Decluttering has a PR problem. Somewhere between the Marie Kondo documentaries and the extreme minimalism TikToks, “decluttering” started to feel like something you had to do intensely or not at all — like you had to pull everything out of every closet on a Saturday and cry over your old high school yearbook before you’re allowed to donate anything.

We’re proposing something different. Thirty days. One small area per day. No drama, no full-weekend commitment, no existential spiral. Just a little bit every day — and by the end of the month, your space will feel genuinely different.

The Ground Rules (There Are Only Two)

Rule 1: Do each day’s task, even if you can only spend 10 minutes on it. Ten minutes is enough. Done is better than perfect, always.

Rule 2: Anything that leaves your home actually has to leave. Don’t let a donate bag sit in the hallway for three weeks. The moment it’s full, it goes to the car. When you’re driving past the charity shop — in it goes. The item needs to physically leave your space to count.

Week One: The Easy Wins

Start with the stuff that’s genuinely easy to let go of — the things you’ve already mentally checked out on. This builds momentum without requiring any hard decisions yet.

  • Day 1: Expired food in the pantry and fridge
  • Day 2: Duplicate kitchen tools (how many spatulas do you actually need?)
  • Day 3: Mugs and cups you never use
  • Day 4: Old magazines, newspapers, and catalogs
  • Day 5: Pens, markers, and highlighters that don’t work — test every single one
  • Day 6: Bags and totes you never reach for
  • Day 7: Charging cables for devices you no longer own. They’re in there. We know.

Week Two: The Bathroom and Bedroom

  • Day 8: Expired makeup and skincare — check those dates
  • Day 9: Products you tried, didn’t like, and kept “just in case”
  • Day 10: Hair tools and accessories you haven’t used in a year
  • Day 11: Socks and underwear with holes, stretched elastic, or mystery origin
  • Day 12: Clothes that don’t fit — not “might fit someday,” don’t fit right now
  • Day 13: Shoes. Be honest with yourself. You know which ones you haven’t worn.
  • Day 14: Old towels and linens taking up shelf space

Week Three: The Living Spaces

  • Day 15: Books you’ve read and won’t reread — keep your favorites, let the rest go
  • Day 16: DVDs, CDs, or media you’ve already gone digital on
  • Day 17: Decorative items that are just collecting dust and you don’t actually love
  • Day 18: Candles that are nearly finished and taking up space
  • Day 19: Board games with missing pieces (they’re not coming back)
  • Day 20: The junk drawer — one full junk drawer, sorted and edited
  • Day 21: Anything in the living room that actually belongs in a different room

Week Four: The Overlooked Spots

  • Day 22: The “catch-all” chair or surface. You know the one.
  • Day 23: Office supplies and stationery you haven’t touched in months
  • Day 24: Kids’ toys that are broken, outgrown, or never played with
  • Day 25: The garage, storage unit, or that one closet where things go to disappear
  • Day 26: Your digital space — phone photos, unused apps, desktop files
  • Day 27: Gift wrap, ribbons, and gift bags that are crushed or faded
  • Day 28: Old greeting cards — keep the truly meaningful ones, let the rest go
  • Day 29: The medicine cabinet — expired meds, mystery ointments, all of it
  • Day 30: Walk through every room with fresh eyes. Notice how it feels. Donate anything else that doesn’t belong.

What Happens at Day 30

Your space will feel lighter. Not dramatically emptied — but noticeably, tangibly different. The kind of different that makes you want to open your closet in the morning. The kind that makes your home feel more like a place to rest in and less like a place to manage.

That feeling? Worth every spatula decision. Let’s go. 📦