
The last thing I expected when I trained to be a lifeguard in my teenage years was that it would later help me to keep my home neat and organized. However, the lifeguard scanning method has become key to catching clutter.
The L-scanning method involves scanning an area back and forth quickly and taking in the fine details. In lifeguarding, it ensures you spot anyone in trouble. In my home, it allows me to quickly evaluate items that are in the wrong places.
I might not be saving lives anymore, but this decluttering method certainly saves me from feeling overwhelmed – here’s how.
The lifeguard scanning method for clutter
The L-scanning method is simple, even if it does make you look like a bobble-head. It involves moving your head actively in an L-pattern to cover a large area quickly.
Usually, the scan takes 10 seconds, ensuring you can reach an incident in 20 seconds, but it doesn't have to be this rapid when you're just using it at home.
The rapid scanning method allows me to move my eyes over every part of a room, actively looking out for things that are ‘out of the ordinary’.
While this used to be swimmers showing signs of difficulty in the water, it is now mundane items in the most cluttered areas of a home, such as shoes that have been left out, cables that haven't been put away, or mail that has been left, so I can quickly reduce visual clutter in my entryway.
I regularly use this approach to tidy up at the end of the day as part of my closing-shift routine, to avoid losing control of clutter and maintain a tidy home.
However, it is also a great method to try if you need to get your home guest-ready in under one hour, for example, and need to declutter quickly.

With the scan complete (I usually do two passes over my room to catch everything), I gather everything up together and then walk around my home putting them back where they belong.
If you want to keep things simple, you can pair this scanning method with something like the 1-2-3-4-5 method, moving only five things to instantly make a room look more put together, or the ‘Take Away 10’ method, to move ten items back to their homes.
For items that need to be moved to other rooms, I use my folding laundry basket, similar to the Joseph Joseph 35-Liter Collapsible Laundry Basket from Wayfair, to transport them all in one go. This way, if I am feeling motivated, I can scan other rooms using the lifeguard scanning method and collect items from there to be put away, too.
Why this method works

This systematic visual search pattern ensures that you cover a large area thoroughly, limiting distractions so that your eyes do not dart around and miss anything. This tidying technique I actually use at home might seem a bit over the top – we are not, after all, on a poolside saving lives, but using it often to stay on top of daily mess is a great way to avoid tidying when you feel overwhelmed.
It is also helpful in achieving a true sense of calm at home, adds Elizabeth Lulu Miranda, home organizer and owner of Mercury Organizing. She explains, ‘A tidy home doesn’t just benefit your body – it also promotes peace of mind. The process of organizing and decluttering can reduce stress held in the body, lower anxiety, and clear your thoughts. When your space is orderly, it’s easier to focus, make decisions, and feel calm. This sense of tranquility can inspire self-care and help you maintain a healthier lifestyle, both mentally and physically.’
What to shop
This scanning method can also help you to spot areas that need dusting or cleaning. Keeping some reusable microfiber cloths to hand make tackling these areas quick and easy.
I love my collapsible laundry basket. I use it for everything from laundry day to decluttering. The fact it folds down means I can store it easily behind my dresser in between uses so it is not always in the way.
Under-furniture storage is a great tool for hiding essential everyday items without making a room look really messy. Don't limit them to under your bed; use them under sofas, too, to keep throw blankets tucked away where you use them most.
Meet the expert
If you like the idea of working systematically across a room to catch and collect clutter, you might also like the Ski-Slope organizing method, which involves moving back and forth across a room collecting items that need to be moved elsewhere in a basket until you reach the door, before putting everything away.
I tried this approach a few years ago and still use it to sort through chaotic rooms and restore order.