Anonymous wrote:There are people who will come and take stuff to sell on eBay, FB marketplace etc for a % of the sales price. There are some fairly new tax regs and if you sell over I believe $600 or $699 you will get a 1099. Would your mother be open to the idea that a tax deduction might be better (if she itemizes)? Depending on her expectations and your budget, the least stressful thing may be just doing as you suggested, get rid of it and tell her it sold for whatever amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much stuff? Like a few boxes or a hundred boxes?
100 boxes. Clothes, collectibles, some furniture (nice, antique, but not in style).
Anonymous wrote:There are people who will come and take stuff to sell on eBay, FB marketplace etc for a % of the sales price. There are some fairly new tax regs and if you sell over I believe $600 or $699 you will get a 1099. Would your mother be open to the idea that a tax deduction might be better (if she itemizes)? Depending on her expectations and your budget, the least stressful thing may be just doing as you suggested, get rid of it and tell her it sold for whatever amount.
Anonymous wrote:Estate sales companies will handle this but you make very little money. My girlfriend made around $2000 during the 4 day estate sale at her house. Her house was chock full of furniture and stuff.
The people traipsing through her house dirtied the carpets.
I don't think it was worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not in the DMV but wanted to comment that it helps to find certain types of charities.
We had luck giving brown wood furniture and unable to be sold oriental rugs to a charity that helps poor people furnish entire homes for free. It's like a Goodwill that doesn't charge. People can come and pick out an entire apartment worth of stuff.
The other place where we had luck was a single outlet charity store in an area where people go antiquing. They were more interested in small brown wood pieces.
The world has truly changed. You could furnish an entire Boomer house for pennies on the dollar.
This has been devastating for some people of that generation. The deal was that you saved up and bought what was considered high end, and it was supposed to have lasting value. Many cannot compute that nobody wants the china sets or heavy furniture that they worked so hard to afford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't you donate and trash? So much of it will be nearly impossible to sell. The amount of free time you put into trying to sell it will cost you far more than any money you make. Donate, but don't donate stuff with holes or in terrible condition.
This goes really deep for hoarders, though. They are invested heavily in the idea that this stuff has value, and they will be able to take some pride in being savvy and making money from buying low (or not throwing away) and selling for profit.
If that's not true, then they were just living surrounded by trash that nobody wants, making roaches and dry rot more likely, and leaving a mess for other people instead of bestowing them with a valuable gift. If that's true, then everyone who criticized them was right. They will die on that hill, PP, because they can't bear it.
Hoarding is its own peculiar mental illness with some aspects of OCD, but that's not equivalent. It has elements of what you see with addiction disorders, too. Lack of insight is one of the features, but it's not just a lack -- it's a dogged commitment to resisting the truth as well. Part of the disorder.
Anonymous wrote:^^ This poster had a good idea. A family at your church had a fire and they need EVERYTHING. Drive it away and donate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Estate by Gail.
In Iowa? Are you going to send breakable junk there?