For disabled people
Decluttering when your home isn’t built for you
You direct, we do the physical work. Energy-aware pacing, wheelchair-accessible workflows, reach envelope redesign — and a flare-friendly cancellation policy because life is variable.
What we know
The barriers are in the building, not in you
The social model of disability shapes how we work: we adapt the environment, the session, and our own pace — not you.
Spoons are finite
Energy limitation, chronic pain, and post-exertional malaise are real. We pace sessions around your reserves, not the clock. We will stop when you need to stop, not when the timer says.
Most homes are designed for non-disabled bodies
Top shelves you can't reach. Cupboards that don't open from a chair. Drawers that need two hands. The barriers are in the building, not in you. We help redesign storage so the room works for the body that lives in it.
Asking for help can feel like losing ground
Many disabled people have been infantilised by previous 'helpers'. We are not here to take over. You direct the session — we are the hands, the lifting, the reach, the energy you don't have to spend today.
How we adapt
How we adapt
Practical, physical, and immediate — not a list of buzzwords.
You direct, we do the physical work
You sit, lie, or pace as needed. We bring items to you to decide on, do the lifting and moving, and put things where you tell us. The session is yours; the labour is ours.
- Direct from a chair, bed, or sofa
- No expectation that you stand or lift
- We come prepared with our own kit
Reachable storage redesign
We rebuild storage so daily-use items live within your actual reach envelope. Heavy and rarely-used go higher; light and often-used come to where your hand can find them sitting down.
- Reach envelope mapping in your kitchen / wardrobe
- Drawer and basket systems instead of high shelves
- Visual labelling so you don't have to remember layouts
Working alongside your carers / PAs
If you have a PA, support worker, family carer, or housing support team, we coordinate with them — at your direction. The brief is to add capacity, not to add another person you have to manage.
- Sessions during PA hours if helpful
- Hand-off notes to your support team if you want
- Direct payment / Access to Work compatible
Recovery, flares, and post-surgery
Short-burst sessions during recovery, flexible rebooking around a flare, and a long-term plan that adapts as your condition does. We don't require a long-term commitment for a single session.
- Single-session bookings welcome
- Free rescheduling on a flare day
- Sessions as short as 30 minutes
What a session looks like
What a session might look like
Three example sessions across different access needs.
Wheelchair user — kitchen reach overhaul
A two-hour in-person session. Your declutterer takes everything out of the high cupboards (which you'd long stopped trying to use), brings it to your tray for sorting, and puts the daily items into pull-out drawers at chair height. The high shelves now hold once-a-year items only.
Chronic illness flare — bedroom from bed
A single 60-minute session, you stay in bed throughout. Your declutterer reorganises the bedside table, clears the floor space your wheelchair needs, refills your med pillbox, and changes the sheets. You direct from the pillows.
Post-surgery recovery — short series of sessions
A 30-minute weekly session for the six weeks of recovery. Each session catches up the laundry, washes the dishes you couldn't reach this week, and resets the kitchen. We end the series when you don't need us any more.
FAQs
Questions disabled clients ask
The questions we get most often before a first session.