Moving into a Care Home: Your Possessions

December 3, 2025

Moving into a Care Home: Your Possessions

When you move into a care home, it’s important to know what extras are and aren’t included, not only in order to be able to budget, but also to work out what to take with you. At easyStorage, it’s a common reason for booking storage, and we’ve been on this journey many times with customers and their families.

So what have we learned along the way?

You should always visit the care home a few times before you move in, getting used to what’s there, who’s there, whether you can continue with any hobbies, the food and how things work – including where your room is likely to be, what furniture you can bring with you, decoration schemes etc. Your favourite things, personal touches from photos to furniture, are going to make the transition to a care home much easier.

And whilst you may have provided the care home with details of your former life in advance, the staff will get to know you better if they can see some of your former life in the forms of photos and belongings.

Retired couple sat on a seaside bench watching the sunset

Moving into a care home can be emotionally tough. Make sure those around you know the reason for the move, and that that you still want to see them (assuming this is the case, of course!)

One of the hardest decisions will be what to bring with you, and what to leave. If, as suggested above, you’ve spent time in the care home, you stand a better chance of getting it right from the outset. However, practical space is one thing. Emotional attachment is another. Until we start living our new lives, we don’t know which things we’ll miss, which we’ll hate looking at in our new surroundings, and which we’ll simply have misjudged, whether for size or for importance.  

Deciding what to take/leave is emotional as well as a physical process – it can help to have a close friend help you decide, especially when the decision to move into a care home has been made in a rush.

Prioritise clothes. Clothing is an essential, but also a big part of our identities. Whether we’re ‘rocking’ Bett Lynch (the ‘brassy’ barmaid in Coronation Street), or channelling our inner Jackie Onassis, whether we dress like Fred Flintstone of Fred Astaire, our clothes and accessories help us keep our own identity. All items should be labelled, and we need things for any activities we’ll be doing, be that swimming or painting, gardening or outings.

Similarly, it’s important to bring familiar toiletries and perfumes/aftershaves to the care home. And bedding if you have personal preferences. (Make sure that what you bring can be laundered by the care home.)

Older woman and younger man unpacking easyStorage moving boxes

Electronics and social media may sometimes feel like the scourge of the modern age, but they’re a great way to stay connected – and whilst some care homes provide a TV or Wi-Fi, in others they won’t, or you’ll need to pay extra. Don’t forget to ask, and, moreover, don’t forget that you’ll need remote controls, cords, and chargers for many items if you’re bringing your own. Don’t be surprised if the home insists that any electrical items are tested for safety – it’s health and safety regulations and those rules, whilst they sometimes seem onerous, are there to keep everyone safe.

(Similarly, if you are allowed to bring your own furniture, they may insist on checking that it’s fire retardant.)

It’s inevitable that everything in your home won’t fit into a room in a care home, but deciding what, and what not to take, can be stressful. You can give yourself some space by thinking about some temporary storage. This will give you the chance to try out whatever items you’ve chosen to take without burning your bridges by giving away or selling all of your other things. Emotionally, too, it can give you time to consider what you are prepared to part with rather than the stark reality of parting with everything in one go.

The price of storage has come down considerably, with newer services like easyStorage are changing old models of self storage for cheaper options that additionally both collect and deliver back.  You can get a no-obligation quote, any time, day or night and it almost certainly costs a lot less than you imagine: Storage quote.

Be gentle with yourself. Moving into a care home comes with a lot of prejudice, internal and from others, so go gently. Go at your own pace, and with the love and understanding of people around you, it can be a really smooth transition towards a new, happier phase in life.

We at easyStorage hope you’ll find every happiness in your new home, and are here to help with your storage needs in any way that we can.

Latest popular posts
Discover the articles our readers are engaging with the most right now.

Self-Storage: A Beginner's Decluttering Solution in Becoming a Minimalist

If you are a late 20s adult, fast approaching to thirty, and thriving phase of your life who has been having a very chaotic world, I bet you probably thought of soul searching and even do a web research on how you can live peacefully, while still holding on for your dear life and fighting from the everyday struggle of being an adult. You have probably been hanging out most of the time in a bookstore, most specifically in the lifestyle section, searching for that one special book that might give you tips on how you can live your life in tranquility and reach that ultimate goal in living simply and satisfied. Well, folks, does it sound like I am speaking from experience?
Learn more →

The Real Cost of Self-Storage in London: Are You Overpaying for Storage

As the self-storage industry is becoming larger and larger every year, almost all of them have the same offerings to get customers' attention. There are an estimated 1,582 self-storage facilities in the UK, providing a total of approximately 45.6 million sq. ft. of storage space according to the 2019 survey conducted by Self-Storage Association UK (SSA UK). Out of all those storage places located in the UK alone, what are the chances of you finding the perfect one without overpaying for it?
Learn more →

Storage Unit Size Guide: How Much Space Do You Need

"One size fits all" doesn't always work in planning to rent a storage unit. You have to consider that your belongings are not uniform in size or dimensions. Some of them have awkward shapes and even a single item can really occupy a lot of space. Just like a piano. Even the number of each item you will store should be considered as well. You have to sort them out and decide how many of them should stay and how many should go. Feeling overwhelmed now?
Learn more →