The first time I tried to “get organized,” I dumped my entire bedroom closet onto the bed, sat down in the pile, and immediately wanted to cry. Everything was out, nothing was decided, and now I couldn’t even go to sleep until I dealt with it. If you’ve ever wondered what to declutter first when your whole house feels like too much, that closet-on-the-bed disaster is exactly why this post exists. There’s a right place to start, and it’s not the hardest room.
I’m not a professional organizer. I’m a recovering compulsive shopper with two kids, and for years I’d start decluttering in the most emotionally loaded, most cluttered spot in the house — the closet, the basement, the box of old photos — and quit within an hour, more discouraged than when I started. The fix wasn’t trying harder. It was starting smaller and smarter.
So here’s what I wish someone had told overwhelmed me: start where decisions are easy and the payoff is instant. Build proof that you can do this before you go near the hard stuff. Below is exactly where to begin, in order, when you don’t even know where to look.
The Rule: Start Where Decisions Are Easy
When you’re overwhelmed, your brain doesn’t have the energy for hard calls. Deciding whether to keep your grandmother’s teacups is a hard call. Deciding whether to keep an expired bottle of allergy medicine is not — the date already decided for you.
So the answer to what to declutter first is always: the zone with the most “garbage decisions” and the fewest “feelings decisions.” Trash, expired things, duplicates, broken stuff. The things you can let go of without negotiating with yourself. You want quick wins that build momentum, not a sentimental swamp that drowns you on day one.
Two things to set up before you touch anything:
- A timer for 15 minutes. When it dings, you’re allowed to stop. This is the single most important rule for overwhelmed people. The exit is built in.
- Three piles: keep, donate, trash. No “maybe” pile. The maybe pile is just a clutter pile wearing a disguise.
What to Declutter First: The 5 Easiest Starting Points
These are ranked from absolute-easiest to slightly-harder. Pick number one. Do it for 15 minutes. Then stop, or keep going if you’ve caught the bug — but you only owe yourself one.
1. The trash that’s already trash
Before you “declutter” anything, just walk through and throw away actual garbage. Dead pens, broken hair ties, takeout menus, the receipt graveyard. No decisions, no feelings, instant visual relief. The first time I did this I filled a full kitchen trash bag without donating a single thing, and the rooms already looked calmer. That’s the hit you want.
2. Expired stuff (the bathroom + medicine cabinet)
Expiration dates make every decision for you. Old sunscreen, dried-up mascara, the cough syrup from 2019. You’re not deciding if you “love” it — you’re reading a number. My bathroom cabinet took me 11 minutes and produced half a trash bag. Zero emotional labor.
3. The junk drawer
Everyone has one. It’s the gateway drug of decluttering — small, contained, and full of obvious nothing. Twist ties, dead batteries, mystery keys, a charger for a phone you no longer own. You can finish it in one timer and feel genuinely accomplished.
4. Duplicates in the kitchen
How many spatulas does one person need? How many travel mugs, when only two fit your cup holder? Duplicates are easy because you’re not losing a function — you already have another one. Keep the best, donate the rest.
5. The “everything” basket or surface
The catch-all spot where stuff goes to be dealt with “later.” Sorting it isn’t about tossing much — it’s about putting things back where they live. It’s a slightly harder one because it requires homes for things, which is why it’s last on the easy list.
Notice not one of these is a closet, a garage, a basement, or a box of photos. That’s on purpose. Those come after you’ve proven to yourself that you can do this — and a structured run-through like the 30 day declutter challenge walks you from the easy zones into the harder ones one day at a time, so you never face the photo box cold.
Free “Where to Start” Declutter Checklist
A one-page, ranked checklist of the easiest zones to tackle first — the exact order in this post, with checkboxes. Print it, start at the top, and let the easy wins carry you. No overwhelm, no perfectionism.
What to Skip First (So You Don’t Quit)
Just as important as where to start is where not to. These are the zones that make overwhelmed people quit, every time. Save them for week two or three, once you’ve got momentum.
| Don’t start here | Why it backfires | Do this instead |
|---|---|---|
| Sentimental boxes / old photos | Every item is a feelings-decision; you’ll stall in an hour | Start with actual trash |
| The bedroom closet | Too big, too many “I might wear it” calls | Start with the junk drawer |
| The garage or basement | Massive, physical, and not in your daily sightline | Start with a spot you see every day |
| Kids’ toys (with kids home) | They’ll rescue everything; you’ll triple your time | Do toys solo, later in the process |
| Paperwork | Decisions plus a need to file, which is two jobs | Start with one drawer, not the filing cabinet |
I broke the photo-box rule once. Sat down to “quickly sort” a bin of old pictures and resurfaced two hours later having organized nothing, just felt every feeling available to a human. Don’t do that to yourself on day one. The hard stuff deserves a calmer, stronger you.
Where Does All This Stuff Go?
The trash is easy — it goes in the bag. But the donate pile is where a lot of overwhelmed people get stuck, because they keep things “just in case someone could use it.” Here’s the reframe that finally let me release stuff: someone will use it, but only if I actually let it leave. The EPA’s reducing and reusing basics explains how donating keeps usable items in circulation and out of landfills, which honestly took the guilt out of letting go for me. Pick a destination before you start — a local shelter, Goodwill, a Buy Nothing group — and box things toward it.
And the rule that makes the donations real: get the box out of your house within 48 hours. A donation box that lives in your trunk for a month is just clutter that learned to drive.
What to Do When Even Starting Feels Impossible
Sometimes the problem isn’t where to start — it’s that you can’t make yourself start at all. The clutter feels like proof you’ve failed, and that shame is paralyzing. I’ve been there on the floor of that closet. Two things help.
- Shrink it until it’s stupid-small. Not “the kitchen.” Not even “the drawer.” Just “the silverware section of the drawer.” Five minutes. The job has to be small enough that the resistance can’t win.
- Separate the mess from your worth. A cluttered house is not a moral failing. It’s a backlog. Backlogs get cleared one tiny task at a time, and your value as a person was never in the question.
If your overwhelm is tied to a specific deadline — guests, a season, the holidays — it can actually help to have an external clock, which I lean into with my approach to decluttering before the holidays in 15 minutes a day. Sometimes a soft deadline is the nudge that gets you off the floor.
FAQ
What should I declutter first when I’m overwhelmed?
Start with the easiest decisions: actual trash, then expired items in the bathroom, then the junk drawer. These need almost no emotional energy — the date or the obvious uselessness makes the call for you. Avoid sentimental boxes, closets, and the garage until you’ve built momentum with quick, low-stakes wins.
How long should I declutter at a time when I feel overwhelmed?
Set a timer for 15 minutes and stop when it goes off. A built-in exit makes it far easier to start, and starting is the hardest part. If you catch momentum and want to keep going, great — but you only ever owe yourself those 15 minutes.
Should I declutter or organize first?
Declutter first, always. Organizing what you don’t need just means buying bins to store clutter neatly. Get rid of the excess — trash, expired things, duplicates — and then organize the smaller amount that’s left. You’ll need fewer containers and the system will be easier to maintain.
Just Pick the Junk Drawer
You don’t have to know what to do with your whole house tonight. You have to open one junk drawer, set a timer, and toss the dead pens. That’s the entire assignment. The closet, the garage, the photo box — they’ll all still be there next week, and you’ll be a more capable, less overwhelmed version of yourself when you get to them. Start where it’s easy. Let the easy wins carry you. I started this on the floor of a closet convinced I was hopeless, and I promise you’re not. Go grab a trash bag.