Lifestyle and Decor

Successful strategies for decluttering

Private Property South Africa
Press |
Successful strategies for decluttering

Just about everyone knows that if you’re getting ready to sell your home and move, clutter is your worst enemy. “It not only makes your home look smaller, dirtier and less appealing to prospective buyers, but also makes packing a nightmare,” says Gerhard Kotzé, MD of the RealNet estate agency group.

“On the other hand, an uncluttered, tidy home is much more pleasant to live in even if one is not planning a move – and yet many of us continue to live in a mess because we just can’t seem to get started on a clear-out or figure out what to do with all our extra belongings.”

However, he says, there are some tried and tested strategies for getting past these obstacles:

  • Feeling overwhelmed. You may have so much clutter that you don’t know where to start. But you don’t have to clear your whole home in one day. Just commit to spending a couple of hours a day decluttering for the next few weeks or even a few months, and then pick one countertop or one cupboard or one room and get started. Your goal will become clearer (and your home tidier) with each small step that you take, and each small success will reinforce your motivation to keep going.

  • Not being organised. It’s no good just putting all your clutter in one big pile to be sorted out “later”. Rather sort as you go and be strict with yourself about sticking to three categories – items to keep, items to donate or sell, and items to throw away.

See more: Quick and easy ways to clutter your home

  • Being sentimental. We are often tempted to keep certain things because of their “sentimental” worth – which actually means the memories that are associated with them. However, there are lots of ways to preserve these memories without keeping the item itself – like taking a digital photo that you can archive and look at any time you like. Obviously you should hold on to valuable items that are real heirlooms, but most old toys, clothes, ornaments, books and kitchenware should not be in your “keep” box.

  • Being slow to move things out. Once you have a cupboard or a room done, you shouldn’t let the unwanted items sit around and create a different kind of clutter. Start selling things online or take the donate/sell pile to your favourite charity, second-hand shop or car boot sale, and make sure the rest goes to recycling or the dump. This is an important part of the overall decluttering exercise.

  • Not maintaining. Once you've cleared, tidied and cleaned your whole space, don’t let your guard down. We all tend to accumulate things and its imperative to keep decluttering every now and then – or you’ll just end up feeling overwhelmed again.

Read more: Marie Kondo's top tidying up tips

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