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Sorting Guide

What to Keep, What to Toss, and What to Call Me About

By Josh Eldred · Updated April 2026 · 7-minute read

Most families staring down an estate know what they want to keep — the photos that matter, the rings, a few pieces of furniture. The hard part is everything else. Here's a category-by-category sort, with a clear "call me before you decide" list for the items families lose most often when they don't know what they're looking at.

Last verified May 2026 · Original research by Josh Eldred

KEEP — Don't Throw These Out, Ever

If you find any of the following, set them aside. I can sort, route, or dispose of them later. The risk of trashing one of these by accident is the single biggest avoidable loss in any cleanout.

  • 📌Family Bibles. Especially with handwritten genealogy pages — births, marriages, deaths recorded in pen.
  • 📌Identified photographs. Anything with a name written on the back. Even photos you can't immediately place — a sibling or cousin will recognize someone.
  • 📌Letters in handwriting. Especially WWII V-mail, family correspondence, and anything pre-1950.
  • 📌Diaries and journals. Even partial ones.
  • 📌Birth, marriage, and death certificates. Originals especially.
  • 📌Military records and medals. Discharge papers, unit photos, regimental documents, deployment correspondence.
  • 📌Deeds, land grants, old maps. Anything related to property — especially New Mexico Spanish or territorial-era documents.
  • 📌Signed or inscribed books. A book inscribed by a family member to another family member is irreplaceable.
  • 📌Anything written in Spanish that looks old. Pre-1912 (statehood) Spanish-language documents may have real significance.
  • 📌Any document or item with a family name written on it. If the family name appears, hold it.

CAN GO — Usually Safe to Release

These categories are almost always fine to discard, recycle, or donate. None are "throw it all out without looking" — give every container a quick scan first — but the categories themselves are routine.

  • Expired medications. Take to a pharmacy take-back program. Don't flush.
  • Old tax returns. Past 7 years, almost always safe to shred.
  • Magazine subscriptions and back issues. Recycling.
  • Generic paperback novels. Donation pickup, free book pickup, or recycling.
  • Bank statements past retention. Past 3–7 years, safe to shred.
  • Greeting card stockpiles. Mainstream donation or recycling.
  • Empty photo albums. Recycling.
  • Junk mail and catalogs. Recycling.
  • Old phone books. Recycling.
  • Mainstream kitchenware in average condition. Donation pickup.
  • Damaged furniture and broken electronics. Disposal or e-waste recycling.

CALL BEFORE DECIDING — These Are the Ones Families Lose

If you find any of these and you're not sure, take a photo and send it to me at 702-496-4214. Honest yes/no/maybe in 5 minutes, free.

  • 📞Anything in Spanish that looks pre-1950. Even more so pre-1912.
  • 📞Manhattan Project / Los Alamos era ephemera. Site passes, ID badges, photographs labeled "PO Box 1663," anything from 1943–1946.
  • 📞Jewelry that looks old or substantial. Don't toss into a "donate" pile. Photo first.
  • 📞Firearms and ammunition. Always call. Never throw out.
  • 📞Older artwork and prints. Especially regional Southwest art, Native American prints, and signed pieces.
  • 📞Collections. Stamps, coins, vinyl records, vintage tools — any organized collection deserves a look before disposal.
  • 📞Items flagged in a will. If the will mentions an item by name, hold it for the executor.
  • 📞Contents of a safe, lockbox, or fireproof file. Don't open or sort without family agreement.
  • 📞Anything labeled "important" or in a special folder. The label means something.
  • 📞The "I don't know what this is" pile. Just call. Better to be sure than to lose something irreplaceable.

A Few Sorting Tips

  • Sort first, decide later. Resist the urge to throw things in the dumpster as you go. Sort into piles, decide once, then act.
  • If in doubt, hold. Hesitation is information. Items you hesitate on are usually worth a closer look.
  • Photograph everything contested. Before throwing it in any pile, photo it. Solves a lot of sibling disagreements.
  • Don't sort alone. Decisions made in grief and isolation are the ones most regretted later.
  • Use a printable checklist. Our First 30 Days Prep Checklist (PDF) has the full keep/go/call breakdown on one printable page.

When in Doubt, Send a Photo

Honest yes/no/maybe gut check, free. Text 702-496-4214 with a photo and a sentence.

Call or Text 702-496-4214 Download Checklist (PDF)

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I decide what to keep when clearing out an estate?

Start with anything that has a family name on it — identified photographs, inscribed books, family Bibles with genealogy pages, letters in handwriting, and vital records like birth and marriage certificates. These are irreplaceable and should be set aside before you touch anything else. For everything else, sort into piles first and decide later. Resist the urge to throw things in the dumpster as you go — decisions made in grief are the ones most regretted.

What items are commonly overlooked during an estate cleanout?

The items families lose most often are the ones they did not recognize as valuable. Pre-1912 Spanish-language documents, Manhattan Project era ephemera, vintage tools by makers like Stanley or Snap-On, Pueblo pottery by named potter families, and organized collections of stamps, coins, or vinyl records all carry real value that gets missed. If you find anything you cannot immediately identify, take a photo before it goes in any pile.

Should I keep old papers and documents from an estate?

Keep original vital records, military papers, deeds, and any document with a family name on it — always. Old tax returns past seven years and expired bank statements past the retention period are generally safe to shred. The tricky category is the stuff in between: old insurance policies, naturalization papers, immigration documents, and anything that looks official but unfamiliar. When in doubt, hold it. A cleanout operator or estate attorney can help you sort what matters from what does not.

When should I call a professional for help with an estate cleanout?

Call a professional when the volume is more than you can handle in a weekend, when you are out of state and cannot be on-site regularly, when the estate involves probate documentation requirements, or when you are finding items you cannot identify or value. You should also call before making decisions about collections, artwork, jewelry, or firearms — those categories need evaluation before disposal. A good operator will give you an honest gut check on a photo for free.

What should I do with sentimental items I cannot keep during an estate cleanout?

Photograph everything before letting it go — the photo preserves the memory even when you cannot keep the object. For items with family significance, circulate photos to siblings, cousins, and extended family before disposing of anything. Someone in the family almost always wants the item you were about to donate. For items no one claims but that feel wrong to trash, a cleanout operator with Heirloom Rescue protocols can route them to the right institutional home rather than the landfill.

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Don't Lose What's Irreplaceable

If you're unsure, send a photo. Free, no obligation.

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