This Professional Organizer Loves Tidying Up — and She Makes $150 an Hour

A woman poses inside an organized closet.
Tova Weinstock, also known as Tidy Tova, is a professional organizer, and she makes up to $150 an hour decluttering people's lives. Photo courtesy of Tidy Tova

Editor’s note: This post was originally published in 2016.

Tova Weinstock has been cleaning and organizing since she was a child.

“These are things I’ve been doing my entire life,” she says. “I love them. I did them when I was a kid in my friends’ houses, in my own house. I was that kid.”

In 2011, Weinstock was two years out of college and decided it was time to go back to school. She needed a day job with flexible hours while she took night classes, so she wrote a Facebook post declaring herself a “cleaning lady.”

In the years since, she’s morphed her job as a freelance house cleaner into a full-time gig as a professional organizer.

Today, she charges $150 an hour to help people organize their closets, pack and unpack during a move and, generally speaking, declutter their lives.

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Becoming a Professional Organizer

Weinstock’s first hint that organizing might be a viable career path came to her while she was cleaning apartments in New York.

“I was working for a young tech guy,” she explains. “He loved me. I refolded his whole closet and he was blown away. I looked in his closet and I couldn’t stand that the T-shirts were unfolded. My clients saw how passionate I was about cleaning and organizing and tidiness, and I think that helped them vouch for me when I made that transition.”

She launched her professional organizing company a little over three years ago and began building her client base through referrals and by sharing organization advice on her blog. She also writes about tidiness for various publications.

“Things have just snowballed,” she says.

Tidiness as a Philosophy

Weinstock typically works Sunday through Friday. Although she’s always thinking about how to build her brand (she also wants to write a book about organizing), she tries to take Saturdays off.

Because she works with the “chronically disorganized,” many of Weinstock’s jobs are booked somewhat last-minute.

Though her clients vary, many are women. Frequently, they’re young moms or pregnant women who are nesting and preparing for a baby. She often works with New Yorkers, but Weinstock says she’ll travel anywhere to work with a client, as long as they cover the cost.

Weinstock can spend a range of time with a client, from one long afternoon to several full days. Her average job is 10-12 hours long, but she also works with clients who want to declutter a specific area, which requires four to six hours of her time.

She’s also stayed over at a client’s home and worked for four days to complete a more intense project. She likes to work quickly and finish each job before she starts a new one.

“I work really, really quickly and hard, and I make my client work really hard to keep up with me,” she explains. “It’s a really intense two days for both of us.”

A woman folds clothes before putting the, in a drawer.
Weinstock conveys her own life philosophy to her clients: Simpler is better. She encourages her clients to live consciously and not to over-consume. Photo courtesy of Tidy Tova.

As odd as it may sound for business purposes, Weinstock’s goal is for a client never to need her services again. Working with the client, she assigns a home for every object in their home — yes, every object — and hopes they maintain that system after she leaves.

“I do have clients who I’ve been with for years call me back maybe every six months, which obviously is not the ideal because those clients are struggling to maintain those systems and just that mindset that I try to encourage,” she says.

“But it’s also behavior modification and it could literally take years to make [being organized] second-nature. That doesn’t happen overnight.”

Weinstock explains that many of her clients are really looking for a lifestyle change — one involving fewer material goods, less clutter and less time spent looking for things.

She tries to convey her own life philosophy to them: Simpler is better.

“I do try to encourage people to move forward consciously, not like they used to,” she says.

“And to not over-consume. I really think that’s a terrible thing for the environment and just for people’s physical spaces and head spaces. I tell them to maybe consider getting rid of something every time they bring something new into their home.”

Weinstock says she works side-by-side with clients to figure out the best way to organize their belongings. Together, they work systematically through the space, making sure to purge anything the client deems unnecessary. They talk about how frequently the client uses an item before deciding where to store it.

“I am good at reading clients’ interactions with their things and encourage them to let go of items that they clearly don’t use or feel bogged down by,” she adds.

The World Needs More Organization

The before and after photo of an organized play area.
Weinstock took a disorganized play area and tided it up for a client. Photo courtesy of Tidy Tova

There’s a unique need for a professional organizer in New York City, where space is hard to come by, but Weinstock said she believes her trade is necessary everywhere, including parts of the country where homes are larger and storage more plentiful.

“If you live in a New York City apartment and you try to pretend it’s the size of a suburban home, then you’re going to battle your belongings every single day,” she explains.

“It’s a conversation I have with clients. ‘If you don’t have room for all of this stuff, it is weighing you down, it is bringing negative energy into your life.’”

Weinstock’s apartment, as she describes it, is immaculate. She can’t remember a time when she left dirty clothes on the floor — it’s just not in her nature.

“Everything has a home and everything is always in its home,” she says. “I don’t have a lot of stuff. I don’t like having a lot of stuff. My closet is by no means bursting. I tell my clients that I’m not OCD but I know where all of my things are at all times. I never look for things.”

When she visits a friend’s apartment, Weinstock says they always remark on how embarrassed they are if their place is untidy.

No need to worry, she reassures them.

“Tidy notices but she doesn’t judge,” Weinstock says of herself. “I’m very aware of my surroundings but I truly don’t judge. I understand that people struggle with being organized.”

Sarah Kuta is a contributor to The Penny Hoarder.