If you've ever stood in your living room, looked around at the pile of things you've been meaning to sort through, and felt a wave of exhaustion wash over you — you're not alone. Research by [The Australia Institute](https://australiainstitute.org.au/) found that **40% of Australians feel anxious, guilty, or depressed about the clutter in their home**. The connection between your physical space and your mental health is real, measurable, and more significant than most people realise.
**Quick Answer:** Decluttering your home can genuinely improve your mental health and happiness. Research from UCLA and Princeton shows that clutter raises cortisol (the stress hormone) and reduces your brain's ability to focus. Even small decluttering sessions — one drawer, one shelf — can create a noticeable sense of calm and control.
Why Clutter Takes a Toll on Your Mental Health
The link between clutter and stress isn't just anecdotal. Neuroscientists at the [Princeton Neuroscience Institute](https://www.jneurosci.org/content/31/2/587) found that multiple visual stimuli in your environment compete for your brain's attention, reducing your ability to focus and process information. In practical terms, a cluttered room forces your brain to work harder — even when you're trying to relax.
The impact goes deeper than focus. A landmark study by [Dr. Darby Saxbe and Dr. Rena Repetti at UCLA](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0146167209352864) tracked 60 dual-income spouses and found that women who described their homes using words like "messy," "chaotic," and "not fun" had flatter cortisol slopes — a stress hormone pattern linked to poorer health outcomes. Women who described their homes as "restful" showed healthier cortisol patterns throughout the day.
The same UCLA study revealed a striking detail: **75% of the families studied had garages so full of possessions they could no longer park their cars inside.**
It's worth understanding that clutter doesn't just affect mood — it affects the way your brain functions day to day. The [Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP)](https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/clinical/what-does-clutter-do-to-your-brain-and-body) reports that disorganisation impairs both cognitive function and emotional regulation, creating a cycle where the mess makes it harder to find the energy to deal with it.
**⚠️ Mental health note:** If clutter-related stress feels unmanageable, or if you're struggling with compulsive acquisition or difficulty discarding items, consider speaking with a mental health professional. Decluttering can support wellbeing, but it's not a substitute for professional care.
How Clutter Builds Up (and Why We Hold On)
Clutter doesn't appear overnight. It accumulates gradually, and understanding why helps you tackle it more effectively.
Most household clutter falls into four categories:
**Just-in-case clutter** — Items you keep "in case" you need them one day, even though you haven't touched them in months or years. An old phone charger, a spare set of curtains, that exercise bike gathering dust in the corner.
**Sentimental clutter** — Things tied to memories and emotions. Children's artwork, gifts from loved ones, souvenirs from holidays past. These are the hardest to part with because discarding them can feel like discarding the memory itself.
**Bargain clutter** — The Bunnings clearance find, the Kmart sale item, the freebie from a friend. They cost next to nothing — or were free — which makes them oddly difficult to let go of.
**Expensive clutter** — Items you spent good money on and can't bear to part with, even though they no longer serve a purpose. [Research by Joseph Ferrari, PhD at DePaul University](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12144-018-9803-0) found that chronic procrastination and clutter are deeply linked — the longer we delay decisions about our possessions, the more they pile up.
You might have tried the KonMari method or buying more storage containers from Kmart. But organising clutter isn't the same as decluttering. Bins and baskets just give your clutter a nicer home.
Nine Benefits of a Declutter-Free Home
The benefits of clearing out what you don't need extend well beyond a tidier house.
1. Lower stress and anxiety
Removing visual clutter gives your brain fewer stimuli to process. A calmer physical environment leads to a calmer mental state — it's why walking into a tidy room can feel like taking a deep breath.
2. Clearer thinking
A chaotic environment reflects a cluttered mind. As you clear your surroundings, many people notice their thinking becomes sharper and more focused.
3. Easier relaxation
The less clutter competing for your attention, the easier it is to switch off and unwind after a long day. Your [bedroom should feel like a retreat](/cleaning-101/bedroom-living/10-tips-to-make-your-bedroom-10x-more-appealing), not a storage unit.
4. More time for what matters
Research from the National Soap and Detergent Association suggests that **decluttering could eliminate up to 40% of housework** in an average home. Less stuff means less to clean, organise, and search through.
5. Stronger relationships
A cluttered home can lead to embarrassment, guilt, and social withdrawal — what some call **"Can't Have Anyone Over Syndrome."** Clearing the clutter can help you feel comfortable inviting friends and family around again.
6. Better physical health
Unused items collect dust. According to research [published by the American Chemical Society](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5269654/), household dust can contain pollen, skin cells, decomposing insects, food debris, and even legacy pollutants like DDT. Fewer items means less dust and healthier air — especially important if anyone in your household has asthma or allergies.
7. Increased productivity
A disorganised workspace competes for your attention and disrupts your thought process. Clearing your desk and work area can noticeably improve your focus and output.
8. Higher property value
If you're thinking of selling, decluttering makes your home look more spacious and appealing to potential buyers. It's one of the simplest ways to boost first impressions.
9. Greater creativity
A clutter-free space frees you from distractions and mental fatigue, giving your mind room to wander, brainstorm, and create. Sometimes the best ideas come when there's nothing in the way.
How to Declutter Your Home Room by Room
Tackling your entire home at once is overwhelming. Instead, work through one room at a time — the sense of accomplishment builds momentum.
Living room
The shared space where everyone wants to relax. Start here for the biggest mood boost.
Use storage baskets or containers for kids' toys and games
Recycle old magazines and newspapers
Clear out DVDs, CDs, and media you no longer use
Remove anything that doesn't belong in this room
Bedroom
Your bedroom should feel like a retreat. After a long day, you deserve to walk into a space that feels calm and inviting.
Keep only seasonal clothing in your wardrobe; store the rest
Donate or sell anything unworn, torn, or no longer loved
Replace old pillows and [check your mattress condition](/cleaning-101/bedroom-living/why-its-important-to-have-your-mattress-cleaned)
Clear your bedside table down to the essentials
Kitchen
If you cook regularly, kitchen drawers and cabinets tend to overflow. A decluttered kitchen saves you time every single day.
Clear out each cabinet one at a time
Discard chipped crockery and pans with broken handles
Check expiry dates in the fridge and pantry — be ruthless
Remove out-of-place items (that junk drawer can wait)
Bathroom
Bathrooms harbour more clutter than you'd expect — expired toiletries, unused products, and worn-out towels.
Toss products you don't use or don't like
Move frequently used items (toothbrush, toothpaste) to easy-reach spots
Use clear containers or jars to sort smaller items
Discard expired medicines and toiletries responsibly
Practical Decluttering Methods That Actually Work
The three-box method
This approach forces you to make a decision about every single item. Gather three boxes and label them:
**Box 1: Keep** — Items that earn their place. Once full, put everything in its proper home.
**Box 2: Let go** — Items to donate, sell, or recycle. St Vincent de Paul and the Salvos are great options for items in good condition.
**Box 3: Store** — Items you don't need daily but want to keep. Label each box clearly and store neatly.
Work through one room at a time. The key is making a decision for every item — no "maybe" pile allowed.
The three-year rule
If you haven't used something in three years, it's time to let it go. This applies to everything — tools, kitchen gadgets, clothing, toys. If it hasn't been touched in three years, chances are it won't be missed.
How to Keep Your Home Clutter-Free
Decluttering feels wonderful. But without a maintenance plan, clutter creeps back. Here are four strategies to keep it at bay:
**One in, one out** — Every time something new comes home, something else leaves. No exceptions.
**Ask four questions before buying** — "Do we have room?", "Where will it live?", "Do I actually need this?", "Can I do without it?" Building this habit stops clutter at the front door.
**Make it easy to put things away** — If returning an item to its spot is inconvenient, it'll end up somewhere else. Easy storage setups (open baskets, accessible bins) keep [good habits flowing for the whole family](/cleaning-101/family-pets/easy-effective-and-everlasting-cleaning-habits-for-the-whole-family).
**Schedule a regular declutter sweep** — Set aside 20 minutes daily, or plan a weekly or [fortnightly evening routine](/cleaning-101/uncategorized/a-quick-nightly-cleaning-routine-for-a-better-tomorrow). Small, consistent effort prevents hours of catch-up cleaning later.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why does clutter make me feel so anxious?
Clutter overloads your visual cortex, forcing your brain to process more information than necessary. Research from Princeton University shows this constant competition for attention raises stress levels and reduces your ability to focus. Your brain essentially interprets a cluttered room as unfinished business — and that creates a low-level hum of anxiety.
Q: How do I start decluttering when I feel completely overwhelmed?
Start with one small space — a single drawer, a bathroom cabinet, or your bedside table. The goal isn't to transform your entire home in a day. Even 10 minutes of focused decluttering can create a noticeable sense of progress and calm. Once you see one clear surface, the motivation to keep going tends to build naturally.
Q: Does decluttering actually help with depression?
Research supports a real link between tidier environments and improved mood. The UCLA cortisol study found measurable differences in stress hormones based on how people perceived their homes. However, decluttering is complementary to professional mental health support, not a replacement. If you're experiencing persistent low mood, speaking with your GP is always a good first step.
Q: What should I do with things I declutter?
Donate usable items to charities like St Vincent de Paul or the Salvation Army. Sell quality items through Facebook Marketplace or Gumtree. Recycle what you can through your local council's recycling programs. The goal is to find your items a new purpose rather than sending everything to landfill.
Q: Why is it so hard to throw things away?
Your brain registers loss roughly twice as intensely as gain — a principle known as **loss aversion**. Combined with sentimental attachment and the sunk cost fallacy ("but I paid good money for that"), parting with possessions can feel genuinely painful. Recognising this bias is the first step to working through it.
Related Reading
[10 Tips to Make Your Bedroom 10x More Appealing](/cleaning-101/bedroom-living/10-tips-to-make-your-bedroom-10x-more-appealing)
[9 Simple Steps to a Clean and Organised Attic](/cleaning-101/bedroom-living/9-simple-steps-to-a-clean-and-organised-attic)
[Easy, Effective and Everlasting Cleaning Habits for the Whole Family](/cleaning-101/family-pets/easy-effective-and-everlasting-cleaning-habits-for-the-whole-family)
[A Quick Nightly Cleaning Routine for a Better Tomorrow](/cleaning-101/uncategorized/a-quick-nightly-cleaning-routine-for-a-better-tomorrow)
[5 Reasons Why Homeowners Neglect House Cleaning](/cleaning-101/uncategorized/5-reasons-why-homeowners-neglect-house-cleaning)
Sources & References
**Dr. Darby Saxbe & Dr. Rena Repetti**, psychologists at UCLA — [No Place Like Home: Home Tours Correlate With Daily Patterns of Mood and Cortisol](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0146167209352864), *Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin*, 2010. Referenced for the cortisol-clutter connection in dual-income families.
**Stephanie McMains & Sabine Kastner**, Princeton Neuroscience Institute — [Interactions of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Mechanisms in Human Visual Cortex](https://www.jneurosci.org/content/31/2/587), *Journal of Neuroscience*, 2011. Cited for neural competition research showing how visual clutter impairs focus.
**Joseph Ferrari, PhD**, St. Vincent de Paul Distinguished Professor of Psychology, DePaul University — [Procrastination and Clutter: An Ecological View of Living with Excessive Stuff](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12144-018-9803-0), *Current Psychology*, 2018. Cited for the procrastination-clutter link.
**Virginia Pelley** — [Dust, Unsettled](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5269654/), *ACS Central Science*, 2017. Referenced for household dust composition and health implications.
**Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP)** — [What Does Clutter Do to Your Brain and Body?](https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/clinical/what-does-clutter-do-to-your-brain-and-body). Cited for Australian medical perspective on clutter's cognitive and emotional effects.
**The Australia Institute** — [Clutter and Wellbeing Research](https://australiainstitute.org.au/). Referenced for the finding that 40% of Australians feel anxious, guilty, or depressed about home clutter.
*If keeping on top of the clutter feels like one thing too many, our friendly team is always here to help.*
*Care for your home. Respect for the people behind every clean.*