Skills
18 skills are associated with this occupation.
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Amusement park cleaners keep visitor areas, facilities and attractions clean while handling small repairs and urgent cleaning when the park is open.
The work often happens at night after closing, but it can also include daytime cleaning, visitor directions, safety observation and quick maintenance tasks.
In job descriptions, look for public-area cleaning, attraction facilities, outdoor cleaning, glass surfaces, chemical cleaning agents, minor repairs, emergency procedures and visitor contact.
Cleaning work moves between visitor spaces, attraction areas, service zones and closed-night rounds. The role combines routine cleaning with quick response to spills, litter, minor damage and visitor-facing issues.
Useful depth includes cleaning products, chemical handling, public-area cleaning, outdoor cleaning, glass surfaces, attraction facilities, minor repairs, park safety observation and emergency procedures.
Pay is best read through shift timing, park size, visitor intensity, cleaning zones, chemical or equipment handling, repair duties and whether the role includes guest contact during opening hours.
Experience can lead toward cleaning team coordination, facilities maintenance, attraction support, safety stewarding, night-shift supervision or broader venue operations work.
Check whether a vacancy is mainly overnight deep cleaning, daytime public-area response or mixed maintenance. A clear advert names zones, surfaces, equipment, visitor contact and repair expectations.
This guide gives editorial career context for the occupation. It is not official labour-market statistics or salary data.
18 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
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Other cleaning workers (9129)
| ESCO URI | http://data.europa.eu/esco/occupation/38eb308f-0075-451e-9c1a-c557fd173022 |
|---|---|
| ESCO code | 9129.4 |
| ISCO group | 9129 |
| Concept type | Occupation |