Decluttering goes beyond cleaning up. It’s a way to bring structure and peace to your everyday life. This fall, take control of your environment with easy steps to organize both your physical documents and digital files, reclaim your space, and boost your mental well-being. Here’s how.
What’s Decluttering?
There’s a good chance you have piles of papers you don’t need anymore and probably even don’t remember where they came from. These useless papers occupy place and waste your time when you need to find one specific file buried among the rest.
To fix this, you need to declutter your space, and this fall is a perfect time to start. However, decluttering isn’t just about throwing things away to make your place look cleaner, whether it’s an office, home, garage, or closet. It’s about creating a system that helps you keep everything in order and always find what you need, when you need it.
Plus, your mental health will also benefit from it. A 2017 study found that people who procrastinate a lot often have messy, cluttered environments. The thing is that the clutter can make them feel overwhelmed and negatively impact their emotions, social life, and overall well-being. Such a space leads to feeling overwhelmed, and that clutter negatively affects their emotions, social life, and overall well-being. Another research even found that a cluttered kitchen can change our eating habits.
So, decluttering has some undeniable advantages. And here’s one more, especially with winter approaching: bring the papers you don’t need anymore to your country house. When it’s time to light a fire and enjoy a cozy evening by the fireplace, you’ll be glad you kept them for the right reason.
How to Declutter Your SpaceStep 1. Review What You Have
First and foremost, go through your papers to figure out what’s worth keeping and what can go. It goes without saying that it’s always best to keep original, important documents such as birth certificates, marriage records, graduation certificates, diplomas, medical records, and similar documents.
Some papers should be kept for as long as they’re valid. These are contracts, certain receipts, warranties, loan documents, acquisition agreements, and so on. By the way, tax records are recommended to be kept for up to seven years after filing your return. However, the IRS doesn’t require you to keep hard copies. Storing them digitally is perfectly acceptable.
Step 2. Scan and Throw Away
Believe us, you won’t need that handout from your German class five years ago. It should go to a trash bin (or by your fireplace) without hesitation. The same goes for old receipts, cinema and theater tickets (unless it was something very meaningful, like a first date), promo flyers, expired insurance, catalogues, old job materials, and any other irrelevant documents.
However, if there’s some important information you’d like to keep, simply scan it. A digital copy, for instance, of an old business card will be more than enough.
Step 3. Organize Your Digital Files
Decluttering means nothing if you create digital chaos instead of paper clutter.
Check your Downloads folder, and chances are, you’ll be very surprised. It’s often filled with random images, videos, and text files with strange or duplicated names. A huge number of archives you don’t even remember downloading, especially those from emails, which are often compressed into .zip format. Most devices have built-in features to open ZIP files, but there are some exceptions. Anyway, no matter what device or platform you use, there’s a universal solution that works for all: unzipping PDF files with a free online tool.
The Downloads folder is just an example. Review all your files and folders, one by one, deleting anything you don’t need and organizing the rest. Here are a few basic tips:
– Create a clear folder structure. You can arrange files by date, format, topic, or create your own system. It’s worth spending some time to create a folder template to keep things consistent.
– Name your files properly so you can easily find them using keywords.
– Keep one file for one type of information. For instance, if you’ve scanned your passport, ID card, insurance, and flight tickets all into one file, you might forget what’s actually inside something called “my_passport_scan.” If you already have files like this, consider learning how to split your PDF files using a free online tool.
Step 4. Maintain and Update Your System
A system only becomes effective when it’s tested and proven to work. After you’ve decluttered and organized, spend a couple of minutes each week (on Friday evening or Monday morning) to review your papers and digital files. Regularly delete or archive what you no longer need, and file new documents right away so they don’t pile up again.
Also, remember that your system doesn’t have to stay fixed. If something isn’t performing at its best, feel free to make adjustments and improve it.






