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A parent’s just moved into care — must the house be cleared straight away?
The first week after a parent moves into a care home is one of the busiest many families ever face. There is a room to sort, a house to deal with, utilities and accounts to notify, and paperwork waiting in every drawer. And underneath all of it, the quiet weight of a situation no one really planned for.
Storage will not sort any of that for you. But it will stop the house clearance from happening before the family is ready. That matters more than it might sound.
This page is for the adult child managing the practical side of things. It covers what storage actually does for a family in this position, how the terms work, what to expect on the day, and how to get started without having everything figured out first.
When the house has to be cleared but the family is not ready

Most care home rooms hold a bed, one comfortable chair, a small chest of drawers, and a few personal items from home. A photograph on the windowsill. A familiar lamp. Maybe a small bookcase if the room is generous. That is roughly it.
Everything else, and in most cases that means a full house, needs somewhere to go.
Why a care room takes so little
The care home manager will tell you exactly what your parent’s room can hold and what is not permitted. That is always the right first call. What they will almost always say is that the room is smaller than expected, furniture tends to be provided by the home, and only a few meaningful personal items can come in.
That is not a policy designed to make things hard. It is a practical reality of a residential setting. But it does mean that a family coordinating a parent’s move is suddenly facing the contents of a three-bedroom house, or a two-bedroom flat, or a lifetime of accumulated things, and needing somewhere for all of it to go.
The belongings that need somewhere else to go
The furniture, the boxes of photographs, the books, the china your parent would be upset to lose, the papers in the filing cabinet that nobody has gone through yet. These are not things to skip into a bin. They are things that take time to think about properly.
Some will go to children or grandchildren. Some will be sold or donated when the moment is right. Some will turn out to matter more than anyone realised once the dust settles. But you cannot know which is which in the first fortnight. A storage unit gives those things a home while the family works it out.
The gap between the timeline and the family’s readiness
Care home moves rarely come with much notice. The house may need to be vacated before siblings have even had a chance to talk. That is where storage earns its place: not as a permanent solution, but as a bridge between the timeline the process imposes and the one the family actually needs.
What a storage unit actually changes about this process

A unit does not make the decisions for you. What it does is change when you have to make them.
Without somewhere to put things, a family’s sorting window is whatever days or weekends can be scraped together before the house must be cleared. With a storage unit, the sorting window becomes weeks or months. The emotional pressure drops. The conversations that need to happen can happen at a pace that is bearable rather than frantic.
Converting a deadline into a sorting window
Once the belongings are in the unit, the charity runs, the gifting to grandchildren, the things that end up going to auction, the things that come home with you in the end: all of that happens on a human schedule. You can come back to the unit on a Saturday morning, or a Tuesday afternoon, or whenever you and your siblings are ready to take the next box home.
That is the specific thing storage changes in this situation. Not the size of the task. The clock.
Keeping siblings and wider family in the loop
Families managing a care home move are rarely doing it alone. There is usually a sibling group, sometimes spread across different towns, each with their own sense of what should be kept and what should go. A storage unit gives everyone access to the same belongings, at a time that suits them, without any single person having to be the one who makes all the calls alone.
Wigwam units are individually alarmed and locked by you. You control who has the access details. That means the whole family can be involved in the sorting without anyone feeling bypassed.
Probate and estate matters at a pace that works
Some families need storage not just for weeks, but for months. If the family home is being sold, if there is an estate to settle, if probate is involved, the admin can run for a long time alongside the practical business of sorting belongings.
Wigwam’s terms support that. There is no fixed-year contract. Storage can run month by month for as long as the family needs.
A note on jurisdiction: estate administration and probate timelines in England and Wales are different from those in Scotland and Northern Ireland, where separate legal frameworks apply. This page does not give legal or probate advice. If you have questions about the estate, the right person to speak to is your solicitor.
How much space you will need

Most families overestimate this, which is worth saying out loud. The contents of a care home clear tend to feel enormous when you are standing in the middle of them, but they compress well into a properly sized unit.
Roughly speaking, the contents of a one-bedroom flat will fit into a small unit, and a three-bedroom house into a medium one. Those are genuinely rough guides. The right size depends on what is going in, how it is packed, and whether large furniture is included.
From a few boxes to a full house clearance
If you are storing the contents of a single room, or a flat, a smaller unit is often enough. If you are clearing a full family house including furniture, beds, sofas and wardrobes, a larger unit gives you room to move things around as the sorting progresses.
The team can help you work out a likely size once you have a sense of what you are storing. You do not need a precise inventory. A rough description of the property and what is going in is enough to get started. See the pricing page for indicative costs, and use the quote tool to get a proper recommendation for your situation.
What to do if you are not sure yet
You do not need to have this worked out before you call. The team has helped families through this kind of move before and can suggest a unit size based on a straightforward conversation. If you need more space further down the line, that can be arranged. Start with a quote at quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk and go from there.
Keeping heirlooms, antiques and important paperwork safe

Your parent’s belongings will be clean, dry and secure. That is a plain statement of what the units are, not a marketing phrase.
What the units are actually like
Every Wigwam unit is individually alarmed. You set the lock. Wigwam does not hold a key to your unit. Access is by smart entry, available from 6am to 10pm seven days a week, so the family can come and go on weekday afternoons, weekend mornings, or whenever works.
The units are clean and dry. That matters for paperwork, for photographs, for books, for clothing stored in boxes. It means your parent’s things are not sitting in a damp outbuilding or a garage susceptible to weather.
One thing to be clear about: Wigwam units are not climate controlled. If you are storing antique oil paintings, delicate wooden furniture, or other items sensitive to atmospheric changes, the unit will protect against theft and weather, but not against fluctuations in temperature or humidity. For anything you are particularly concerned about, take specialist advice.
A word on contents protection
Contents cover is required for everything stored with Wigwam. You have two options: take out the Wigwam RSA Self Storage Customers’ Goods policy, which is a New-for-Old policy with a £50 excess, or provide proof of your own cover.
Whichever route you take, declare the full replacement value of what you are storing. If something is claimed and the declared value was lower than the actual replacement cost, the settlement will be proportional. The RSA policy excludes climatic and atmospheric damage, which is worth knowing if the contents include items sensitive to humidity.
This is a signpost, not insurance advice. The full details are at wigwamstorage.co.uk/contents-protection/. For questions about insuring estate items or items you hold under a power of attorney, speak to your insurer or solicitor.
How long you can stay and what the terms look like

There is no lock-in here. The terms are designed to be honest and straightforward, which matters especially when a family is already managing a great deal.
Two-week minimum, then flexible month by month
The minimum stay is two weeks. After that, storage runs month by month with no fixed end date. Families often keep belongings in storage for several months while the estate is being settled, the house sale completes, or siblings find the right moment to come and collect things. The terms support that.
If the situation resolves sooner than expected and you empty the unit early, any unused days are refunded.
What happens when you are ready to leave
When the family is ready to close the unit, give 14 days’ notice. Once the unit is vacated and the account is settled, the deposit is returned. There are no hidden charges. The full terms are at wigwamstorage.co.uk/terms-conditions/, and the team is happy to walk you through them if anything is unclear.
Selina and the wider team are real people who answer the phone. The sites are unmanned, which means you access your own unit independently, but there is a team behind Wigwam who can answer questions about the terms, help with a unit size, or talk through the logistics of a move.
Ready to get a quote? Tell us roughly what you need to store and which market town is nearest, and the team will come back to you quickly. quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk
How the move works on the day

The logistics of a care home clear can feel complicated when everything is already emotionally charged. Here is what actually happens.
Coordinating a removals firm and the storage unit
Many families arrange a removals firm to clear the house and deliver straight to the storage unit. This works well, and is one of the most common ways families use Wigwam in this situation.
The sites are unmanned, so someone from your side needs to be present when the removals crew arrives. That might be you, a sibling, or another trusted person. Wigwam does not sign for deliveries or accept goods on a customer’s behalf. Book the removals van for a time that falls within access hours (6am to 10pm), and make sure whoever is meeting them has the access details for the unit.
Access hours and how smart entry works
Smart entry gives you access from 6am to 10pm, seven days a week. That is enough for a Saturday morning removals slot, a weekday afternoon sorting session, or an early start if you need to be somewhere else by midday. The family can visit as often as they need within those hours.
Say “smart entry” when you describe it to the removals firm. It is the same secure electronic access you would use yourself.
Finding storage near home

Wigwam operates across UK market-town locations, which means there is often a site close to either the parent’s old home or to wherever the coordinating sibling lives.
Wigwam Self Storage Bath serves families in Bath and the wider Somerset area, including those whose parents are moving into care homes around Bristol and north Somerset. Wigwam Self Storage Lincoln covers Lincolnshire and the surrounding area. Across the network, there are Wigwam locations in Cheltenham, Warminster, Dorking, Marlow, Leatherhead, Reading, Tewkesbury, Burton upon Trent, Bromsgrove and more.
For families coordinating between siblings in different towns, it is worth checking whether there is a Wigwam close to the parent’s old home, close to the care home, or close to wherever a sibling lives. The locations hub lists all sites.
Getting started when you are ready
You do not have to have everything figured out to take the first step.
You do not need to know the exact unit size. You do not need a precise inventory. You do not need to have decided how long you will need the storage for. A quote starts a conversation, and the team can help you work out the rest from there.
For an idea of likely costs, the pricing page gives a clear picture of how storage is priced across UK market towns.
When you are ready, or when the family is nearly ready, the team at quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk is there. There is no pressure and no rush. That is rather the point.
Frequently Asked Questions
Whose name should the unit be in if my parent has moved into care?
In almost every case the unit is rented in the name of the family member managing things, usually the adult child coordinating the move, rather than the parent. That is the practical reality when a parent has moved into care: they are unlikely to be visiting the unit, paying the account or dealing with the logistics, so the person doing all of that is the natural account holder. The account holder is the one who holds the smart-entry access, settles the account and gives notice at the end. If you are acting under a Lasting Power of Attorney for your parent, you may prefer to keep the storage clearly connected to their affairs, paying from their funds and recording it as part of managing their estate. That is a sensible way to handle it, but how you account for the cost, and whether it is paid from your parent’s money or your own, is a matter for you and your solicitor rather than for us. We simply need a named account holder who is responsible for the unit. Our team handles storage matters only, sizing, access, terms and invoicing, and cannot advise on power of attorney, estate accounting or what you may or may not do with a parent’s assets. For anything touching their finances or legal position, your solicitor is the right person. What we can do is provide a clear rental agreement and invoices, which is exactly the documentation that helps when you are keeping a record of how a parent’s affairs are being managed.
What happens to the stored belongings if my parent passes away while they are in storage?
The unit and its terms do not change, but the belongings become part of the estate, so the person dealing with probate takes over the decisions. This is a hard but common situation, and the honest answer is that storage is designed to give you exactly the breathing room it is needed at such a time. Mechanically, nothing dramatic happens to the unit. It continues on the same month-by-month basis with no fixed end date, so there is no scramble to clear it during an already difficult period. When the family is ready, the unit is cleared, 14 days’ notice is given, the account is settled and the deposit returned, just as it would be at any other time. The change is in who has authority over the contents. The belongings form part of the estate, and decisions about them sit with the executor or administrator handling probate. If the account holder and the executor are the same person, that is straightforward. If they are different people, it is worth making sure everyone is clear on who is authorising the clearance and the distribution of items. We cannot advise on probate, estate administration or the legal handling of a deceased person’s belongings, and timelines differ across UK jurisdictions, so your solicitor is the right person for that. What we can do is keep the unit secure and available for as long as the estate needs, and provide whatever documentation of the storage arrangement helps the probate file.
How can several siblings share access to the unit safely?
The account holder controls the access details and can share them with siblings, which lets everyone help with the sorting without anyone having to be the gatekeeper. The whole value of storage in a care-home move is that it turns a frantic deadline into a sorting window the family can work through at a human pace, and that only works if more than one person can get to the belongings. Practically, the unit is rented by one named account holder who holds the smart-entry access. That person can share the access details with siblings or other trusted family so they can visit on a Saturday morning or a weekday afternoon, within the 6am to 10pm access hours, to take the box that is theirs or to help with a charity run. A few sensible habits keep it calm. Agree as a family who is holding the account and who has the access details, so there is no confusion. Keep a shared list, even a simple note on a phone, of what has been taken and by whom, which heads off the most common source of friction when siblings are spread across different towns. And be mindful that the access credential is the key to the unit, so share it only with people the family trusts. We cannot mediate family disagreements about belongings, but we can make sure the access itself is simple, so the family’s energy goes into the decisions rather than the logistics.
Can we move to a smaller unit as we gradually clear the belongings?
Yes. As the sorting progresses and belongings leave the unit for children, grandchildren, charity or auction, it often makes sense to move down to a smaller, cheaper unit, and the team can help you arrange that. A care-home clearance usually starts large, a full house compresses into a medium or larger unit, and then steadily empties over the weeks and months as the family works through it. There is no sense in paying for space you are no longer using. When the contents have reduced enough that a smaller unit would comfortably hold what is left, speak to the team about availability and moving across. It is a practical step rather than a complicated one, though it does mean a moving session to shift the remaining items, so it is worth doing when there is a clear drop in volume rather than chasing every box. The terms support this kind of gradual wind-down: there is a two-week minimum at the start, then a month-by-month arrangement with no fixed end date, and unused days are refunded if you leave a unit early after giving notice. So the cost can taper as the task does. When you reach the point where only a few treasured boxes remain and they have found their permanent homes, you give your 14 days’ notice, clear the unit, and the deposit is returned once the account is settled. Storage shrinks to fit the job as the job shrinks.
What should I do with the paperwork and personal documents found during the clearance?
Keep the important documents with you, not in the unit, and handle the sensitive ones with care, because a house clearance always turns up paperwork that matters. As you sort, you will find things like the deeds, financial records, pension and insurance paperwork, the will, medical records, old correspondence and photographs. The practical rule is that anything legally or financially important, or anything the solicitor handling your parent’s affairs or estate might need, should come home with you and be kept safely to hand, rather than being boxed and put into storage where it is harder to reach. A storage unit is clean, dry and secure, which is a sound environment for boxes of older papers and photographs you want to keep but do not need regularly. But the live, important documents are better kept accessible. For sensitive material you are discarding, old bank statements, anything with account numbers or personal details, shred it rather than binning it whole, to protect your parent from identity theft. We cannot advise on what paperwork is legally significant or what you must retain, and questions about wills, probate or a parent’s financial affairs are for your solicitor. What we would gently suggest is that you separate paperwork into three piles early in the clearance: keep accessible, keep but store, and securely destroy. Doing that at the start saves hunting through stored boxes later for a document the solicitor suddenly needs.
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