If you want someone full-time there are a lot of websites where you can advertise jobs. I always use Aldaba.com and you get a really good response. If it's just a part-time cleaner you need, as suggested, better to ask friends or neighbours because you need someone who is honest, and someone who someone else knows.
Speak to the priest at the local church and ask if you can post a job available notice. The secret to success is spending the time to teach whoever you hire exactly how you want things done using which cleaning chemical for which jobs and how much of it to use.
You need to supervise frequently during the first few months to ensure that toilet rags don't end up wiping down counters or taps or toilet water isn't used on floors. If you want your person to do laundry, lock up the bleach. Teach them how to sanitize their rags at the end of the day using the microwave (if you have one). Just about anyone will profess to be a good cleaner, very few of them are and it's up to you to teach and constantly check the quality of their work. If you go about your business with no follow up, you'll get sub-par results - so it helps immensely if you can speak Spanish. Eg#1. One of my cleaning people thought vacuuming the stone deck around the pool was a good idea. Eg#2. Dump bucket of water on floor then use mop to put water back into bucket.
Speak to the priest at the local church and ask if you can post a job available notice. The secret to success is spending the time to teach whoever you hire exactly how you want things done using which cleaning chemical for which jobs and how much of it to use.
You need to supervise frequently during the first few months to ensure that toilet rags don't end up wiping down counters or taps or toilet water isn't used on floors. If you want your person to do laundry, lock up the bleach. Teach them how to sanitize their rags at the end of the day using the microwave (if you have one). Just about anyone will profess to be a good cleaner, very few of them are and it's up to you to teach and constantly check the quality of their work. If you go about your business with no follow up, you'll get sub-par results - so it helps immensely if you can speak Spanish. Eg#1. One of my cleaning people thought vacuuming the stone deck around the pool was a good idea. Eg#2. Dump bucket of water on floor then use mop to put water back into bucket.