Start here: the “first 72 hours” checklist
Whether you’re handling a parent’s home, settling an estate, or downsizing in Memphis, these early steps prevent the most common (and expensive) mistakes.
1) Secure the property and stop the “helpful removal” problem
Change exterior door codes/locks if needed, gather spare keys, and limit access to a small, trusted list. Even well-meaning friends or relatives can unintentionally remove items that should be inventoried, appraised, or distributed by the estate.
2) Create a simple inventory system (fast, not perfect)
Use a phone camera and quick notes by room: “master bedroom dresser drawers,” “garage shelves,” “china cabinet.” Don’t spend hours itemizing every spoon—capture categories and the “high attention” items (jewelry, coins, firearms, designer bags, signed art, vintage electronics, vehicles).
3) Identify specialty categories early
Certain items can’t be treated like general household goods:
Firearms: secure storage and compliant transfer/sale procedures matter; interstate transfer restrictions and special rules can apply, and certain NFA items require federal approval before transfer.
Precious metals & coins: condition, authenticity, spot price, and collectible (numismatic) premiums can change value significantly—avoid “guess pricing.”
Vehicles (including classics): title status, VIN accuracy, and documentation can strongly affect sale options and buyer confidence.
4) Separate “keep / sell / donate / dispose” with colored tape
Use a visible system that everyone can follow. Example: Green = keep, Blue = sell, Yellow = donate, Red = dispose. This reduces re-sorting and prevents sentimental items from being accidentally liquidated.