Getting the House Back After the School Holidays

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There comes a point, somewhere around the second week of September, when you glance around your house and realise it looks like it’s been hit by a glitter tornado, a snack explosion and a soft toy uprising—all at once.

The school holidays are brilliant for memory-making, spontaneous fun and slower mornings—but they are not kind to your home. After weeks of activity, guests, day trips, and “Mum, can I get the paints out?”, your space might be crying out for a reset.

If you’re wondering how on earth to begin getting the house back after the school holidays, don’t panic. You don’t need to do it all in one go. Here’s a practical, manageable approach that won’t leave you sobbing into the laundry pile.


🧹 1. Start with a Surface Sweep

Begin by clearing the surfaces you use daily—kitchen counters, dining tables, hallway units. These are the visual clutter magnets, and just tackling them can make the whole house feel calmer instantly.

Bin the junk mail, rehome the Lego, and put away the “just-dumped-here” pile. Don’t aim for perfection—just aim for breathing space.


🧺 2. Take Control of the Laundry Pile (Again)

It’s incredible how much washing accumulates when everyone’s home. You’ve probably had a mix of beach towels, muddy walking gear, fancy dress costumes and about 17 odd socks.

Set a laundry goal:

  • One load per day until it’s under control
  • Involve the kids in sorting and folding (promise them screen time after)
  • Use a basket for “things that need putting away upstairs” and tackle it once a day

Batch what you can—bedding day, towel day, school uniform day—and it’ll soon feel more manageable.


🧸 3. Sort the Toy Zone(s)

Over the holidays, toys migrate. That puzzle from the playroom? It’s now under the dining table. The craft supplies? Scattered from the lounge to the stairs. Toy cars and dinosaurs? In your bed – yes really.

Time to:

  • Do a “sweep and sort” per room—what belongs, what doesn’t?
  • Box up or rotate toys that have lost their novelty
  • Use baskets, storage cubes, or labelled boxes for easy organisation
  • Get ruthless with broken or incomplete items

If your children are old enough, make a game out of it. “Find five things to rehome” works wonders.


🧽 4. Focus on One Room a Day

Trying to reset the entire house in one weekend? A recipe for burnout. Instead, assign one room per day and give it 20–30 minutes of attention.

Try this simple weekly reset:

  • Monday: Kitchen
  • Tuesday: Living room
  • Wednesday: Bathroom
  • Thursday: Kids’ bedrooms
  • Friday: Hallway/utility
  • Weekend: Bonus time or rest (yes, rest!)

Use a timer and blast music—it makes it feel less like a chore.


🗂️ 5. Reclaim the Paper Trail

Letters, drawings, receipts, party invites, postcards, certificates—paper multiplies over summer like rabbits.

To deal with the mountain:

  • Create three piles: bin, keep, action
  • Store keepsakes in a memory box
  • Action items go on a pinboard or into your planner
  • Recycle ruthlessly (you do not need to keep every scribble)

Going digital? Snap pics of artwork and store in a cloud folder for zero clutter guilt.


🧹 6. Deep Clean One Neglected Area

Pick the bit that’s been most ignored. Maybe it’s the fridge, the skirting boards, or that hallway cupboard full of mystery items. Choose one and give it some love.

It feels oddly therapeutic, and it kick-starts momentum for the rest.


🕯️ 7. Reset the Vibe

Now that the chaos is clearing, add a few finishing touches to shift from “summer madness” to “autumn calm”.

Try:

  • Lighting a candle in the evening
  • Swapping out summer cushions or throws
  • Adding a vase of dried flowers or a cosy lamp
  • Playing calm background music after school

It tells your brain (and your family), “we’re home again”.


Final Thoughts

Getting the house back after the school holidays doesn’t mean creating a show home. It means reclaiming your space from the chaos, one small win at a time.

You’ve survived the holidays, made memories, and now—slowly but surely—it’s time to reintroduce a little order, one sock and storage box at a time.

And remember: the mess meant fun. The tidying means you made it.

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