Once you have exchanged contracts, you should be looking to set a moving date, which will usually be your completion date. When you have a moving date you can then start the process of booking a removal company. Try and avoid Fridays, weekends and Bank Holidays as these are the days when the roads are busier and removal firms are in higher demand. Booking a mid-week move may mean you have more options with your choice of removal companay, and it may even be cheaper than a peak booking.
When looking for a removal company always turn to the professionals. The British Association of Removers (BAR) or the National Guild of Removers and Storers (NGRS) will be able to supply names of approved members in your area. They operate within the terms of a code of practice and offer an independent conciliation and arbitration service in case of complaint. You may find cheaper options but the service may not be to the same standard and you may not have any way to complain or receive any refunds in the event of the move not going as planned.
As well as looking for professional removal companies, look for firms that can be recommended by friends or relatives. A company may look and sound good, but ultimately you need to judge them on the actual service that they provide.
Once you have decided on a removal company, make sure that your possessions are covered by insurance during the move. Some removal companies may offer this, it may cost extra, but otherwise you will need to make arrangements yourself. This may seem like an extra cost and although the removal company will be as careful as possible, accidents do happen and items can get broken or damaged. When you have found insurance, or if it is offered by the removal company, check what is covered and what is not so that you can make any additional arrangements.
Before you move into your new home, either visit it in advance and give it a good clean or arrange for it to be cleaned professionally, before your possessions arrive. Your removal company may able to arrange this, or provide details of companies that offer this service. This means that when you move into your new home it will be thoroughly clean and you can concentrate on unpacking rather than cleaning up.
Start packing your belongings well in advance and get rid of any old clutter that you no longer need. If you forgot you had it or never use it then chances are you don't need it. Getting rid of clutter gives you more room in your boxes for things you really want and stops your new home from being full of clutter as soon as you move in.
If you have children or pets then try and arrange for someone else to look after them on the day of the move so that you can concentrate on the move itself and not be distracted or worried by where they are or what they are doing. With pets, get new address tags made up in advance so that if they go missing or get lost they can easily be traced to their new home.
If someone else is moving into your old home then think about creating a file of things they may need to know about their new home and the local community. Leave things like instructions manuals for any appliances you are leaving and for the boiler etc. Also leave a note of important details such as when the bins or any recycling is collected, plus if milk can be delivered and anything else you think would be helpful.
You should make up a plan of your new home and give it to your removal company so that they know where things should be going at the other end of the move. Mark all boxes too with where they should be going to make the process a whole lot smoother and easier for all involved. Also make an inventory of everything that is going to be moved so that you can easily identify any items that may go missing during the move.
Give plenty of notice to cancel any deliveries such as newspapers and milk, and arrange for your post to be redirected to your new home.
Finally, collect up all the keys for your old home from your family, friends and relatives ready to hand them over to the estate agent or landlord for the new occupiers to collect.
Slaughter House Move On
It is very rare for both parties in a relationship to get the moving bug at the same time and after months of badgering one or the other will back down. Amid resentment and irritation the house will go on the market, you will both emotionally and mentally uproot yourselves from your home and, already feeling like a nomad, let the tension begin.
If it's the female party that has decided a move is on the cards, every weekend will be filled with a flurry of housecleaning to make a good impression on prospective buyers. The male party will find himself railroaded into all those little jobs on the exterior of the house which would normally have got left until they were forgotten about. This is partly due to the female wanting to express good 'kerb appeal' and partly due to her wanting the male out from under her feet so she can get the house ship shape.
How come she couldn't make the house look like this when you just lived there? How come the weekends once involved climbing over piles of washing and old papers and avoiding each other's grumpiness and now the grumpiness has taken a turn for the worse in a regular cleaning frenzy?
Shopping for a new home is always fraught with difficulties. You want room for a snooker table and she wants a bigger kitchen. In the end, you compromise. She gets the bigger kitchen and you get a shed at the bottom of the garden.
So, you get to that point when the house is sold. You have accepted an offer and the packing begins. You want to make things easier so you find a removal company together. It now comes to light that you really should have designated jobs to do when moving house because anything that requires joint decisions is fuel for a fight.
Her indoors wants the pristine clean, hunky removal men and you want a removal company that are simply going to get everything to your destination with all your furniture in one piece, preferably before you grow old and die.
Amid a conversation over which removal company to use, point out some insignificant bit of dust that she's missed, such as the top of the doorframe and in your other half's panic to clean to a shine, you will get the opportunity to ring the removal company of your choice and book it all before she puts down her jay cloth.
Pick a removal company that will supply packing boxes. There is nothing worse than trawling the supermarkets begging for old boxes before they get crushed. Once your boxes are delivered be prepared for the utter shock when you realise just how much stuff you have accumulated over the years.
Be ruthless. If you haven't used it for a year, what is the point in keeping it? More to the point, what is the point in paying a removal company to drag it all to the new house and having to unpack it all over the following months just to have it sit there, unused, for another month?
Be sneaky and be clever. Let the female see all that stuff you have to move! She won't want it all in her new kitchen so she will feel the need for a bigger house to accommodate it. When she's out scrubbing the plants to a pristine shine to impress the viewers, dispose of all that stuff secure in the knowledge that you'll have a place big enough for that snooker table after all!
Both Chris Marshall & Catherine Harvey are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Chris Marshall has sinced written about articles on various topics from Health, Anger Control and Credit Cards. .. Chris Marshall's top article generates over 49500 views. to your Favourites.
Catherine Harvey has sinced written about articles on various topics from Culture and Society, Home and Wedding Gowns. Relationship expert Catherine Harvey looks at how to choose a to ease the stress of moving house.. Catherine Harvey's top article generates over 1500000 views. to your Favourites.
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