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Create CVIf you’re applying for a cleaner job, your education section should be simple, relevant, and easy to scan. Most hiring managers don’t expect advanced degrees—they want to quickly confirm your basic education and any job-related training. The key is knowing what to include, where to place it, and how to make it support your experience, even if you don’t have a degree.
This guide shows exactly how to format your cleaner resume education section, with real examples for high school graduates, no-degree candidates, and career switchers.
For cleaning roles, recruiters are not evaluating academic prestige—they’re checking for basic qualifications and job-relevant training.
Here’s what they look for:
Proof of high school completion or equivalent
Any certifications or training related to cleaning, safety, or hygiene
Clear, readable formatting
No unnecessary details or academic overload
Recruiter insight:
If your education section is too long or overly detailed, it actually works against you. Hiring managers skim resumes in seconds. Keep it clean and practical—just like the job itself.
At minimum, your education section should include:
School name
Diploma or qualification (e.g., High School Diploma or GED)
Graduation or completion date
Location (optional but helpful)
You can also include relevant training if applicable:
Workplace safety training
Infection control or sanitation courses
OSHA-related certifications
Use a clean, consistent structure that’s easy to scan.
Qualification
School Name, Location
Graduation Date
Qualification
School Name, Location
Graduation Date
Relevant Training (optional line below)
Cleaning equipment handling training
Good Example:
High School Diploma
Lincoln High School, Chicago, IL
Graduated: 2022
High School Diploma
Roosevelt High School, Dallas, TX
Graduated: 2021
Relevant Training: Workplace sanitation and safety procedures
The placement of your education section depends on your experience level.
Place education near the top, after your summary.
This helps show you meet basic requirements.
Place education after your work experience section.
Your experience matters more than your education at this stage.
New or entry-level → Education first
Experienced cleaners → Education last
This is one of the most common questions—and the answer is simple:
Put education first only if it’s your strongest asset.
You’re a recent graduate
You have no cleaning experience
You completed relevant training recently
You have hands-on cleaning experience
You’ve worked in similar roles before
Your work history is stronger than your education
Recruiter insight:
In cleaning roles, experience beats education almost every time. Only highlight education first if you have nothing else to show.
High School Diploma
Westfield High School, Houston, TX
Graduated: 2023
If you didn’t graduate, be honest but still include your education.
Good Example:
Central High School, Phoenix, AZ
Completed coursework through 11th grade
Avoid hiding this—employers value honesty more than perfection.
General Educational Development (GED)
State of California
Completed: 2021
High School Diploma
Jefferson High School, Miami, FL
Graduated: 2020
Relevant Training: Infection control and sanitation procedures
If you're moving into cleaning from another field:
High School Diploma
Northview High School, Atlanta, GA
Graduated: 2018
Additional Training: Workplace hygiene and safety certification (2024)
This shows you're actively preparing for the role.
Do not list multiple levels unless relevant.
No need for GPA, coursework, or academic achievements.
This is where you can stand out.
If the job mentions safety or sanitation, reflect that in your education or training.
Not having a degree is completely normal in cleaning jobs. The key is to focus on what you DO have.
High school attendance (even if incomplete)
GED if earned
Any informal or on-the-job training
Certifications or workshops
Eastside High School, Denver, CO
Completed coursework through 10th grade
On-the-job training: Commercial cleaning equipment and safety procedures
Recruiter insight:
Many employers care more about reliability and work ethic than formal education. Show that through training and experience.
Weak Example:
High School Diploma with coursework in math, science, English, and history
Why it fails:
This is unnecessary and wastes space.
Even if minimal, always include something.
If you didn’t graduate, don’t list unrelated college coursework unless it adds value.
Putting education first when you have strong experience reduces impact.
Messy formatting makes your resume look unprofessional.
Simple, clear formatting
Relevant training included
Honest representation
Correct placement based on experience
Overloaded academic details
Missing education section
Irrelevant information
Poor formatting
Add certifications if you have them
Use keywords like sanitation, hygiene, safety
Keep formatting consistent with the rest of your resume
Align with the job description
Recruiter insight:
Even a basic education section can make a strong impression if it’s clean, relevant, and aligned with the role.