Marie Kondo method: 10 tidying tips to transform your home
Marie Kondo shares her decluttering tips to help you transform your home from unmanageable mess to ordered haven...
5 minute read
Weโve read ALL the guides to decluttering โ and you probably have too. If youโre like us, theyโre taking up space in the third drawer down โ that famous one where you put the things youโre going to deal with โsome dayโ.
Well, thatโs all over now. Here are ten radical but highly effective tidying and decluttering tips from organisational expert Marie Kondo, who argues that if you tidy your home properly now using this method, youโll never need to declutter again. Take a deep breath, lose your received wisdom about cleaning and tidying, and read on…
Marie Kondo method: 10 tidying and decluttering tips
1. Tidy everything all at onceย – and stop putting it off!
Ignore all the advice about tidying for 15 minutes at a time, or getting rid of one thing a day, or starting with the bedroom. According to Marie Kondo’s tidying method, you need to set aside some time and start tidying everything together. But do it as soon as possible.
2. Discard first, sort and tidy later
โDo not even think of putting your things away until you have finished the process of discarding,โ says Marie Kondo. โAs soon as you think, โI wonder if it will fit in this drawer,โ the work of discarding comes to a halt. You can think about where to put things when youโve finished getting rid of everything you donโt need.โ
3. Start with the easy stuffย when decluttering
Donโt begin by going through old photo albums or love letters. These are the hardest things to throw away. Marie Kondo explains that unless youโre a style maven and clothes are your ultimate passion, a top tidying tip is to need to begin the decluttering process with your wardrobe. Next, move on to books, then papers, miscellaneous items (e.g. kitchen equipment) and, lastly, items of sentimental value.
4. Find every item within a category before you start decluttering
If youโre sorting and tidying clothes first, find every bit of clothing in every part of your home. Marie Kondo says when sheโs working with clients she warns them that anything they donโt bring to her at this stage is going in the bin. Tell yourself the same thing, and youโll find anything thatโs of value. Anything else probably isnโt that important to you.
5. Throw away everything you don’t love
If you want to achieve true tidiness, you need to really think about the things you are throwing away. Donโt throw away randomly, instead try holding each item in your hand and think about its meaning to you. In her tidying method, Marie Kondo always says that if the item โbrings you joyโ, youโll feel it straight away. If it doesnโt, itโs time to let it go.
I found this approach particularly useful for the two non-essential sets of possessions I also happen to love โ clothes and books. As Kondo says, โPick them as if you were identifying items you loved from a display in your favourite shop.โ
6. Don’t forget to declutter your paperworkย
This part of Marie Kondo’s tidying method is tough, but ultimately fair. It’s time to throw away your elaborate filing systems. Kondo argues that all your paperwork should fit in one place, in two groups: papers to be saved, and papers to be dealt with. This means being absolutely ruthless about what you keep.
Gone are the electrical manuals. Think about how often you go back to use them โ never, right? If you really need to figure a part out, most information can be found online now. Ditto old bills, credit card statements and payslips.
The only thing you need to keep are contracts (employment, mortgage, lease, etc) and insurance policies. Avoid piles of papers โ store them in an upright holder to avoid the collection getting too big.
7. Let go with love when decluttering gifts and keepsakes
This decluttering tip is truly life-changing. You know that hideous vase you keep because Great Aunty Maureen gave it to you when you first moved out of home? Itโs OK to say goodbye.
In her tidying method, Marie Kondo recommends quietly thanking the person who gave it to you and the item itself for its time with you, and then putting it in the charity pile. Sounds nuts, but strangely enough it works to get rid of the guilt.
Dithering over old love letters? Ask yourself why youโre keeping them. Do they bring you joy? Or is there a reason youโre holding onto that part of your life? If you can honestly say you feel happier holding on to them, fine. Otherwise, let them go with love…
8. Don’t buy expensive or complicated storage equipment
Marie Kondo claims to have tried every kind of storage on the market in Japan and says ultimately the only thing that is truly useful when tidying and decluttering is a shoe box.
Our insatiable need for โbetter storageโ comes from having too much stuff in the first place โ and once stored away in your latest pretty box from IKEA, your things are forgotten about and youโve just added another box of stuff to your life.
Shoe boxes can be used in a drawer to store tights in neatly packed upright folds or, in a kitchen, used to store baking pans and trays upright instead of piled on top of each other.
9. Learn Marie Kondo’s file folding method so your clothes ‘stand up’
With the exception of heavy coats and trousers, delicate dresses and suits, most items of clothing do better folded than hung, and properly folded clothes take up far less space. With her tidying method, Marie Kondo claims that โdepending on the thickness you can fit from 20 to 40 pieces of folded clothing in the same amount of space required to hang 10โ.
Watch Kondoโs folding video below. To store your newly folded clothes, donโt press them down on top of each other in piles, says Kondo. Allow them to โbreatheโ โ and help yourself to locate them more easily and use things in more regular rotation by standing folded clothes upright at the height of the drawer theyโre in.
10. Treat your posessions like people
This part of Marie Kondo’s tidying method might take a bit of getting used to, but Kondo recommends an ongoing โdialogueโ with your things, which will allow you to sense more readily when it might be time to let them go. She says, โWe often hear about athletes who take loving care of their sports gear, treating them almost as if they were sacred…Our belongings work really hard for us.โ
Caring for your possessions is the best way to make sure they support you, their owner, for longer. (Turns out your granny was right about caring for your clothes after allโฆ)
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying: A Simple, Effective Way To Banish Clutter Forever (Vermilion, ยฃ10.99) and Marie Kondo’s new book Spark Joy: An Illustrated Guide to the Japanese Art of Tidying (Vermilion, ยฃ10.99) are both out now.
Read our review of Marie Kondo’s book, Spark Joy, here.