P5 — Compliance pillar
Free tool · P5 compliance

Kitchen cleaning checklist India

40+ cleaning tasks across cooking line, prep area, refrigeration, exhaust, floors, dry store, and pest control — organised as daily, weekly, and monthly schedules. Log cleaned-by, verified-by, and completion time for each task. Print with three sign-off columns. Aligned with FSSAI Schedule 4 hygiene requirements. No signup.

Overall completion0 / 44 tasks done (0%)
0/21 done (0%)
Cooking line0/5 done
DailyWipe down all cooking surfaces, burners, and knobs
DailyClean grease traps and grease filters
DailyDegrease and wipe flat-top griddle / tawa
DailyEmpty and clean fryer basket; top up oil if below level
DailyWipe oven interior and exterior
Prep area0/5 done
DailySanitise all chopping boards (colour-coded check)
DailyClean and sanitise prep tables and counter tops
DailyWash and store knives in knife block (not loose)
DailyClean and sanitise mixer / blender / food processor
DailyWipe shelves and speed racks
Refrigeration0/3 done
DailyCheck and log temperatures (chiller ≤4°C, freezer ≤-18°C)
DailyWipe interior shelves and door seals (chiller)
DailyRemove expired / unlabelled items; FIFO check
Dish wash0/3 done
DailyClean dish wash sink and drain (hot water + detergent)
DailySanitise dish wash machine / three-sink wash area
DailyRemove food waste, clean bin and surrounding area
Floors & drains0/3 done
DailySweep and mop kitchen floor (hot water + disinfectant)
DailyClean and flush floor drains
DailyMop dry — no wet floors left during service
Surfaces & handles0/2 done
DailySanitise all high-touch surfaces: door handles, light switches, taps
DailyWipe pass-through / service window

Why a kitchen cleaning checklist is not optional

FSSAI Schedule 4 (Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations, 2011) mandates that licensed food businesses maintain a hygienic environment in all food handling and preparation areas. During an FSSAI inspection, the enforcement officer will ask for your cleaning records — not just observe whether the kitchen looks clean at the moment of inspection. A written cleaning schedule with names, times, and sign-offs is documentation; a kitchen that “always gets cleaned” with nothing on paper is legally no different from a kitchen that does not.

Beyond compliance, the checklist serves an operational purpose: it catches problems before they become pest infestations, equipment failures, or food safety incidents. A grease trap that is cleaned daily will not catch fire. A walk-in chiller that is wiped weekly will not grow mould on the shelves. A drain that is flushed daily will not back up during peak service.

Daily cleaning: non-negotiable, every shift

Daily cleaning tasks must be completed every service day, not just when the kitchen “feels dirty.” The key areas are:

  • Cooking surfaces. Grease and food residue on burners, ranges, and flat tops are a fire hazard and a contamination risk. Wipe down every surface at the end of every service, not just weekly. Grease filters should be checked and cleaned daily — a clogged filter under an active exhaust can ignite.
  • Chopping boards. FSSAI requires colour-coded boards (red for raw meat, green for vegetables, yellow for cooked food, blue for fish, white for dairy) to prevent cross-contamination. Each board must be washed and sanitised after each use and again at shift end. A kitchen where all boards look the same colour is a cross-contamination incident waiting to happen.
  • Temperature logging. Chiller at ≤4°C and freezer at ≤-18°C. Log the reading at the start and end of each shift. A refrigerator running at 8°C for six hours before the chef notices is a food safety event.
  • Floors and drains. Kitchen floors accumulate grease and food debris that become slip hazards and pest attractants. Sweep and mop with a hot detergent solution after every service; flush drains to prevent buildup. No wet floors during service — a wet kitchen floor during service is a Workers' Compensation waiting to happen.

Monthly pest control: a legal requirement

FSSAI Schedule 4 requires licensed food businesses to implement an effective pest control programme. In practice, this means a pest control visit by a licensed Pest Management Professional (PMP) at least once a month, with a service report filed after each visit. This is not a suggestion — during an FSSAI inspection, pest control records going back six months are routinely requested. A business that cannot produce these records is at risk of a notice or suspension of licence.

Between professional visits, the monthly checklist includes inspecting entry points (gaps around pipes, broken door seals, holes in walls) and checking dry stores for signs of rodent or insect activity. Catching a pest problem between professional visits — and sealing the entry point immediately — is what keeps a monthly visit a “clean bill of health” rather than a remediation crisis.

Where this fits

  • Daily food safety / HACCP checklist — temperature logs, personal hygiene checks, cross-contamination controls, and receiving checks; the food safety twin of this cleaning checklist
  • Compliance calendar 2026 — FSSAI licence renewal, fire NOC, health trade licence, and other statutory deadlines for Indian restaurants
  • Shift handover report — kitchen status (cleaning completed, low stock, equipment issues) is a required section of the shift handover
  • Wastage tracker — items discarded due to spoilage (which cleaning and proper storage prevent) should be logged for food cost analysis
  • P5 — Compliance pillar — complete guide to FSSAI, labour law, fire safety, and tax compliance for Indian restaurants