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11 min read homemaking

A Cleaning Plan for Every Personality Type

You need a cleaning routine that works for you, not one you printed off the internet.

A Cleaning Plan for Every Personality Type

Have you ever tried keeping someone else’s home routines and failed?

There are lots of reasons that can happen, from a difference in situations (what works for a family of four will not work for a family of eight) to a difference in standards and priorities (some people care about dust and others are satisfied with clean bathrooms).

But one contributing factor to why plans that worked for your friend might not work for you – and vice versa – comes down to personality differences.

If you’ve tried a variety of plans – from custom to printable checklists to emailed assignments – and still haven’t found something that works, look to your personality type.

You might be trying to use a method and system that is incompatible with your personality type. 

Yup, it might not be the system. It might be you.

However, you’re not the one who needs to change! You just need to adjust the system to align with your personality and your priorities.

When you know your personality, you can more readily find what’s most likely to work for you, and you can also have more clarity and insight about how to customize your housecleaning routine to work for you.

If you don’t know your Myers-Briggs personality type, take the test here. If you’ve taken the test but aren’t sure the answer is right, read about how to find your personality here.

Here’s my take on what will work for each of the Myers-Briggs types. Of course many of the suggestions will fit multiple types, so don’t read only yours. All ’N’s will relate at least a little to the others; same for the ’S’ types. Js and Ps will see similarities and get ideas from the other types with the same end letter. The E/I distinction is much less important in such matters as the N/S and J/P.

Leave your comment at the end and share your type and what has worked for you!

ISTJ – responsible duty-fulfiller

An ISTJ mom has a strong desire to do the right thing and keep track of the details. She loves structured plans. Her strength is her reliability and consistency. Her weakness is her perfectionist tendencies. She cares more that she is fulfilling her duty than that everything looks just so.

Tips for ISTJs:

ESTJ – down-to-earth project-manager

An ESTJ mom is practical, realistic, and driven. She doesn’t like to get off course or off topic and she always has a goal she wants to achieve. Sometimes a clean house is her goal, sometimes it’s just a means, but it’s not likely something she will ignore. She will likely prefer to schedule her tasks – because she will keep her schedule.

Tips for ESTJs:

ISFJ – nurturing memory-maker

An ISFJ mom is supportive and nurturing, always seeing individual needs and doing her best to fulfill them. Because she prefers a supportive role but is good with details, an ISFJ is better at implementing someone else’s plan than creating one herself. She will prefer a clear-cut plan rather than a loose big-picture concept, but will be able to work a checklist better than most other types.

Tips for ISFJs:

ESFJ – dynamic social butterfly

An ESFJ mom loves to take advantage of teachable moments, relationship-building opportunities, and volunteer needs. An ESFJ will find it easier to start with an “official” checklist she has found, incorporating it into her own creative calendar or planner with her own flair. She will find ways to involve everyone in the housecleaning, not because it’s fair, but because she loves having everyone working together and dislikes working alone.

Tips for ESFJs:

ESTP – adventurous adapter

An ESTP mom is enthusiastic and loves experiences and projects. She thrives on situations that require risk, strategy, and competition. She will likely be so caught up in other goals and projects that she neglects mundane chores.

Tips for ESTPs:

ISTP – reflective diy

An ISTP mom is less authoritarian but also naturally flexible. She loves growing her skills and using technology. An ISTP will likely enjoy the challenge of creating and optimizing a housecleaning system, but she will struggle implementing that system.

Tips for ISTPs:

ESFP – fully present performer

An ESFP mom is friendly, outgoing, and attentive. She creates beautiful situations or experiences naturally and flawlessly. An ESFP’s housecleaning begins and ends with her aesthetic vision – once she visualizes how she wants the room to look, she will make it so. She will not require a rigid checklist, just reserved time and an end-goal.

Tips for ESFPs:

ISFP – generous helper

An ISFP mom is quiet yet responsive, enjoying a life with her family without being overbearing. If she has a cleaning list, will have a beautiful printable on her fridge. Far more likely than cleaning too little, she will tend to clean too much, gliding around the background, fixing everything that’s askew quietly and quickly. Her home is not likely to be out of hand, at least not for long; instead, she needs to consciously build in rest.

Tips for ISFPs:

INFJ – understanding supporter

An INFJ mom is committed to her vision of a harmonious lifestyle full of love and understanding. Although she’s easily overwhelmed with details, she craves structured routine. An INFJ needs to make sure her plans get out of her head onto paper, so she can think through what needs to be done with less overwhelming perfectionism. She loves being on a team, so she will enjoy email challenges and tasks, especially if she has friends doing them too.

Tips for INFJs:

ENFP – spontaneous idea-generator

An ENFP mom loves to say yes to fun – and often has a hard time with the mundane details of life at home. An ENFP needs a clearly written plan to help her stay on track, but it needs to be full of variety and allow room for adaption and flexibility. The surprise of a new email with an assignment will encourage motivation, so FlyLady or Clean Mama will appeal to her.

Tips for ENFPs:

INFP – tuned-in connector

An INFP mom is perceptive, understanding, and sensitive. A checklist list will not come naturally to her, but with practice, she can derive great benefit and direction from it. An INFP will avoid decision-making, being easily overwhelmed, so she will do best with an online community resource that makes the decisions for her and keeps the ideas behind the plan front-and-center, helping her stay on track and inspired.

Tips for INFPs:

ENFJ – enthusiastic mentor

An ENFJ mom needs to connect her tasks with big ideas. The more she can see how the mundane details support her vision, the better she’ll be able to follow the list. An ENFJ will need to make her cleaning list personal and flexible. It is difficult for her to find the balance between giving up on constantly maintained order and being fussy.

Tips for ENFJs:

INTJ – determined director

An INTJ mom will have her own (highly-researched, well-thought-out) way of doing whatever she sets her mind to. Planning, for her, is the easy and fun part; doing the plan each and every day is draining and difficult. An INTJ desires the most effective, complete, and efficient system, but resists tedious tasks, preferring delegation whenever possible. Much more aware of the state of her mind than her house, she will need to consciously step back and deliberately look at her home before she will have success there; however, the allure of success will help her make that leap.

Tips for INTJs:

ENTJ – decisive administrator

An ENTJ mom does not believe in impossible once she’s decided to do something. She makes things happen, always in line with her guiding principles. An ENTJ will have a streamlined, effective, thorough cleaning routine. She will involve everyone in the plan and ensure that the most work gets done in the least amount of time.

Tips for ENTJs:

ENTP – unconventional negotiator

An ENTP mom has confidence and energy to spare. She is good at seizing opportunities, but not good about following through on details. An ENTP needs a firm picture of her end-goal so that she can improvise in the day-to-day. She will work best from a set of weekly or monthly goals that are more big-picture than specific, small tasks. Tracking actual work toward those goals will help her stay on track while winging it in the moment.

Tips for ENTPs:

INTP – intellectual researcher

An INTP mom values her own knowledge base and is good at doing what she knows must be done rather than figuring out what needs to be done. Because she can see all the possibilities, it’s better for her to follow a premade, reasonable checklist that is clutter-free and straightforward. On the other hand, because she lives much more in the world of ideas than the physical world, she might just need someone else to take over the cleaning.

Tips for INTPs: