Tag: Moving Home

  • Getting your home ready to downsize

    Getting your home ready to downsize

    So you’ve decided to downsize and you are putting your home on the market.  So, what should you do to get it ready?

    •  Take advice from the estate agent you are using, but note they will all have different opinions on this!
    • If your home is likely to need a lot of work by your buyer to modernise it, feel free to ignore most of the rest of this advice, as it won’t make much difference to the outcome.
    • Tidy the front garden and make sure any issues with the front of the house (peeling paint, dirty or cracked pathway, weeds, etc) are sorted.  You can add some vibrant pots of plants.
    • If you live in a flat, do what you can to keep the communal areas clean and tidy.
    • Create the feeling of space in the rooms by removing clutter into cupboards or taking it away from the home.
    • If you are tempted to remove furniture, only do this if you are re-purposing the room  for prospective buyers.  And it is always good to have a double bed in bedrooms where possible to show how the room can be used.

     If you need help with choosing an estate agent or de-cluttering either before you go on the market or before the move, we would love to help.

  • When should you downsize?

    When should you downsize?

    There is never a good time to downsize.  Many of our clients wish they’d done it much sooner, but acknowledge they probably thought they were invincible 10 years earlier.   So when you do it is up to you.  But the younger you are the more energy you’ll have to do it.  As specialists in downsizing parents and grandparents we can help and assist with small and large tasks, or project manage the whole thing. 

    Things to consider are:

    • Finances – freeing up money to top up pension or pay for care
    • Energy bills and excess rooms  – don’t pay to heat a home that you don’t fully use  
    • Household maintenance including gardening – both financially and physically this can become a drain
    • Health needs – these might need to be paid for or a move might simply help accommodate a health problem
    • Being nearer family for support (both ways) and companionship

    You can read more on our previous blog.  

  • Continuing the decluttering

    Continuing the decluttering

    How are you getting on?

    Were the last three tips useful?  Here are a few more to keep you on the straight and narrow!

    1. Declutter first, organise afterwards (you can’t organise until you know what you have).
    2. Do ‘stuff’ first, and paperwork later as it is a totally different category.
    3. Keeping items ‘just in case’ is all very well, but if it takes up room in your home or garage and you have too much stuff, it is not serving you and you should get rid of it.

    For these and other declutter tips, head over to our website where you can download our free guide, 30 Days to a Clutter-Free Home https://www.onestoporganisers.co.uk/page/downloads/ 

    You can leave a donation to Royal Trinity Hospice if you can afford to do so and find it useful. 

  • January decluttering

    January decluttering

    It is traditional in January to take stock of our lives and make changes, hopefully for the better.  One of these changes is often to ‘get organised’, and decluttering is very much part of that.  Here are just a few of our tips to help you with this:

    1. Gather like with like so you can see what you have (scissors, batteries, paracetamol are good examples of things that exist in different places around your home).
    2. Set aside small chunks of time as you will achieve more.
    3. Take items to the charity shop after each session.

    For these and other declutter tips, head over to our downloads page where you can download our free guide, 30 Days to a Clutter-Free Home.  And you can leave a donation to Royal Trinity Hospice if you can afford to do so.