depending on property size and contents. Quote in 60 seconds.
Discreet · CIR Level 1-5 assessment · Biohazard partners · Therapist & Wake APS coordination
Hoarding cleanouts in Raleigh are sensitive work. The Clutter Image Rating (CIR) framework runs Levels 1-5. We handle all five. Level 4-5 work coordinates with biohazard remediation partners who handle the biohazard portion first. Phased work. Family-coordinated. Discreet.
Wake County APS coordinates hoarding cases regularly. North Carolina's regulatory framework is light at the state level. The mild climate means Level 3-5 work can be scheduled year-round.
Hoarding cleanouts follow the Clutter Image Rating (CIR) framework — Levels 1-5, with 1 being normal clutter and 5 being severe (paths through the property only, biohazard concerns, structural integrity affected). We handle all five levels across the Research Triangle. Level 4-5 work coordinates with biohazard remediation partners (Servpro, Aftermath, Bio-One) who handle the biohazard portion first; we handle the volume cleanout after. Phased work where needed. Family-coordinated. Discreet.
Coordination with mental health professionals is common at Level 3+. the Research Triangle has established clinical infrastructure for hoarding disorder treatment, and we coordinate cleanouts as part of broader treatment plans — particularly when the resident is participating in the cleanout. The therapist coordinates the resident's involvement and decision-making; we execute the volume work. JRP runs route coverage across Wake, Durham, and Orange counties — the Research Triangle — with substantial volume from the fast-growing residential market.
Plus the surrounding Wake, Durham, Orange, Johnston counties. Coverage extends across the entire the Research Triangle area.
What's included in Raleigh whole-house & hoarding cleanouts
Pricing for whole-house & hoarding cleanouts in Raleigh is volume-based and typically falls within $2,475 – $14,800+. Three factors shift price within that range: (1) volume of contents (the biggest driver), (2) access difficulty (stairs, narrow hallways, no driveway access add labor time), and (3) special-handling items (pianos, hot tubs, safes, large appliances with refrigerant). We disclose these factors during the quote rather than after the job.
What's included in the price: labor, truck and disposal fees, donation routing to Goodwill Community Foundation Raleigh, Habitat for Humanity Wake County ReStores, The Salvation Army Raleigh, photo documentation, basic post-job cleanup. What's separately priced if applicable: hazardous waste handling (paint, chemicals, propane tanks), specialty items requiring extra equipment.
For same-day quotes, send a few photos via the form above or call (833) 543-2337. Most quotes ready within a business day.
Raleigh hoarding cleanouts price by CIR Level and property size. Range typically falls within $2,475 to $14,800+. Level 1-2 work runs the lower portion (similar to large estate cleanouts). Level 3-5 work runs the upper portion. Level 4-5 work typically adds $2,000-$10,000 for biohazard remediation handled by partners. We do an on-site assessment before quoting any Level 3+ job.
The Clutter Image Rating is a 5-level visual scale developed by the International OCD Foundation. Level 1 is normal clutter. Level 2 is moderate. Level 3 is substantial (some rooms unusable). Level 4 is severe (most rooms unusable, hygiene concerns). Level 5 is extreme (paths only, biohazard concerns, structural integrity affected). We use CIR to scope projects accurately and price predictably.
Yes, in coordination with biohazard remediation partners. Level 5 work typically involves biohazard concerns requiring EPA/OSHA-protocol remediation before standard cleanup crews can work safely. We coordinate with Servpro, Aftermath, Bio-One, and similar partners across the Research Triangle. We handle the volume cleanout after they've certified the property safe.
Yes, and we do this regularly. Raleigh-area clinical hoarding specialists, ICD-trained interventionists, and family therapists coordinate cleanouts as part of broader treatment plans. The therapist decides what level of resident participation is appropriate; we follow their lead on scope, pacing, and resident interaction.
We coordinate with Wake, Durham, Orange, Johnston County APS case workers regularly. APS-involved cases typically follow a different workflow than family-coordinated cases: APS sets the timeline and scope authority, the family is informed but doesn't decide, and the resident's participation depends on the case worker's assessment. We follow APS guidance throughout.
Discretion is core to how we operate hoarding work. Trucks are unmarked when requested. Crews wear plain work clothes (no JRP branding) when requested. Work happens during normal hours unless coordinated otherwise. We don't post job photos publicly or use them in marketing. The job stays between the family, the treatment team if involved, and us.
Level 3+ hoarding work commonly turns up valuable items hidden in clutter — cash, jewelry, photographs, important documents, occasionally firearms or controlled substances. Standard practice: items that might be valuable or sentimentally significant get set aside for family or treatment team review rather than disposed. We document everything. For firearms or controlled substances, we follow law enforcement and DEA protocols.
For Level 3+ situations, we do an on-site assessment before quoting. The assessment is free and confidential. Photos help us pre-assess severity.
Request a Raleigh assessment → Or call (833) 543-2337