A guide to decluttering your home as the year ends
By Josephine Agbonkhese
A decluttered home at year-end does more than look good in holiday photos. It lowers daily decision fatigue, reduces visual stress, and gives you a tangible sense of closure. You’re literally clearing out 2025’s baggage so 2026 has room to breathe.
You don’t need a perfect minimalist aesthetic. You just need less of what weighs you down and more of what lifts you up. Here’s our guide to that great end-of-year space purge.

- Start with a “Why”
Before you touch a single drawer, ask yourself why you’re doing this. The answer might be that you want to feel calm when you walk in the door, that you’re tired of cleaning around things you don’t use, or that you want to start the new year with less stuff and more clarity. Write your reason on a sticky note and stick it somewhere visible. When the process feels overwhelming, it’ll remind you why you started.
- Use the “One-Year Rule”
If you haven’t used, worn, or even thought about an item in the past 12 months, it’s a strong candidate for goodbye. Except for seasonal décor and formal attires you legitimately wear once a year, anything else you’ve not had a reason to use in the last one year is a strong candidate.
- Tackle One Zone at a Time
Trying to declutter the entire house in one weekend is a recipe for burnout. Instead, tackle one zone at a time. Today, the kitchen drawers; tomorrow, medicine cabinet; and day after, the pile of clothes by the door. Small wins build momentum faster.
- The Four-Box Method
Grab four bags and label them: Keep, Donate/Sell, Trash/Recycle, Relocate (for items that belong somewhere else in the house). As you touch each item, it must go into one of the four. No “maybe” pile allowed—that’s just procrastination in disguise.
- Make Disposal Immediate
Schedule a charity pickup (many organisations do pre-New Year charity wrap). List higher-value items on marketplaces such as Facebook Marketplace and Jiji. Put donation bags directly into your car trunk so they leave with you next time you’re out.
- Digitise Sentimental Items
Old letters, kids’ drawings, and concert tickets don’t need to take up shelf space. Snap photos, store them in a folder called “Memories 2025,” and let the originals go. You’ll still have the feeling without the dust.
- Finish with a Mini Reward
When you’ve cleared a room or hit your goal, do something that feels celebratory; light a candle in the newly calm space, pour a drink and enjoy how empty the space looks. You can even take a silly “after” photo.
















