Every estate is different, but this schedule works well for most Bartlett-area homes—especially when there’s a mix of furniture, household goods, and specialty items.
Step 1: 2–4 weeks out — Set the “rules of the road” with the family
Before sorting begins, agree on decision-making: Who is authorized to approve prices, accept buy-out offers, or remove family keepsakes? Estates can stall when multiple relatives are making separate promises to friends or removing items without tracking.
Quick setup checklist
• Pick one point of contact for the liquidation team
• Decide what’s “not for sale” (tag it clearly)
• Gather keys, garage remotes, alarm codes, gate codes
• Identify deadlines (closing date, realtor listing date, probate timing)
Step 2: 1–3 weeks out — Protect valuables and document specialty items
If the estate includes coins, gold/silver, firearms, or high-end collectibles, treat it like a small inventory project. Make a simple photo log (phone photos are fine) and store items securely. The goal is to reduce loss, confusion, and family disputes later.
For precious metals and coins, avoid “quick cash” decisions before understanding what you have (bullion vs. numismatic/collector value). Many sellers do better when items are identified properly and sold through a channel that matches the category—especially for collections. Federal regulators also warn consumers to watch for misleading precious-metals pitches and pressure tactics. (Neutral educational guidance exists from the CFTC.)
Step 3: 7–10 days out — Staging that improves flow (and protects the home)
Estate-sale staging is about safety, visibility, and shopping logic:
• Clear pathways and remove trip hazards (especially in hallways and garages)
• Group like items together (all tools, all kitchen, all linens)
• Use tables/shelves to get items off the floor
• Increase lighting in darker rooms to reduce “missed” inventory
• Create a checkout area that doesn’t block access to merchandise
Even outside of estate sales, staging is consistently linked with stronger buyer perception and improved outcomes for “sale events” in the home. The same behavioral principle applies: organized spaces help people evaluate items faster and more confidently.
Step 4: 3–5 days out — Pricing strategy (and the “don’t overprice this” list)
Pricing is where families unintentionally lose the most money—either by pricing too high (items sit) or too low (high-value pieces disappear early). A balanced strategy often includes:
Anchor pricing for standout items (antiques, brand-name furniture, collectible categories)
Bundle pricing for low-dollar categories (books, craft supplies, kitchen gadgets)
Market-based checks for trending collectibles (sports cards, vintage electronics, tools)
Channel selection (in-home vs. online auction) for items with national demand
Step 5: Sale days — Smooth operations that protect your bottom line
Well-run sales minimize bottlenecks and shrinkage while keeping shoppers happy:
• Clear signage and a defined entry/exit path
• Staffed high-value zones (jewelry, coins, small collectibles)
• Written pickup policies for furniture and large items
• A checkout setup that allows card payments where appropriate (many modern buyers expect it)
Step 6: Post-sale — Cleanout, final accounting, and next steps
After the last customer leaves, the estate still needs closure: removing unsold items, donating where appropriate, disposing of true trash, and preparing the home for a realtor, tenant turnover, or final property transfer. A full-service liquidation company can handle cleanout logistics so families aren’t left with a half-empty home and a tight deadline.