Hoarding disorder support

Support can begin before a cleanup ever happens.

Hoarding disorder support should start with dignity, safety, trust, and the person living inside the situation. The first step may be a conversation, a plan, a group, or one small area that feels possible.

People first

The problem is visible. The person is still the starting point.

Hoarding disorder is often misunderstood as laziness, stubbornness, or a simple refusal to clean. That framing usually makes things worse.

For many people, clutter is tied to grief, fear, identity, responsibility, scarcity, trauma, decision fatigue, or the sense that letting go is unsafe. The Peer Tree does not treat the home like a project that can be fixed by rushing past the person.

Our work is peer-led and practical. We help people slow the overwhelm, name what is most urgent, protect safety, and build next steps that can actually be sustained.

A calm room with daylight through an open window.

What support can include

Different situations need different starting points.

Peer Support Sessions

One-on-one conversations for people who feel stuck, ashamed, overwhelmed, or unsure how to begin. The goal is not pressure. The goal is a next step that feels possible.

Sorting and Organizing Help

Gentle decision-making support for areas, categories, paperwork, pathways, or priority rooms. Nothing leaves without consent and understanding.

Support Groups

Peer-led groups and workshops can reduce isolation, build accountability, and help people practice change without shame.

Friends and Family Guidance

Supporters often need help too. We help loved ones communicate, set boundaries, notice safety risks, and avoid approaches that damage trust.

When to reach out

You do not need to wait until the situation is severe.

When starting feels impossible

If the person wants change but freezes, avoids, or shuts down, support can begin with one small, respectful step.

When family conflict is growing

If conversations keep turning into arguments, supporters may need a better way to talk about safety, trust, and boundaries.

When cleanup alone is not enough

A cleanout may address the property, but ongoing support helps protect momentum after the immediate crisis passes.

Related guides

Find the path that fits your situation.

For friends and family

Learn how to help someone affected by hoarding disorder without leading with shame, threats, or surprise cleanouts.

Read the family guide

For group support

Explore peer-led hoarding support groups, workshops, and online support pathways through The Peer Tree and Unburied.

Explore support groups

Common questions

Questions people often ask before reaching out.

Is this therapy?

No. The Peer Tree provides peer support, education, and practical assistance. It is not clinical treatment, diagnosis, crisis response, or emergency support.

Do I need a diagnosis?

No. You can reach out about hoarding disorder, chronic disorganization, clutter overwhelm, safety concerns, or family stress even without a formal diagnosis.

Will you force a cleanout?

No. We do not support surprise cleanouts or removing items without consent. Safety matters, but trust matters too.

Can this work alongside therapy?

Yes. Peer support and practical assistance can sit alongside therapy, medical care, community support, or other services when those are part of the person's life.

Start simply

One conversation is enough to begin.

Tell us what is going on and what feels hardest right now. We can help you think through the next practical step.