In 2004, the American Journal of Psychiatry published results of a study that said chronic hoarders—people who seem to save things with more passion than the rest of us—have decreased activity in the parts of the brain used for decision making and problem solving. In other words, there may be a clinical reason why you can't decide what to keep and what to get rid of. That's why you need rules. With clothing, the rule is: If you haven't worn something for two years, it goes. With bills and paperwork, the rules vary depending on what you're looking at. ATM receipts need to be kept only until you receive that month's bank statement and verify that the numbers are correct. Tax returns have to be kept for years and years.
Here's a list to keep you straight. Make a copy of it, then tape the list to the inside top of your file box.
Keep as long as you have the underlying asset (such as a house or a car):
- Insurance policies
- Receipts for important purchases like technology, art, antiques, rugs, jewelry (or anything else you may need a rider on your insurance policy to cover)
- Receipts for renovations or other investments made in the property
- Titles
- Warranty papers
- Adoption papers
- Appraisals
- Birth certificates
- Citizenship papers
- Custody agreements
- Deeds
- Divorce papers
- Financial aid documents
- List of credit card numbers, bank and brokerage statements, and insurance policies, and toll-free contact information
- List of important contacts (lawyer, accountant, doctor, children, parents, etc.)
- Military records
- Powers of attorney (medical and financial)
- Stock certificates
- Wills/Living wills
- Credit card solicitations
- Marketing material included in bank and credit card statements
- ATM receipts
- Prospectuses and other information about investments you are considering making (if you're not going to read them, toss immediately)
- Receipts for purchases (assuming you're keeping them or there's no warranty)
- Bank statements
- Brokerage statements
- Cell phone, cable, telephone, and Internet statements (except when deducting for work-related expenses)
- Credit card bills
- Pay stubs
- Social Security statements
- Utility bills
- Child-care records
- Flexible spending account documentation
- 401(k) and other retirement-plan year-end statements
- IRA contributions
- Purchase records for investments
- Records of charitable donations
- Records on houses you've sold
- Tax returns and backup documentation
Bills in a Box continues…
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