Family guidance

Helping someone with hoarding disorder starts with trust.

When someone you love is living with unsafe clutter, it is normal to feel scared, angry, guilty, or helpless. The next step still needs to protect the relationship as much as possible.

Start here

The first goal is not to win an argument about the house.

Family members often search for "help for hoarders" because they do not know what else to call the situation. We prefer people-first language because the person is not the problem.

The real goal is to reduce danger and isolation without making the person feel cornered. A loved one who feels attacked may hide more, avoid calls, refuse access, or become more fearful of accepting help.

The Peer Tree helps supporters slow down, choose careful language, identify safety priorities, and decide what kind of outside support may be useful.

A warm home entryway with shoes, folded blankets, and a plant.

A safer approach

What family members can do first.

Name one specific concern

Start with a concrete safety issue: blocked exits, fall risk, fire hazards, utilities, pests, sanitation, or access for emergency help.

Ask before acting

Secretly throwing items away can confirm the person's fear that help is unsafe. Ask, listen, and look for an agreed next step.

Lower the size of the ask

"Clean the whole house" may feel impossible. One pathway, one chair, one document stack, or one appointment may be enough to begin.

What to avoid

Pressure can protect the property while losing the person.

Do not lead with shame

Words like lazy, dirty, selfish, or crazy usually make the person feel less safe and less willing to engage.

Do not threaten unless safety requires action

Threats may create temporary movement, but they can also break trust. When safety truly requires action, keep the language specific and calm.

Do not make everything urgent

If every room, box, and item is treated like a crisis, the person may shut down. Prioritize safety first.

Do not carry this alone

Supporters need support too. Guidance can help you stay compassionate without losing your own health, boundaries, or stability.

How The Peer Tree can help

Guidance for loved ones who want to help carefully.

Communication Support

Talk through what to say, what not to say, and how to raise safety concerns without making the person feel reduced to the condition of the home.

Boundary Planning

Clarify what you can offer, what you cannot carry, and how to remain steady without taking over the person's life.

Supporter Groups

Connect with other loved ones who are also learning how to help without harm.

Explore group support

Next-Step Planning

Decide whether the best next step is a conversation, a support session, sorting help, safety planning, or another pathway.

Request support

Common questions

Questions families often ask.

How do I help if they refuse help?

Start smaller. Keep the relationship open, name one safety concern, avoid secret cleanouts, and ask what kind of help would feel least threatening.

Should I clean when they are not home?

Usually no. Surprise cleanouts can cause fear, grief, anger, and deeper resistance. Safety emergencies may require different action, but that should be handled carefully.

Can I contact you even if my loved one is not ready?

Yes. Supporters can reach out for guidance, language, boundaries, safety planning, and a better understanding of what may help.

Is this only for severe hoarding?

No. Early support can prevent isolation, family conflict, property risk, and overwhelm from becoming harder to address.

You do not have to have the whole plan

Start with what feels hardest right now.

Tell us what is happening, what you are worried about, and what conversations have already been tried. We can help you think through the next step.