Keep, donate, sell, or toss — we’ll tell you which.
Decluttering is decision fatigue. Instead of working through a generic checklist, upload a photo of any room — kitchen, closet, garage, bedroom — and we’ll tell you what specifically to keep, donate, sell, or toss, with a reason for each item. Sell items even come with an estimated resale value. Free, no signup.
Photos are analyzed and not stored
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How we decide
SELL — items with real resale value
Designer goods, working electronics you don't use, brand-name furniture, barely-worn shoes from major brands. We flag these and give a conservative resale range. The closet space is usually worth more than the maybe.
TOSS — broken or expired
Items past donation-worthy: stained towels, broken-handled mugs, expired food, dried-up paint, electronics that don't work. Honest toss recommendations — donating worn-out junk is just shifting the disposal burden.
DONATE — usable, not worth selling
Items in usable condition that someone else would want, but not worth the effort of a Poshmark listing — duplicate t-shirts, kitchen tools you have two of, decor that no longer fits the room. Get them out of the house and into someone else's.
KEEP — working, used, has a home
We call out items that are clearly working for you so you don't second-guess them. The point isn't to empty the room — it's to confirm what stays and clear what doesn't.
Declutter Tool FAQ
How does this declutter tool work?+
Upload a photo of any room — kitchen, closet, garage, bedroom, anywhere. We look at what's in the photo and identify specific items that are good candidates for decluttering. For each item, you get a keep, donate, sell, or toss recommendation with a reason. Sell items also get an estimated resale value range.
How do you decide what to keep, donate, sell, or toss?+
We look for the same patterns a professional declutterer would: visible duplicates, items showing wear or damage, items in obvious "storage limbo" (boxes still sealed from a move, things piled with no home), excessive quantities of normally-singular items, and high-value items you might not realize you could sell. KEEP for things that are working and used. DONATE for usable items someone else would want. SELL for items with real resale value (~$25+). TOSS for items past donation-worthy.
Should I trust the recommendations?+
Treat them as a starting point, not a verdict. We see what's in the photo, but we don't know which mug was a gift from your grandmother or that you wear those shoes for a specific hobby. Override anything that doesn't match how you actually use the item — the tool is most useful for the obvious wins (broken stuff, duplicates, unworn shoes) where a second opinion confirms what you already suspected.
How is this different from a regular decluttering checklist?+
A static checklist gives you generic prompts ("clothes you haven't worn in 12 months") that you have to apply yourself, room by room. We look at YOUR specific room and call out specific items we can see — so you don't have to do the mental translation work. Faster, more concrete, and surfaces things you might walk past every day.
Is this tool free?+
Yes. No signup, no credit card, no email required. We earn commission when you buy products through the affiliate links in our buying guides — that's how we keep this tool free.
What about sentimental items?+
We generally won't flag sentimental items for decluttering — we focus on the clearly resaleable, broken, or duplicated stuff where the decision is concrete. Sentimental decisions are personal, emotional, and yours. The decluttering classics still apply: photograph the item, write down why it mattered, then decide separately.
After decluttering: organize what's left
Once you've cleared the obvious, our Storage Solutions tool looks at your space and tells you exactly what to add (bins, shelves, organizers) and where to put it — and shows you the after.
Try the Storage Analyzer