Confirmation statements in 2026: the 12 months + 14 days rule
Your confirmation statement is due 14 days after the end of your review period, which normally runs for 12 months from the day after your last statement’s “made up to” date. If your last statement was made up to 20 February 2025, your next review period ends 20 February 2026 and your due date is 6 March 2026. You can file early at any time; doing so starts a fresh 12‑month review period from the new “made up to” date.
Event‑driven filings you might hit in 2026
Several common changes have specific deadlines independent of your annual filings. Director appointments and terminations must be filed within 14 days. A change of registered office address should also be notified promptly (typically within 14 days). For Persons with Significant Control (PSC), the rule is two‑stage: update your own PSC register within 14 days of becoming aware of the change, then file the update at Companies House within a further 14 days.
Sanity Checks Before You Book
Before you lock it in, do a quick verification pass. Call or message with a short list of your priorities and see how clearly they respond—organized companies ask smart questions and confirm details in writing. Request a sample checklist for a standard and deep clean so you can mark must-do items. If reviews mention inconsistent quality, consider a trial clean before committing to recurring visits. For larger homes or special projects, a walkthrough (virtual or in-person) helps set time and scope realistically. Ask whether you should declutter surfaces or leave them as-is, and how they handle delicate items, art, and electronics. If you’re sensitive to chemicals, request product names up front. Confirm whether they photograph preexisting damage and how they handle accidental breakage. Plan access: lockbox codes, alarm instructions, pets secured, parking notes. If possible, be present for the first 15 minutes and the last 10 to align expectations and do a quick walkthrough. Finally, put it all in a simple note: rooms, priorities, don’ts, and any special techniques you prefer. Clarity is kindness—for both sides.
Wild cards in 2026: city rules, late-night surcharges, weather, and AI dispatch
Regional quirks matter more in 2026. Some cities cap the percentage delivery platforms can charge restaurants and require clearer fee breakdowns. Those rules can shift costs from one line item to another, so a lower delivery fee might be paired with a higher service fee. Late-night surcharges are more common on routes after midnight, when driver supply tightens and safety buffers increase. Weather can add a temporary uplift too; ice, storms, or heat advisories make routes slower and require more driver incentives. On the tech side, smarter dispatch systems try to stack orders and shorten deadhead miles, which can moderate fees during busy hours but might add a few minutes to your ETA. Expect fees to flex during sports events, concerts, or campus move-in weekends near a Waffle House. None of these factors are universal, but they explain why the same order swings a few dollars day to day. If you see a sudden bump, check local events, the clock, and the forecast; changing any one of those can tilt the total back down.
Presidential Stories in the Museums
Even without stepping foot in the White House, you can binge presidential history across the Smithsonian and beyond. The National Museum of American History has a strong “American Presidency” exhibition that traces campaigns, crises, and the expanding job description of the office. It’s juicy with artifacts and campaign ephemera, and it pairs well with the First Ladies collection, which opens a window into the social and stylistic side of the role. Over at the National Portrait Gallery, “America’s Presidents” is a greatest-hits tour in portrait form—seeing the faces in sequence tends to sharpen how you think about eras and leadership. For a neighborhood-level angle, duck into Decatur House on Lafayette Square when open; it’s tied to the White House Historical Association and gives you a feel for the social orbit around 1600 Pennsylvania. If you like quieter, residential history, the Woodrow Wilson House in Kalorama offers guided tours that explore diplomacy, domestic life, and a slice of early 20th-century D.C. Together, these stops layer policy, personality, and place.
Lincoln Up Close: Ford’s Theatre and the Cottage
Abraham Lincoln’s story is everywhere in Washington, but two sites bring it vividly alive. Ford’s Theatre combines a working stage with a museum that traces the final weeks of the Civil War, the assassination, and its aftermath. Ranger talks in the theatre are concise and moving, and the Petersen House across the street—the boarding house where Lincoln died—adds a human-scale coda. Book timed entry so you can flow through without rushing. Then carve out time for President Lincoln’s Cottage at the Soldiers’ Home, a short ride north of downtown. Lincoln spent summers there to escape the heat and to think; the house interprets his decision-making on emancipation and the war with a focus on process, not just results. Tours are intimate and reflective, and the surrounding grounds give you a feel for why he came. Do the theatre first, then the Cottage; the city’s memorials will hit differently once you’ve walked the rooms where choices were made. This pair is a masterclass in leadership under pressure.