Organising Hacks
Every hack is checked against a cited source · open the link to see where it comes from.
Declutter by category, not by room
Gather every item of one type from the whole house before deciding what to keep, so you see the true total.
- All clothes first
- Then books
- Then papers
- Sentimental last
Steps
- Pick one category and collect every item of it from every room into a single pile.
- Work the categories in order: clothes, then books, then papers, then komono (miscellany), then sentimental items.
- Hold each item and keep only the ones you want to keep; let the rest go.
- Finish one category completely before starting the next.
Source: KonMari (Marie Kondo)Why it works
Storing the same type of thing in several rooms hides how much you own; gathering it all reveals the real volume and stops you re-deciding room by room.
File-fold clothes so they stand up
Fold each garment into a small upright rectangle and stand them on edge so you see every piece at once.
- Stacked, hidden
- Upright, visible
Steps
- Fold each side of the garment toward the centre into a long strip, leaving a small gap at the edge.
- Fold the strip in half, then into halves or thirds until it forms a small rectangle that stands on its own.
- Stand the folded rectangles upright in the drawer, lined up like files instead of stacked.
- Arrange them so every item is visible from above when the drawer opens.
Source: KonMari (Marie Kondo)Why it works
Standing clothes vertically prevents wrinkles, saves space, and lets you see your whole drawer at a glance instead of disturbing a stack to reach the bottom.
Sort clutter with three boxes
Label three containers Keep, Donate/Sell, and Trash, then sort every item into exactly one of them.
- Keep
- Donate / sell
- Trash
- Move it out
Steps
- Set out and label three boxes or bags: Keep, Donate or Sell, and Trash.
- Work one area at a time and drop each item into exactly one box.
- Return Keep items to their proper home.
- Drop the Donate box off promptly and take the Trash out immediately so nothing creeps back.
Why it works
Forcing one quick decision per item keeps decluttering simple and manageable, which helps people who get overwhelmed finish a space.
Good to know: Decide each item only once; do not create a 'maybe' pile that you have to revisit.
Source: Homes & Gardens (organizer Julie Witherell)One in, one out
Every time a new item comes in, send one similar item out, so an already-tidy space stays tidy.
Steps
- First, declutter the space thoroughly so it starts organized.
- When you bring in a new item, immediately choose one comparable item to remove.
- Put the outgoing item straight into a donate or discard pile.
- Keep a labelled donation bag handy so removed items leave the house regularly.
Why it works
The rule is a maintenance habit, not a first declutter; it keeps totals flat so a space you already organized does not refill.
Good to know: Declutter first; one-in-one-out maintains order but will not do the initial heavy lifting on its own.
Source: Real Simple (organizer Lauren Saltman)Group like items by point of use
Create zones that group items by how they are used and place each zone where you actually use it.
- Cooking zone
- Prep zone
- Dish zone
- Cleaning zone
Steps
- Identify activity zones for the space (e.g. cooking, prep, cleaning, dishes).
- Gather like items together based on how they are used, not where they 'should' go.
- Place each group at its point of use - utensils by the stove, plates near the table or dishwasher.
- Put everything back to its zone after use to keep the system intact.
Source: An Organized SeasonWhy it works
Grouping items by purpose and locating them where the task happens makes things faster to find, easier to put away, and simpler to maintain.
Keep daily items at eye level
Reserve the easy-to-reach eye-level shelf for things you use most, and send rarely-used items high or low.
Steps
- Identify the items you reach for most often.
- Place those on the shelf between shoulder and knee height, where they are easiest to see and grab.
- Store heavy or bulky items low and seldom-used items up high.
- Keep the most-used spot clear so daily items stay accessible.
Source: Clemson Cooperative ExtensionWhy it works
Eye level is the easiest height to see and grab from - retailers price 'eye level' as prime shelf space for exactly that reason - so your daily-use items belong there.
Label your containers and shelves
Put a clear label on every bin, shelf, and container so everyone knows what goes where and items return home.
- Unlabelled guesswork
- Labelled, obvious
Steps
- After grouping items into containers, label each container with its contents.
- Also label the shelf or spot where the container belongs.
- Use picture-plus-word labels where children or many people share the space.
- Return each item to its labelled home after use.
Source: eXtension Alliance for Better Child CareWhy it works
Labels tell everyone where to find things and where to put them back, which speeds putting items away and keeps the system from drifting.
Build a launch pad by the door
Set up one spot near the door to corral keys, wallet, bag, and mail so leaving and arriving is friction-free.
- Pick a door spot
- Tray for keys
- Hook for bags
- Basket for mail
Steps
- Choose a single spot by the door you use most (entryway, mudroom, or hallway).
- Add a tray or bowl for keys and wallet and a hook for bags and coats.
- Drop everyday go-items there every time you come in.
- Let mail land in one basket, then recycle junk and route bills the same day.
Source: Homes & GardensWhy it works
A dedicated spot for the things you reach for constantly stops the morning hunt for keys and keeps surfaces clear.
The one-minute tidy
If a tidying task takes a minute or less, do it right now instead of letting it pile up.
- Spot it
- Under a minute?
- Do it now
Steps
- Notice the small task in front of you (a stray dish, a coat, a piece of paper).
- Ask: can I finish this in about a minute or less?
- If yes, do it immediately - hang the coat, load the dish, file the paper, toss the junk mail.
- Move on; never set the one-minute task aside for later.
Source: Gretchen RubinWhy it works
Most clutter is dozens of tiny deferred decisions; handling each one-minute task on the spot keeps the space calm.
The two-minute rule for incoming stuff
When processing new mail, papers, or tasks, anything you can finish in two minutes, finish on the spot.
- New input
- Two minutes?
- Finish it now
Steps
- When handling new input (in-tray, mail, a request), identify the very next action it needs.
- Estimate whether that action takes two minutes or less.
- If it does, do it immediately rather than filing it for later.
- If it takes longer, defer or schedule it instead of doing it now.
Why it works
It takes longer to stash a two-minute item and re-handle it later than to just finish it, so clearing it on first contact stops backlog from accumulating.
Good to know: Apply this while processing new input, not all day; do not let chains of two-minute tasks crowd out bigger priorities.
Source: Getting Things Done (David Allen)