Successfully buying a new house means you’ve passed home inspection, applied for a mortgage, and paid the house cost in full. Big congratulations to you. However, it’s not time to relax, there’s more work to do! Relocating from your former apartment to your new home can be a nerve-wracking process, unlike the challenging process of buying a house. But, not to worry, as our checklist for moving into a new home will ease the workload. You can also learn what to consider when choosing a moving service to make your move as smooth as possible.

Look through the New Space

The first thing on our checklist for moving out of home is conducting a thorough walkthrough. Before settling, you’ll want to look around the house to ensure that everything you’ll need for comfortable living is in place. So, drive down to your new apartment, check if there are any maintenance repairs left to do, ensure that your electric appliances like the switches, and lighting unitw are also fully functional. You also want to make sure that every item included in the sales promotion is within your reach.

If after checking the apartment you find some issues that fall short of the sales contract, make sure to contact your realtor for further inquiries. Sometimes, you may find other maintenance and repair issues not stated in the contract. It’s best to cover all pressing repairs before deciding when to move. Engaging the needed equity maintenance on time will save you the cost of expensive future repairs.

Prioritize Your Child’s and Pets Safety

Your kids and pets can easily sustain injuries when repair and maintenance issues are flagged as unnecessary. To prevent future home accidents, you’ll want to focus your time on finding solutions to outstanding repairs. Likewise, you’ll want to make sure that every home furnishings you intend to use at home won’t cause home accidents. Get rid of sharp items on the walls, cover open circuits, switch and lighting fixtures, and make sure the floorings are waterproof to avoid slipping.

Make an Unpacking Plan

Next on our checklist for moving into another home is to make an unloading plan. Unpacking your boxes and finding a suitable location for your items can be extremely difficult. So, before the move, you’ll want to figure out a great unpacking strategy to make the workload easy. A step like this will mostly lift the burden of unpacking large and heavy home fixtures. The best part, even with this plan of attack, you can always restyle your home in the future. However, sticking with an unpacking plan will generally make the task of moving easy. If you think the unpacking task would be too stressful, hire pack and unpack movers.

Set up Must-Have Functions

A smart move every homeowner should make before moving is setting up your needed daily utilities. Doing so will make your days in your new home as comfortable as your previous apartment.

The downside, every neighborhood differs in its type of service provider. Before connecting your home’s must-have essential utilities, make sure to learn about your new local server provider terms and conditions. Research the process of residence verification and when to schedule your utilities.

Locate Necessary Functions

Whether your apartment is brand new or not, it’s still a new change for you. So, it’s necessary you know how every function work. First, locate essential functions like the carbon monoxide and smoke detectors are placed. Knowing where these functions are will assist you in better protecting your family in a new environment they are not familiar with.

Once you’ve located the positions of these fixtures, you’ll want to make sure they’re fully functional. If you find some of these items needing repairs, then engage professional technicians to fix them. Sometimes, when they’re not working effectively, they may simply need battery replacements or even total unit replacements. Find the possible solutions to these items as soon as possible to prevent home accidents.

Another function you want to locate is the circuit breaker box and the emergency shut-offs. These fixtures can be confusing as they almost look similar. So, make sure to label these boxes to know which of the functions work in every part of the home.

Set up Home Security

When you purchase a new apartment, a most vital fixture you need to consider is updating your home security. Leaving previous locks and codes to existing security systems might put you in danger of burglary, especially as you’re unfamiliar with the environment. You may even find friends or relations of the previous home occupants coming into your home unannounced.

If your unpacking schedule seems too tight to quickly replace locks, check around the house to see if you’ll find any spare keys to the door. Get your hands on the existing lock manual, learn how to change the existing code, and move on to set a new code only you and your family will know.

In some cases, the sales contract may state that your new home comes with a security lock. So, research the existing service provider and plan a reconnection service. If not, get a completely new set of locks and security systems.

Deep Clean

Do you know how dusty and dirty it can be when using an empty container? That’s what moving into a new space will fill like. So, stock cleaning supplies to help you disinfect and keep the new space dust-free. Deep clean every corner of the room from the sitting area to the dining, kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, and wardrobe. If you’ve got a patio, you need to clean it as you’ll most likely spend most of your evenings outside.

Update Home Address

If you’ve already scheduled a meeting with your post office to update home address, then you’re on the right part. If you haven’t done so, now’s the time to quickly make the change.  Apart from the post office, you also want to notify loves ones of change in address. Contact other service providers like your bank, health care provider, subscription centers, and anything else that connects your bills to your address.

Explore the Community

So, you’re relocating to a place you have no friends or relations and no familiarity with the environment. For this reason, you want to check the neighborhood months or weeks before relocating. Get to know where the health centers, grocery stores, gas stations, spas, schools, fire departments, police offices, and hardware stores are located.

Conclusion

The stress of getting a new apartment doesn’t end there, you’ll also have to consider how to move your belongings to the new living space. Hopefully, our checklist for moving into a new house will help you make the task easy.