How to move house without going crazy.
An irreverent, but honest account from a serial mover, of the one of the worst days of your life!
We’ve all done it, whether renting or buying a home, moving day can be the most stressful experience. No wonder moving house ranks as one of the most emotionally charged things to go through in your life, along with relationship breakdown, divorce and starting a new job. As someone who has just recently moved and also made a bit of a career out of relocating, here’s my top tips for making it as stress-free as possible! Who am I kidding? It’s going to be hell, whatever you do, but these tips can help. Promise!
I have moved house more times than Beyoncé has shaken her booty. In fact, Beyoncé’s booty is currently pitifully in hiding due to the shame it feels for losing miserably to my relocation prowess!
I am, in fact, a moving house pro thanks to my parents. My entire childhood was spent moving from one home to another, even to different continents! By the time I reached adulthood it seemed perfectly normal to me to relocate regularly. It’s a trend that has carried on throughout my married life culminating in our tenth home in 26 years together. It had better be the last!
I don’t believe that moving day can be completely stress-free. In fact, I don’t think you’ll even get close. However, I do think it’s possible, with careful planning, to alleviate the symptoms in order to not completely lose your mind, your relationship and your will to live.
Read on if you’re planning a move and don’t want to have a nervous breakdown, or end up in prison because you’ve killed your partner, or strangled the cat. If you’re a free subscriber then this post is free and thank you for your support. However, the 2nd part of the video house tour and next Sunday’s column will be for paid members. I know times are hard, but if you can, then consider upgrading to paid to read all of my Sunday columns, join the community and have access to my archive, audios and videos. I’d love for you to join us full time!
Before exchange of contracts
In the UK there’s not much you can really do before you have exchanged contracts, apart from get as many removal company quotes in as possible. Once you find the company you want to go with contact them and tell them that they are your preferred choice. You can’t, of course commit to them until contracts have changed hands, but they can at least pencil the dates in their diary. You don’t want to find that your company of choice is all booked up. Even then, as with us this time around, you can loose out. That’s why I’m telling you to get as many quotes as possible. We had to go with our third choice in the end. They were pretty dreadful! No, sorry, they were bloody awful and broke so many things, even items we moved ourselves in advance!
The most important thing you can do before contracts have exchanged is to sort through your entire home. I don’t mean start packing. I mean really sort through all your worldly possessions into what you want to keep and what you want to get rid of. Do you really want to move and possibly put in storage all the things you never intended to keep in the first place?
You can start this weeks, if not months before the big day. Even if you don’t end up completing on a sale/purchase, it’s a good thing to do. When you do eventually sell your home you will be rid of all the years of useless stuff you don’t need anymore. Either hire a skip, or in our case, we did several trips to the local recycling centre and charity shops.
Start at the top!
Start at the top of the house in the loft, if you have one. I know that’s a daunting place to start, but, along with the garage, it’s usually the messiest and probably full of all the things you haven’t looked at in years. Split things into piles of what you want to keep and what you want to dispose of, gift or sell.
Be ruthless! If it’s neither use nor ornament then you don’t need it! Do you love it? Does it bring you joy? Does it have sentimental value? Is it really useful and are you sure you will you use it? If the answer to all these questions is no, then it’s time it went to that great resting place for pointless things in the sky!
If you carry on like this throughout every room, then you can be sure that everything that’s left is coming with you. By doing this you will have dramatically reduced the amount of possessions you have, so there’s less to move! Honestly, this is such a good thing to do, you’ll thank me in the end.
Timing
Now, I’m going to presume that you have exchanged contracts. If it is at all possible, try and arrange quite a bit of time between exchange and completion. You will definitely underestimate how much there is to do, so the more time the better. We had three weeks between the two on our Surrey home in 2020. We did plan to have the same for our latest move, but in the end, we exchanged and completed on the same day. Please, please don’t do this unless there is no alternative, it’s beyond stressful and may result in a murder. Thank god we had a holiday booked two days later!
The key to a successful and relatively calm house move is in the planning. It’s important for you to take time. If you can, you should book time off work before, during and after the move. I know annual leave is precious, but so is your sanity and having to deal with work stress at the same time as a move is a bad idea.
Pets
If you have children or pets then I hugely suggest getting someone to look after them during the move. A lot of removal companies like to schedule a relocation over two days now. If you can get grandma and grandpa to take the kids, do it! If pooch can go too, even better. Moving house involves change and upheaval and most of us don’t like that. It’s a transition period, where almost everything is uncertain. Your family will all be dealing with their own anxieties, be it leaving their school friends or your dog wondering why all the furniture has gone!
We put our dog Missy with her carer for a couple of days during our Surrey move, but this time we had no choice but to leave her at our deckhouse by herself. She just slept, so it wasn’t too uncomfortable. Her vision is impaired due to bi-lateral cataracts. She would not have coped very well with walls of boxes and raised voices. Much better that she was out of the way somewhere happy and calm.
Complete this list - DO NOT MISS THIS STEP!
Plan ahead! You will need to find a new doctor, dentist, schools and the nearest supermarket. Do your homework in advance. You will need to notify all number of people and bodies of your new address too, this can all be done in advance. I’m a huge fan of lists. To me lists can solve almost everything. So, here’s my checklist for things to sort in advance of the big day:
Sit down! Grab a cuppa and actually write the list! No, I’m not joking, write the list!
Contact everybody you possibly can and inform them of your new address as soon as you exchange. These are the bodies I contacted in advance. Most of them could be done online and didn’t take that long:
Bank/building society
Credit card companies
Royal Mail for post redirection. Go for a year, not six months
All utility companies
Existing Borough/City Council and new one.
Register to vote from your new address too, this is a separate job from telling your council about your move.
Contact your driving licence agency. In the UK it’s the DVLA and it can be done online and it’s free. It is illegal to not do the last two points!
Contact your TV company. Ours is Sky TV. I was able to book in advance so that they arrived to install the day after we came back from holiday. If you’re a Sky VIP member, then it’s free.
House insurance – buildings and contents - very important!
Car Insurance. I actually got a rebate as the new address was “safer” in their eyes!
Your mobile/cell provider and the landline company. We arranged for Broadband via EE, now part of British Telecom, to be installed just after we came back from vacation. That went very wrong and I am currently typing this without Wi-Fi. If that happens you must complain and get compensation!
Change your address online with your chosen supermarket. We mainly shop at Tesco or Sainsbury’s, due to the British Airways miles we collect. This is important as you may want to book a grocery delivery for soon after you arrive at your new home.
Put an email list or a WhatsApp group together of all your friends and family and then let them know your new address all at once.
There are some people/companies that I did not contact in advance. These included: my doctors surgery, my dentist, my hairdresser and my dog’s vet. You’re probably wondering why. Well, choosing these takes time. Once you’ve signed up to a new general practitioner in the UK it’s very hard to change. I want to scout about first and find out which is the best surgery. The same goes for dentist, hairdresser and vet.
Buy boxes! Always go for twin-skinned boxes with thick walls. We bought most of ours on Amazon. We also bought loads of large clear plastic storage boxes so that we could see what’s inside them. You can use them again for loft storage. If you have paid for a full packing service I would still buy some boxes. There will be things you want to pack in advance, essential kitchen bits and bobs for example, or personal things that you’d rather the packer didn’t see, you saucy devil!
Buy packing tape, some brown, some that says: “Fragile” and some that says: “You better not bloody drop this!”
Get “Fragile” stickers too and handheld tape dispensers and cutters. You’ll also need permanent marker pens.
THE MOST IMPORTANT THING EVER!
Go to your alcoholic beverage area in your home. Choose your favourite wine, gin, etc and make sure you have enough mixers too. Put the glasses you will need in the same box, wrapped in bubble wrap. Mark on the box on all four sides: “Emergency Alcohol”.
Packing
Do this in the same way that you did the sorting out. Start at the top of the house and work down. My biggest tip is not to make things too heavy. You may not be moving the boxes yourself on the day, but I can assure you that you will be carting them around the house once you’ve moved in! Help your back out.
Use more packing tape on the bottom than you think necessary. Believe me, from experience, it isn’t very much fun packing your prized ornaments beautifully into a box to find that when you lift it everything falls out of the bottom. True fact!
Mark on the box what is in the box! Don’t write what my hubby Mr C wrote: “stuff”. It wasn’t very helpful once we moved in and although funny now, I was less than amused at the time!
Don’t just write it on one side of the box. Write it on all four vertical sides. Why? Well, when the boxes are stacked you will be able to see what’s in the box from whichever way the removal company stacks them. Otherwise, you are going to have to dismantle the wall of boxes to find out what’s in that particular box.
Put together a few boxes and mark them up in advance for “essentials”. You’ll need a kitchen essentials box, for coffee, tea, the kettle, snacks, cups, a few plates and knives and forks, etc. Put everything you need to execute a task, such as making a cup of tea, into one box.
You’ll also need a toiletries essentials box, one for important tools, possibly babycare, etc. The idea is that you are trying to make things easier for the first few days of moving in. If all the things you need immediately are together and organised, then you will be far less stressed.
Pack a suitcase for each person in your household just like you would if you were going on holiday. So, you’ll all have clothes to see you through the first week.
Flat packed furniture.
When dismantling furniture, such as beds, have some freezer bags handy and a marker pen. Put all the nuts and bolts for each piece of furniture in separate bags and mark them. Take keys out of cabinets and put them in a bag and mark which key it is. Then put all of those bags together into one box and mark it!
I’m a huge fan of packing things ourselves. Don’t get me wrong, it is mind-numbingly dull and repetitive, but at least I know where everything is. We have used packing services before and I spent most of my time trying to find things. I’m sure there are very good companies out there with great organisational skills, just not the ones we’ve chosen so far.
Try to pack everything before the big day. You will be too busy cleaning the house and doing a million other things to add packing to your list of chores. A note on cleaning: do ask your buyers whether they are having cleaners come in to blitz the place before they move in. If they are, then you don’t have to kill yourself doing a deep clean everywhere. You can just hoover and wipe around and make sure everything is tidy. Who am I kidding, do you know me? Of course, I went around and cleaned everything within an inch of its life! I don’t care if they’ve got industrial cleaners coming! I’m not having anybody think we’re dirty buggers! Nope, never gonna happen!
…and finally.
If there’s time, plan a few days worth of meals for when you move in and either buy in advance or get a delivery. Not having to think about a menu for the family will help you out no end. I suggest a takeaway for at least day one, if not day two and three, like we did! Good luck and it’ll all be worth it in the end. Promise!
Genius ideas!! Especially marking the boxes in all 4 sides! Oh and emergency alcohol 🤭 xx
Really good advice. Thank you. I am moving after 18 years with a lot of trepidation. I love my house and have so many memories, so finding it hard to be positive but it is the right thing for us. Any advice on getting in the right mindset? X