Living at Inkom's 4,400-foot elevation means your home battles a unique combination of high-desert dust that blows in from the valleys and moisture from winter snowmelt that lingers well into spring. Those older ranch-style homes along Pocatello Creek Road, many built in the 1960s and 70s with wood paneling and original carpeting, tend to trap both dust and dampness in ways that make clutter more than just an eyesore. When magazines pile up on side tables and knick-knacks crowd your shelves, they're not just collecting—they're creating dozens of surfaces where that fine Idaho dust settles and combines with seasonal moisture to create stubborn grime. Add in the mud tracked through during shoulder seasons when snow melts and refreezes daily, and suddenly your decluttering job becomes directly tied to how clean your home can actually get.

Here's the thing about deep cleaning: you can't truly clean what you can't reach. When counters overflow with mail, decorative items cover dressers, and closet floors disappear under piles of shoes, you're essentially deep cleaning around your mess rather than eliminating the dirt beneath it. Decluttering first means your actual cleaning efforts—vacuuming baseboards, wiping surfaces, mopping floors—can address the real accumulation instead of just surface appearances. The process doesn't require perfection, just intention. Remove what doesn't belong, consolidate what stays, and create clear surfaces where cleaning solutions and tools can actually do their job.

Declutter First: The 40% Rule

Professional cleaners consistently report that homes with clear surfaces take 35–45% less time to clean thoroughly. That means a better result — or the same time spent going deeper on what matters.

Where to Start in a Inkom Home

The Kitchen Counter Problem

Inkom kitchens accumulate countertop appliances quickly: air fryers, Instant Pots, coffee systems, smoothie makers. The rule: if you don't use it at least weekly, it goes in a cabinet or out of the house. Goal: one clear strip of counter behind the sink and at least half of all counter space unoccupied.

The Bathroom Surface Audit

The average American bathroom has 17 items on the counter. Ideal is 3–5. Everything else goes in a drawer, medicine cabinet, or under-sink storage. This transforms a 15-minute bathroom clean into a 7-minute one.

Bedroom Floor Rules

Anything on a bedroom floor that isn't furniture is clutter. Under-bed storage with a flat lid surface is the best Inkom solution for extra storage without floor clutter.

The Flat Surface Principle

Every flat surface — dressers, nightstands, coffee tables, bookshelves — should have at most 3 objects on it. Everything else creates visual noise and collects dust.

Room-by-Room Declutter Plan

Kitchen (2–4 Hours)

  1. Pull everything out of one cabinet at a time
  2. Group: keep, donate, toss, relocate
  3. Apply the "last used" test: if unused in 12 months, it goes
  4. Tackle the junk drawer last
  5. Clear all countertops; return only daily-use items

Closets (1–2 Hours Each)

  1. Remove everything entirely
  2. Clean the empty closet
  3. Evaluate each item: does it fit, do you love it, have you used it in the last year?
  4. Return only what passes; bag the rest for donation

Living Areas (1–2 Hours)

  1. Remove all items not permanently belonging to that room
  2. Reduce decorative items to "gallery-worthy" only
  3. Cable management — loose cords are clutter and dust magnets

The Donation Schedule

In Inkom, these organizations accept household goods and furniture:

Maintaining It

The one-in-one-out rule: every time something new enters your home, something equivalent leaves. Applied consistently, this maintains your decluttered space without periodic purges.

Once you've decluttered, TotalCare Cleaning can give your Inkom home the deep clean it deserves. Call (888) 378-7451 to schedule.