Do Not Start by Throwing Everything Away
An estate cleanout should usually begin with sorting. Family photos, documents, keepsakes, tools, antiques, furniture, dishes, collectibles, and usable household items may have value to family members, buyers, donation centers, or another household.
What May Be Worth Selling
Furniture, tools, lawn equipment, antiques, artwork, collectibles, appliances without refrigerant, shop equipment, and quality household goods may be worth setting aside for an estate sale or resale. Even small items can add up when the house has years of belongings inside.
What Should Be Donated or Reused
Usable clothing, dishes, decor, books, small furniture, lamps, and household goods may be useful to another person even if they are not worth selling. Donation keeps usable material out of the dumpster and gives the items a second home.
Why a Dumpster Is Still Usually Needed
Even after an estate sale, there is almost always trash left. Damaged furniture, old mattresses, worn rugs, broken items, outdated paperwork, empty boxes, packaging, attic clutter, garage debris, and unusable household material still need to be removed.
Work Room by Room
Start with documents, valuables, and family items. Then separate sale items and donation items. After that, load accepted debris into the dumpster in stages. This keeps the cleanout respectful, organized, and less likely to send useful property to disposal.
Plan for Weight and Restricted Items
Books, tools, file boxes, and old storage areas can be heavier than expected. Tires, batteries, wet paint, chemicals, propane tanks, appliances with refrigerant, concrete, dirt, brick, rock, and tree stumps should not be loaded in a standard dumpster.
