Salt film is the real job on Malua Bay glass
If you own a place near Malua Bay Beach or up around Pretty Point, you already know what the surf beach does to your windows. It isn't really dirt. It's a fine salt and sea-mist film that settles on the glass, dries in the sun and leaves that hazy, milky look that you can't wipe off with a quick spray and a cloth. The closer you're to the open beach, the faster it builds back up.
That film is why a Malua Bay window clean is different to a wash-and-go job inland. We aren't just shifting dust. We're cutting through baked-on salt that has bonded to the glass, then clearing it properly so the view back out to the water actually looks like a view again. For the houses that cop the full force of the southerly off the surf beach, that means a proper detail rather than a once-over.
Built around the changeover, not against it
Most of what we do in Malua Bay is holiday-let work. The homes around the beach and the bowlo are heavy on short-stay turnovers, and that changes how window cleaning has to run. A guest checks out at ten, the next lot arrive in the afternoon, and somewhere in that gap the glass needs doing along with everything else.
We build the window clean into that turnaround so it isn't a separate visit you have to book weeks out. If the place is a changeover, we hit the glass the guests actually notice first: the big sliders and lounge windows facing the water, the sea-mist film on the bedroom windows, the smudges and salty handprints around the door handles. Clean glass is one of the first things a guest sees when they walk in, and on the coast it's one of the first things that lets a tired place down.
Tracks and flyscreens are where the sand hides
In Malua Bay the sand never really stops. It comes off the beach, through the door, across the floor, and a fair bit of it ends up packed into your window and slider tracks. Salt sits in there with it. Left alone, that gritty paste stops your sliders running, chews out the rollers and leaves a line of muck a guest will spot the second they open the door to the deck.
So the track and frame work matters as much as the glass here. We clear the tracks out properly, wipe down the frames where salt has crusted on the aluminium, and pull and rinse the flyscreens. Beach-house flyscreens clog with salt and fine sand and go dull, which cuts the airflow and the light. A rinsed screen makes a surprising difference to how fresh a Malua Bay room feels, especially in the bedrooms that face the breeze off the bay.
Inside and out, because the salt hits both
Inland you can sometimes get away with doing the inside of the windows and leaving the outside. Not here. The outside glass is where the sea-mist film lands, and the inside picks up cooking, sandy fingerprints and the general wear of a busy holiday house. We do both faces so the glass is genuinely clear, not clean from one side and hazy from the other.
For the lower set we work off the ground. For anything two-storey, which a few of the homes up the slopes around Pretty Point are, we assess it on site before we start. Some of those upper windows we can reach safely and some we can't, and we'll tell you straight which is which rather than promise a result we can't deliver cleanly. No guessing, no half-done panes left up high catching the afternoon light.
Getting it guest-ready before peak season
A lot of Malua Bay owners book a deep clean before peak season to get the place guest-ready, and the windows are a big part of that reset. Over winter, when a holiday home sits quiet, the salt film keeps building even with nobody there. By the time the first summer booking lands, the glass can be properly dull without anyone having touched it.
If you're getting your place ready for the season, the windows are worth doing as part of that first deep clean rather than waiting for a guest to mention it. We'll get the salt off, clear the tracks, rinse the screens and leave the glass sharp so the first review of the summer is talking about the view, not the grime on it. After that, a clean between the busier changeovers usually keeps it looking right.
Local team, fast turnarounds, low-tox products
We're Capital Coastal Cleaning, a small Indigenous-owned local team based up the road in Batemans Bay. Tyson, Shanice and Lisa do the work ourselves, so the same people who know which Malua Bay homes cop the worst of the salt are the ones turning up. We know the area well and turn changeovers around fast between check-out and check-in, which matters when your glass is the last thing on a tight handover list.
We're police-checked, fully insured and open seven days, and we use low-tox products, which is worth knowing for a holiday let where guests and kids are straight out onto the floor and up against the glass. We hold a 5.0 rating from 110 Google reviews. If you want your Malua Bay windows sorted, whether it's a changeover, a pre-season deep clean or a permanent home near the beach, give us a call on 0479 184 498.
Other cleaning we do in Malua Bay
Ready for a free quote?
Tell us about the job and Tyson comes back, usually within the hour, 7 days a week.
Get a quote
Who you're dealing with
Tyson and the local team
Capital Coastal Cleaning is owner-run by Tyson, who started the business here in Batemans Bay in 2023. A small, police-checked local team, the same faces each visit, and our name on every job, from Durras to Moruya.
