Do you look around your home and feel that familiar knot in your stomach? You know the one. Piles of stuff everywhere, no clear system, and absolutely no idea where to begin. If you’ve been putting it off because it feels too big or too hard — you are not alone.
Figuring out how to start decluttering is the hardest part for most people. It’s not a willpower problem. It’s not because you’re “not an organised person.” Clutter builds up gradually, and then suddenly it feels completely unmanageable. That’s especially true in a busy family home with kids, school bags, sports gear, and approximately one thousand water bottles.
The good news? You don’t need a whole weekend, a skip bin, or a miracle. You just need a starting point. Here are practical, realistic steps that work for overwhelmed Melbourne families ready to reclaim their space.
How to Start Decluttering Without Getting Overwhelmed
One of the biggest mistakes people make is trying to do everything at once. They pull everything out of every cupboard on a Saturday morning. By 3pm, they’re surrounded by even more stuff than before, wondering why they bothered.
Start small instead. Pick ONE zone — a kitchen bench, a bathroom cabinet, the entry table — and commit to clearing just that space. Set a timer for 20 minutes. Work quickly: keep, donate, or bin. The goal isn’t perfection; it’s momentum. One clear surface leads naturally to the motivation to tackle the next.
A simple rule that helps: if you haven’t used something in 12 months and it’s not sentimental, it can go. Donate it to your local op shop, pass it on to a friend, or recycle it where you can. Knowing how to start decluttering really does come down to this — begin smaller than you think you need to.
A Simple Sorting System for Starting Your Declutter
When you’re ready to move beyond one surface to a whole room, a sorting system makes a massive difference. You don’t need anything fancy. Three boxes or bags labelled Keep, Donate, and Bin will do the job beautifully.
As you sort, try not to overthink it. Don’t ask “do I love this?” — that question leads to an hour on the floor deliberating over a novelty mug from 2014. Ask instead: “Does this have a purpose in my home right now?” If the answer is no, it goes.
For families with kids, involve them in age-appropriate decisions. Older kids can sort their own belongings with a bit of guidance. It teaches them to choose what they keep and take responsibility for it — a genuinely useful life skill. When everyone understands the system, decluttering becomes a family effort — not just something Mum tackles on her day off.
Decluttering Your Home Room by Room
Once you have a sorting system, work through your home one room at a time. Finish each space completely before moving to the next. This stops the overwhelming feeling of multiple half-finished zones and gives you real, visible progress as you go.
A suggested order that works well for busy Australian families:
Entry and living areas first — these are the spaces you see every single day. Clearing them has an immediate visual impact that keeps you motivated to continue.
Kitchen and pantry second — high-traffic areas that accumulate clutter quickly. Expired food, duplicate utensils, and gadgets that haven’t seen the light of day since 2019 can all go.
Bedrooms and wardrobes third — more personal spaces that often hold the most emotionally charged items. Save these for when you’ve built confidence with the earlier rooms.
Storage areas last — the garage, linen cupboard, and any junk room. These feel enormous, but they’re actually easier to tackle once the rest of the house is sorted.
For each room, use the same Keep / Donate / Bin method. Give everything in the Keep pile a proper, permanent home — don’t just put it back where it was sitting.
How to Start Decluttering a Habit That Actually Sticks
Here’s something that often goes unsaid: decluttering is a process, not a one-time event. Even after a big clear-out, clutter will start to creep back in. The goal isn’t a perfectly minimalist home — especially not with kids. It’s a manageable baseline with simple systems your whole family can maintain day to day.
A few habits that make a real difference once you’ve done your initial sort:
- One in, one out: When something new comes into the house, something similar goes out. New toy? An old one gets donated. New jacket? An old one leaves the wardrobe.
- A daily 10-minute reset: A quick surface tidy at the end of each day keeps things from building up. It’s much easier to maintain than to tackle after a week of accumulation.
- A running donation box: Keep a box in your wardrobe or laundry for items you want to pass on. Add to it as you come across things, rather than waiting for the next big sort.
Knowing how to start decluttering is one thing. Building these small habits is what keeps your home calm and manageable long term. Start with just one and add the others when you’re ready.
Ready to Get Your Home Organised?
If you’d love a professional set of hands to help you declutter and organise your home, Eve and the Ducks in a Row team are here to help. We work with busy Melbourne families to create calm, functional spaces with simple systems that actually stick.