this post was submitted on 16 Aug 2024
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[–] Sharkwellington@lemmy.one 12 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Since we're talking about mail:

What do I do with my old bills/insurance statements/etc? I have executive dysfunction and I just can't find a simple method that works for me. It all ends up in a pile and every few months I pitch the whole thing and promise myself to do better next time. Perhaps there's an app, website, or program I should just digitize them into?

[–] gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com 15 points 2 months ago

You're super likely to not need them yourself, the companies you've dealt with will likely have their records digitized for the 7 required years (or more)

Keep them for 1-6 months to make sure no funny business happens (I've caught my ISP pulling bullshit and proved it with my last 6 bills kept) and then shred them and you'll be fine

Oh, and try to get anything you can sent to an email with privacy, then they come digitized and can be kept forever with no real effort

[–] hungprocess@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 2 months ago

I was in the same boat and wound up buying a scanner and installing Paperless. Scanner sends the files to my network drop box, Paperless picks them up from the drop box and digitizes them. I finally got rid of like an entire garbage bag of old pay stubs and stuff that I had been hoarding.

[–] mdd@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago

I have a filing cabinet with one drawer for hanging folders. Everything gets sorted and put in there. When a folder gets too fluffy I will pull it out and shred old stuff.

I could probably get rid of a lot but this method does come in handy occasionally. Most recently were my 2023 taxes which I filed in July (I had an extension). I yanked the 2023 file and immediately had 90% of my donations and medical expenses.

If you need it, put it in a folder and store it somewhere safe. But you really don't need 99% of it.

I have a safe with some cash and two folders:

  • important, official documents - birth certificate, passport, etc
  • potentially important financial stuff - tax returns, mortgage papers, etc

I definitely need the first, I will probably never need the second.