; cleaning services often need if storing flammables
Registration required for all commercial alarms
No general business license; zoning approval needed instead - see county zoning
Cleaning service typically permitted in commercial/ag zones
Home-based OK with occupation permit addendum
No customer visits allowed; material storage limits
All retail/service businesses required
Required for all employers with one or more employees in Kansas, including LLC members who receive wages, unless exempted. Agricultural and domestic workers may have exceptions. Sole proprietors without employees are not required to carry coverage for themselves but may elect to do so.
Not legally required by the State of Kansas for cleaning services, but strongly recommended. Often required by commercial landlords, clients, or contracts. May be mandated indirectly through city contracts or public works projects.
Not legally required in Kansas for cleaning services. However, it is strongly recommended to protect against claims of negligence, damage to client property, or substandard work. May be required by high-value client contracts.
No statewide surety bond requirement for general cleaning services in Kansas. However, some municipalities (e.g., Kansas City, Wichita) may require a bond for business licensing. Also common in janitorial contracts with schools or government entities. Bond amounts typically range from $5,000 to $10,000.
Required under Kansas law (K.S.A. 40-3103) for any vehicle used in business operations. Minimum liability limits: $25,000 bodily injury per person, $50,000 per accident, $25,000 property damage. Applies even if vehicle is personally titled but used for business.
Federal posters include the Minimum Wage, Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO), Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and OSHA Safety and Health Protection. Posters must be visible to employees. State-specific posters also required (see Kansas Department of Labor).
Cleaning services are not automatically exempt. Employers with 10+ employees must maintain OSHA logs. Form 300A must be posted from February 1 to April 30 each year. Records must be kept for 5 years.
Most cleaning services are not subject to Kansas sales tax as they are considered non-taxable services. However, if the business sells cleaning supplies or equipment, those sales may be taxable. Filing frequency is assigned by the Department of Revenue.
Most cities in Kansas require a general business license. Renewal deadlines and fees vary. Check with the city clerk or county administrator. Examples: Wichita Business License (https://www.wichita.gov/CityDepartments/Finance/Pages/BusinessLicense.aspx), Overland Park (https://www.opkansas.org/government/departments/finance/business-license).
Required under the EPA's Renovation, Repair, and Painting (RRP) Rule. Firms must be certified and use certified renovators. Certification must be renewed every 3 years. Does not apply to general cleaning unless paint is disturbed.
Not legally required unless selling products that could cause harm. Cleaning services that only use their own supplies without selling them are not subject to product liability mandates. However, coverage is recommended if selling retail cleaning products.
Not applicable to standard cleaning services. Only relevant if the business operates in a role involving alcohol service (e.g., event cleanup with alcohol service permits). Most cleaning businesses will not need this.
Required for all LLCs, especially if they have employees or file excise, employment, or alcohol/tobacco/firearms returns. Even single-member LLCs without employees may need an EIN to open a business bank account or if electing corporate taxation.
LLCs are pass-through entities by default. Single-member LLCs report income on Schedule C of Form 1040. Multi-member LLCs must file Form 1065 (informational) and issue Schedule K-1s. Members pay self-employment tax on net earnings via Schedule SE.
Applies to all employers with employees. Cleaning service businesses must provide hazard communication training (especially for chemical exposure), maintain Safety Data Sheets (SDS), and comply with bloodborne pathogens standard if handling biohazardous waste. Employers with 10 or fewer employees are exempt from routine inspection but still must comply.
Title III requires businesses open to the public to be accessible. While most cleaning services operate off-site, if clients visit an office or if marketing is online, website accessibility and physical access (if applicable) must comply. Title I applies if employing 15+ employees, requiring reasonable accommodations.
Employers must maintain a written Hazard Communication Program, provide Safety Data Sheets (SDS), label containers, and train employees on chemical hazards. Required under OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1200.
Frequency and requirements depend on local fire code. Applies primarily if the business operates out of a commercial office, storage facility, or has high employee traffic. Contact local fire marshal for schedule.
A single-member LLC taxed as a disregarded entity files on the owner's personal return (Schedule C). If the LLC has elected S-corp or partnership status, it must file Form 1120-S or 1065 annually by March 15.
Kansas does not impose a franchise tax or capital stock tax on LLCs. This is a common misconception. The only recurring state-level obligation is the Annual Report ($55).
General cleaning services are not subject to Kansas sales tax, but sales of tangible supplies (e.g., mops, chemicals, trash bags) may be taxable. Must register before collecting tax.
Cleaning services require several federal permits, including FTC compliance for advertising, and adherence to IRS tax obligations, with the IRS tax filing currently at $160400.00. You’ll also need to comply with the Corporate Transparency Act and maintain proper record retention.
No, the Small Business Administration (SBA) confirms that there is no industry-specific federal license required for cleaning services, but you still need to comply with other federal regulations.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) requires compliance with advertising and consumer protection rules, which includes truthful marketing and fair business practices; fees vary depending on the nature of any violations.
The Corporate Transparency Act requires most businesses to report beneficial ownership information to FinCEN, the U.S. Treasury; this reporting has no fee and is a one-time requirement.
As an LLC, you have Federal Income and Self-Employment Tax Filing obligations with the IRS, which currently has a one-time fee of $160400.00, and you may also have estimated tax payment requirements.
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