The kitchen is usually the room people dread most when packing for a residential move. It holds more items in more shapes and sizes than anywhere else in the house — fragile glassware, heavy pots, sharp knives, and bulky appliances all living side by side. Add in a refrigerator full of food and a pantry that’s been building up for years, and the challenge becomes real.
The good news: a little strategy goes a long way. Here’s how to pack your kitchen efficiently without ending up with broken plates or a box of mystery items you can’t identify later.
Start by Clearing Out What You Don’t Need
Before diving into packing mode, take some time to review what you have. Go through your cabinets and drawers. Check the pantry for expiration dates and toss anything past its prime. Pull out duplicate tools, gadgets you haven’t touched in years, and chipped mugs that have outlived their welcome. According to Today’s Homeowner, decluttering before packing the kitchen is one of the highest-value steps you can take. Fewer items mean less packing time and a cleaner setup in your new home.
Gather the Right Supplies
Packing paper is your best tool in the kitchen. Avoid using newspapers, as the ink can transfer to dishes. You’ll want bubble wrap for stemware and glassware, sturdy medium boxes for plates and cookware, and smaller boxes for canned goods and pantry items (heavy items in small boxes are much easier to carry). Dish divider kits are worth the small extra cost for protecting glasses during transit.
Pack the Least-Used Items First
Holiday bakeware, specialty appliances, serving platters for large gatherings — box these up first. Work your way toward everyday items, leaving your daily coffee maker, a few plates, and basic utensils out until the last possible moment. You still need to eat during the week before the move.
How to Handle Plates and Glasses
Wrap each plate individually with packing paper, then stand them vertically inside the box — the same way records or vinyl sit in a crate. Plates packed flat are more vulnerable to breaking under weight. For glasses and stemware, use dividers and wrap each piece before placing it in the cell. Mark these boxes as fragile on the top and all four sides.
Pots and pans can nest together to save space, but put a layer of packing paper between each piece to prevent scratching. Wrap the glass lids separately.
Prep Your Appliances
Clean your appliances before packing them — moving a greasy toaster oven into a box is a mess you don’t want to deal with. Secure cords with twist ties or tape them to the appliance. If you kept the original boxes, use them — they’re engineered for exactly this purpose. For your refrigerator, plan to defrost and clean it 24 to 48 hours before moving day. Disconnect any water lines the day before if your fridge has an ice maker.
Pack Your Essentials Box Last
Set aside one box — clearly labeled — with the items you’ll need for your first couple of days in the new home: a pot, a pan, a few plates and utensils, dish soap, coffee supplies, and snacks. Pack this box last so it comes off the truck first. It’s a small thing that makes a big difference when you’re tired and hungry after a long moving day.
Think About Your Pantry
Perishables are tricky. Plan meals in the final two weeks to use up what you have. For non-perishables you won’t use before the move, consider donating them to a local food pantry in the Lehigh Valley or the Poconos rather than hauling them across the state. For any long-distance move, it’s often smarter to leave canned goods behind than pay to transport them.
Professional Packers, Total Peace of Mind
Not sure you want to tackle the kitchen yourself? AAA Moving offers full and partial packing services to take that job off your plate entirely. Contact us today for a free estimate — and let our experienced team handle the heavy lifting from start to finish.
