How to Declutter Your Home Room by Room
Slug: declutter-home-room-by-roomPillar: Practical Living > OrganizationKeyword: how to declutter your home room by roomExcerpt: Learn how to declutter your home room by room with this practical guide — simple steps, no overwhelm, real results.
Why Room-by-Room Decluttering Works
Trying to declutter your entire home in one go almost always fails. You run out of energy, make fewer decisions, and end up moving clutter from one room to another. Breaking the process into rooms gives you clear wins, natural stopping points, and a sense of real progress.
The room-by-room method is endorsed by professional organisers worldwide precisely because it prevents decision fatigue. When you finish a room, you see the result immediately — and that feeling of accomplishment drives you forward.
Before You Start: Three Rules to Follow
First, work with a timer. Set 20–45 minutes per session. Shorter sessions prevent overwhelm and make it easier to start again tomorrow. Second, use three boxes: Keep, Donate/Sell, and Bin. Everything you touch must go into one of these — no "maybe" pile. Third, do not buy storage solutions yet. Buying more boxes or organisers before decluttering just gives clutter somewhere to hide.
Room 1: Start With the Bathroom
The bathroom is the easiest room to start with because decisions are simple. Expired products go in the bin. Duplicates get consolidated. Products you have not used in six months leave.
Pull everything out from under the sink, out of the cabinet, off every shelf. Wipe down surfaces. Then only return what you genuinely use. If you have three half-empty moisturisers, decant them into one bottle and bin the rest.
Room 2: Tackle the Kitchen
Kitchens accumulate gadgets that seemed essential on purchase day and have sat unused ever since. Start with one drawer or one cupboard at a time. Ask two questions for every item: Did I use this in the last three months? Do I own another item that does the same job?
Expired food, duplicate utensils, broken appliances, and novelty gadgets are the four biggest sources of kitchen clutter. Clear these first, then move to crockery and glassware — keep only what you actually entertain with.
Room 3: The Bedroom
The bedroom tends to collect clothes, cables, and miscellaneous items that "don't have a home yet." Work through the wardrobe using the standard rule: if you have not worn it in twelve months, donate it. Be honest about sizes you are "keeping for when" — if it does not fit now, it is taking up space you need now.
Bedside tables are clutter hotspots. Keep only: a book or Kindle, a glass of water, and one charger. Move everything else to a more appropriate home.
Room 4: The Living Room
Start by removing anything that does not belong in a living room — dishes, unopened post, bags, children's toys, shoes. Give each of these a proper home elsewhere. Then tackle the media area: old DVDs, cables for devices you no longer own, and outdated instruction manuals all go.
Bookshelves tend to fill with books bought optimistically, read once, or never started. Keep the ones you return to. Donate the rest — a local library, charity shop, or community bookshelf will make good use of them.
Room 5: The Home Office or Spare Room
Spare rooms often become whole-home dumping grounds. Give yourself extra time here. Start by sorting everything into broad categories: paperwork, electronics, hobby items, clothes overflow. Then work through each category with the three-box system.
For paperwork specifically: keep only current-year financial documents, essential contracts, and recent medical records. Everything older (with exceptions for property deeds and tax records) can be scanned and shredded.
Maintaining a Clutter-Free Home
The one-in-one-out rule is the simplest maintenance habit: every time something new enters the home, something old leaves. Apply it immediately, at the point of purchase. Additionally, a five-minute tidy before bed prevents clutter from re-accumulating.
Schedule a short declutter session once per season — 30 minutes per room is enough to catch drift before it becomes overwhelming again.
FAQ
How long does it take to declutter a whole home?
Realistically, a thorough whole-home declutter takes between two and six weeks if you work in daily sessions of 30–45 minutes. Rushing it leads to poor decisions. Pacing it leads to lasting results.
What do I do with sentimental items I cannot bring myself to bin?
Create a dedicated "memory box" — one per household member, limited to a single box each. Photograph items you want to remember but do not need to keep physically. Display one or two meaningful pieces and store the rest out of the way.
Should I declutter before or after cleaning?
Always declutter first. Cleaning around clutter is inefficient, and decluttering reveals surfaces you did not know you had. Clean after decluttering and the difference will feel dramatic.
What is the fastest room to declutter?
The bathroom is almost always the quickest — most decisions are clear-cut. It is also a good starting point because the immediate visible improvement is motivating.
Do I need to do it all in one weekend?
No. One-weekend challenges work for some people, but most find a slower, consistent approach produces better and more lasting results. A room per week is a completely reasonable pace. For more practical living guides, visit our Practical Living section at Eight2Infinity.










