If you’re thinking about downsizing your home and upsizing your life, then you’re on the brink of an amazing adventure.
Downsizing is a significant and emotional decision because it usually involves selling the family home and letting go of possessions that have been with you for years. But it’s also liberating!
Couples who have downsized successfully have made financial independence their key goal. If you’re going to move to a smaller property, it’s a great idea to end up with no mortgage and – if possible – completely debt-free.
Below are a few ideas that will help you get off to a great start.
- Pay off your mortgage – Being debt-free is a key reason to downsize. Create and keep to your budget when you start to look for a new home. Smaller properties are not always less expensive, so you need to have a certain amount of financial discipline in your search.
- Say no to an in-home gym – Resist the urge to buy a property with room for an in-home gym, and avoid a swimming pool and a big garden. You want to minimise your running costs and maintenance obligations. If these amenities are important to you, consider an apartment or townhouse in a complex that offers on-site recreational facilities.
- That’s entertainment – When downsizing, be honest with yourself about how much you wish to entertain family and friends. Do you need a big kitchen? Perhaps a small barbeque area might be sufficient. Avoid investing in expensive features of a property that, ultimately, you might use once or twice a year.
- Measure up – Once you’ve found your perfect new home, it’s a smart idea to measure your furniture to see what will fit. Smaller homes need appropriately-sized furniture. You can feel cramped and unhappy if you furnish your home with oversized pieces that you couldn’t bring yourself to throw out.
- Drop-dead deadline – When you begin the inevitable clear-out of possessions, you’ll find many items that belong to other members of the family, especially your children. Please give them a deadline for collecting their possessions. If they go past it, you know what to do. You’re not a storage unit for your adult children.
- Go digital – Don’t take up space in your new home with storage for documents. Get them digitised, and keep important papers, such as passports and birth certificates, in a safe deposit box.