Inside: Learn how you can use the 1% rule in your home to make a big difference.
In the hustle of daily life, it’s easy for our homes to become sources of stress rather than sanctuaries. You glance around and suddenly notice how every surface seems to have something on it, or how that drawer you’ve been meaning to clean out still hasn’t been touched.
Between scattered shoes and cluttered countertops, the sheer volume of things that need tidying can feel overwhelming. When every room seems to need attention, many of us shut down instead of taking action.
But what if there were a simple, manageable way to start making real change in your space without draining your energy or your time?
But creating a home that feels calm and manageable doesn’t have to start with a deep clean or an all-day organizing session.
In fact, trying to do everything at once often leads to burnout or avoidance.
That’s why the 1% rule is so effective. It allows you to make meaningful progress in your home through small, manageable actions that fit easily into your day and make your space feel just 1% better.
Rather than tackling your entire kitchen or garage in one go, the 1% rule invites you to do just a little bit – just 1% – and trust that over time, those tiny efforts will create visible, lasting change.

How Can the 1% Rule be Used in Your Home?
The 1% rule is a simple approach to home organization and tidying that focuses on small, consistent progress.
Instead of expecting yourself to clean an entire room, you focus on just one small area – in theory, about 1% of your space.
That might mean organizing one drawer, tidying a single shelf, or clearing off one counter. It might be even smaller – adjusting the throw pillows on the couch, or loading the hamper overflowing with dirty clothes into the washer.
The idea is that tiny wins add up. When you make a habit of improving one small part of your home each day (or even a few times a week), the cumulative effect is surprisingly powerful.
You’re not waiting for the perfect time to do a major project. You’re simply doing what you can, when you can.
By breaking things down into bite-sized tasks, the 1% rule removes the mental barriers that often prevent us from getting started.
You don’t need to carve out hours of time or wait until the weekend. You just start with what feels manageable today.

Why the 1% Rule Works in Your Home
One of the main reasons the 1% rule is so effective is that it helps you bypass overwhelm. When your home feels out of control, the pressure to “fix it all” can become paralyzing.
But if you only have to deal with one drawer, one pile, or one corner, the task becomes doable. And once something feels doable, you’re much more likely to actually do it.
Starting small is the key to changing your habits, as it makes the job feel more approachable.
There’s also a mental benefit to completing small tasks. Each time you put away a book, clear a countertop, or sort through a stack of papers, you experience a sense of accomplishment.
That feeling helps build momentum, making it easier to return to the process the next day. Your brain starts to associate tidying with a positive emotional reward.
Over time, those tiny actions build trust in yourself. You begin to see that progress doesn’t require perfection or heroic effort. It just requires a commitment to showing up consistently.
This shift in mindset is what turns one-off cleaning sprees into long-term habits.

Who Can Benefit from the 1% Rule?
The beauty of this method is that it’s accessible to everyone, regardless of how much time, energy, or motivation you have. It meets you where you are, whether you’re just starting your decluttering journey or working to maintain the systems you’ve already built.
- Busy professionals and parents who only have short windows of free time.
- Anyone feeling overwhelmed by the state of their home and unsure where to begin.
- People with limited energy or physical capacity who find large cleaning tasks too taxing.
- Minimalists who are trying to stay on top of the little things before they snowball into clutter.
- Anyone trying to build better habits, one small step at a time.
This approach isn’t about how much you can do. It’s about staying consistent, even when your capacity is low. The smallest step is still progress.

How to Get Started With the 1% Rule in Your Home
You don’t need a big plan or a long checklist to start using the 1% rule. All you need is a little awareness and a few minutes.
Look around your home and identify one area that you can improve right now. Not the whole room, just a single part of it. Micro-decluttering uses easy tasks that can be accomplished quickly.
Here are a few simple 1% tasks that can make a visible and satisfying difference in just a few minutes:
- Straighten the pillows on the couch or fold your throw blanket.
- Clear off one section of your kitchen counter, like the coffee station or near the sink.
- Wipe down the bathroom sink or mirror.
- Tidy the entryway, placing your shoes in the right spot and hanging up stray coats or bags.
- Sort through a single drawer, such as a nightstand, junk drawer, or silverware organizer.

- Recycle old receipts or paper clutter from your purse, wallet, or desk.
- Tidy the top of your dresser, putting jewelry or clothing back where it belongs.
- Throw out one expired item from your fridge or pantry.
- Vacuum or sweep a small, high-traffic area, like the hallway or under the dining table.
- Delete one app from your phone that you no longer use.
These tasks might seem insignificant on their own, but they create a ripple effect. That single drawer you organized makes it easier to find what you need in the morning.
That tidy entryway creates a more peaceful start and end to your day. Over time, those tiny improvements add up to a calmer, cleaner home.
Want more help with taking small steps to improve your space?
Check out these posts:
- Why the Slow Declutter Method May Be Best for Simplifying Your Home
- 8 Super Small Habits That Will Keep Your Home Neat & Tidy
- How to Use the ‘Snowball’ Decluttering Method to Effectively Simplify Your Space
What’s a 1% task you could do today to make your home feel lighter, calmer, or more organized? Leave a comment and let me know!
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I like this.
This doesn’t work for me at all, too much probable backsliding. So you fold a blanket one day — the next day you have to do it all over again. And over and over.
Right! I soo agree with you! I feel like it’s all gonna set me back faster than anything… like u said about the blanket and not only that but maybe… just MAYBE a person who lives alone ALONE could possibly get away with this, but, I have a grown man baby and fur babies that follow me around undoing my progress. I wish this would work.. I’m at a loss of what to do that now I clean pretty much all day and I’ll clean up outside to I bring something in and then I’ll put that away and then put more away till I need to put something in another room.. so on and so forth.. some days I’ll see the progress but most days there’s too much interruptions and people trying to distract me or pull me away asking me for help but I can’t get anything in return and at the rare occasion I get help it’s not helping at abd most of the time they want this or that or things come up missing… I’m a hot mess rn…I wish I could have the time and energy to do one big deep clean out at least put everything away so I can stay on top of it
some people say that if we have less stuff in our home, less will need to be put away. Food for thoughts.
An another idea, like having each family member have their own blanket and they are responsible to put it away.
Exactly not going to work 4me either more like clean and dust livingroom and fold blankets then next day sweep and mop livingroom & vacuum main floor and so on that’s the only way u going to see and change and make a difference
lol😂
I want to know how the kitchen has nothing on the counters?? where is the coffee maker? Napkin holder etc do they actually store every little item? So to make coffee I got to get the maker etc etc then toaster or blender by then I would be worn out! these kitchens with nothing on counters are just picture setups.
My dear friend has nothing on her counters. Her home is always picture perfect. She has all drawers in lower cabinets and her small appliances are stored in those drawers.
Think of it as exercise ☺️
yeh I do it’s movement exercise
these are suggestions and steps to get you started without wearing yourself out. I personally found this article refreshing to not kill yourself. Thank you to the author
my body is disabled by crippling physical pain and I’m old age pensioner. I have no help at home and do everything myself my mind brain is also declining with age and stress. I do all physical mental and emotional tasks alone. I’m following this one per cent rule now to see if it helps so far it has I get up Dona small task at a time in different rooms. each day. and I’m feeling better physically mentally emotionally since I started doing it. though my head tells me get it all done now over night my body tells me if you over do it your going to be in a lot of physical pain for doing so. sit down rest have a cup of tea and do a little more later. and I get satisfaction from decluttering and enjoyment in rest period . what I could do when I was younger and fitter I’m no longer capable of doing and I have no one that can do it for me. no care support workers wanted or needed. family can’t help friends aren’t able or available to help so I do everything myself . in the past two years I have been grateful to be able to afford to hire pay for help around things I used to be able and capable of doing myself like a decorator and and carpet fitter . most home tasks keeping on top of bills it’s all been done by me. but I’m slowing down now ageing and my disabilities have worsened . so I’m taking it easy and doing a little at a time I and relaxing watching a movie reading a book out shopping or appointments haveing a bath whatever then I’m doing a little bit more. and that’s ok there’s no rush it don’t have to happen over night and it don’t have to be perfect. I sorted out my wardrobe last night today I sorted out replying to e mails tomorrow I might hoover the carpets and sort the lounge cupboard .since I started the one per cent rule my home is More organised I gave a lot to charity and I have changed the interior decor I hired some help for decorating and did some myself.
Just make sure you are organizing and moving things to places that make sense for you so it’s easier to put the items away right when you are done using them. being ADHD myself, this is one that is easier said than done most times.
Helps keep the progress you’ve made and keep feeling good about your space!
Maybe 5% or 10% would work better for you.
My 1% job is to wash the dishes and clean the kitchen sink. Once I get that done, I’m encouraged to do more.
I have unintentionally been doing this for the last month. it is absolutely brilliant. so much better than a big sort out as you don’t make a mess doing it. It’s absolutely amazing the.difference it makes and wonderful to go to a tidy drawer and see it.
I call it a whilst game, whilst waiting for the kettle to boil or the meal to cook.
I have been decluttering for a long while using a method of getting rid of one item on day one, two items on day two and so on up to thirty days. Then, I start over getting rid of one item on a day one, two on a day two, and so on. For items, I can use papers such as receipts, notes or anything made of paper. I just wanted to be able to maintain my strategy for decluttering. After many months, I finally got too far behind to catch up. I haven’t given up, though. I know I have made a lot of progress. I’m just going to shift to the one percent strategy now. If I fall short using this strategy, I won’t give up decluttering.
I find this almost impossible to do, where do you put the stuff after you cleaned out the drawer if it is things you need to keep in another place that hasn’t been cleaned yet?
Look up Dana K. White. Her No Mess decluttering method is miraculous for those of us who haven’t made progress using conventional decluttering methods.
Try Dana K White’s method of “take it there now” if it’s super overwhelming. For the drawer example, find a couple of things (or one thing) that does belong somewhere else, take it there, and make room for it by removing something easy like trash or that one itchy scarf you’d been meaning to donate anyway. That has helped me with the piles of “gotta keep but can’t put anywhere” just transforming into more clutter for later.
I have a charity shop basket so as I am sorting through things anything I want to donate goes in the basket. once it’s full I take it to the shop. I do the same for the clothes/shoe recycle bin for anything too tatty.
I would suggest putting them in a small dish or organizing item near where you want them to go. That way the are just that much closer to where you want them.
I do this 🙂 My mom taught me to try to make every room or place, or person:), a little better than the way I found it. I didnt know it was a thing! I look at it like there is 365 days in a year, if I do a little extra most of those days the house will be in good shape!
At times, this 1% rule can work, particularly when one is tired. Yes, just clean out a drawer instead of all 10 or 100.
However, at other times it’s extremely depressing. If you don’t see noticeable results early and often, it’s easy to get frustrated and abandon Decluttering efforts altogether.
Wonderful ideas to get organized!
We sold our home in October in the Midwest and moved south to be on the beach. We are living in our 42ft 5th wheel right now until we find a new home to buy. I’m a tidy person anyway, but, this is a whole different way of living, being tidy is a must! Thank you for the article.
will try to start this…Just too much stuff!
This is very helpful for me. I’m almost 80 and don’t have a lot of energy. I’ve really let things go. My home used to be so nice and clean. I’m going to try your suggestions. Thank you so much.
I am a busy single mom and a professional therapist, and I have Lupus- causes fatigue and general malaise…
We get home between 5:45-6:30 every evening and figure out dinner and homework but we first put our shoes, coats and bags where they go and I take 20 min to do something, (the have tos…) start laundry, gather and toss trash, pick up clothes and mess from the morning… and then if there’s any energy I unload and load dishes and hang or fold a few clothes… and visit with my child, tend to the animals, and tidy the cat box and feed and water cats… the weekends are when I’ll take on one or two big tasks, clean out a closet, or my daughters dresser (clothes she’s outgrown) fold and hang the remaining clean clothes on my bedroom sofa… it’s about having your daily set routine and always making sure to do one big task over the weekend to completion… not the whole house, just one big task… or one room… or dusting and floors but DAILY SHOULD BE- a 20 min pickup when you get home… because once you sit/relax or move on to other things… you won’t get the 20 min a day done… then you’ll feel stressed and overwhelmed…