Clearing a parent or grandparent's home is one of the harder things people end up doing. The sentimental weight makes every decision harder than it should be, and most families have never done it before. Add in a real estate timeline, an executor, or out-of-state siblings, and the logistics get complicated fast.
Here's how we think about estate cleanouts, based on what we've seen on these jobs.
Before you call anyone, do this
Walk the house once. Don't sort, don't decide, don't throw anything out. Just walk through every room and the basement and the garage and any sheds. Take photos with your phone of each space.
You're doing two things on this walk-through:
- Getting a rough sense of the scope (one truckload, multiple visits, a dumpster too)
- Noting any rooms or items that need special handling before the cleanout starts
When you come out of the walk-through, you'll have a much better sense of what you're dealing with. The job tends to be smaller or bigger than people expect, rarely in between.
Decide on a few categories before the crew arrives
Tell us up front which categories matter to the family. Common ones:
- Documents. Anything in a closed file, envelope, or banker's box. Tax records, wills, deeds, life insurance, birth certificates.
- Photos. Albums, loose photo boxes, framed pictures off the walls.
- Jewelry and small valuables. Often in dresser drawers, jewelry boxes, or odd places like the back of a sock drawer.
- Sentimental furniture. The chair Dad sat in, the table Mom inherited from her mother.
- Anything still in original packaging. Sometimes there's a stash of unopened gifts or items still in boxes.
Once we know the categories, we'll flag anything matching during the work rather than tossing it.
What usually doesn't matter
Letting some things go is part of the work. The instinct is to look at every item and decide. But for most households, the bulk is:
- Furniture nobody in the family wants
- Decades of accumulated household goods (cookware, linens, decorations)
- Old electronics, broken appliances, holiday decorations
- Magazines, books nobody plans to read, board games
- Clothes from decades back
If the family has had a chance to take what they want, the rest can usually move quickly.
The two formats most estate jobs run as
Single truckload visit. We show up, talk through what's going with whoever's on site, and load the truck. Works for smaller estates or properties that have already been partially cleared. Usually one day, sometimes two.
Truckload visit plus a dumpster. We handle the household contents in the first visit. We drop a dumpster after for whatever's left (renovation debris, items nobody could lift, things that surfaced after the first sweep). Customer or family clears the dumpster over a week. We come back to haul it.
For most full-house estates, the second pattern is the right one. Either way, call 603-634-9947 and we can walk through your specific situation.
If the family isn't local
A lot of estate work happens when nobody local is available to be at the house. A son in California handling his dad's place. An out-of-state executor who flies in once. A real estate agent running point because the family lives several states away.
We can quote off photos for most properties. Tell us up front who's handling the property and who needs to be looped in on photos, invoices, and access details. If there's a listing deadline, mention it on the call.
What to expect on cost
Pricing depends on volume, access (stairs, narrow doorways, second floors), and whether the job runs a truckload visit or adds a dumpster. We quote from photos or from an in-person look, depending on how big the estate is.
For full-house estates, expect the conversation to involve multiple visits and a flexible timeline. These jobs aren't priced like a single-item pickup. The family usually wants pacing, not speed.
One thing nobody tells you
The hard part isn't the work. It's the decisions. We move fast on the loading. The family deciding what stays and what goes moves slowly, and that's how it should be.
Give yourself permission to take an afternoon to go through one room before anyone touches it. Families who do this find the job runs smoother.
Call us when you're ready to talk it through. No timeline pressure on our end.
