8 Important Documents You Should NEVER Throw Away

Photo by New Africa from Shutterstock

Sometimes we throw important things away without checking them first. For example, you may discard some personal papers along with an old notebook. Grab your glasses and always pay attention to what you want to throw in the trash.

Being patient when you clean and declutter is the best thing to do if you don’t want a massive headache. After selecting the good from the “bad” ones try to keep your papers organized—this way you’ll have immediate access to any important documents you may need in the future.

“Organizing your financial documents allows you to reduce your paperwork clutter and gain control of your financial life,” says Tony Steuer, an authority on financial literacy and author of GET READY! A Step-by-Step Planner for Maintaining Your Financial First-Aid Kit.

“Being able to quickly find your important documents will help you during major life events, such as when you apply for a loan, meet with your estate planning attorney, or are forced to leave your house in an emergency,” he added.

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25 thoughts on “8 Important Documents You Should NEVER Throw Away”

    1. It’s nice to see you want to save these 8 items but your site can’t be reached. It looks Iike this site is taking me all over the place and nothing is about the 8. nfo may be good but

  1. I wish I would have kept my 1988 tax forms because Social Security went back 31 years when I applied for disability and was granted in 2019. Since I couldn’t prove I made the amount that was on Social Security Statement for that year by not saving that years paperwork, Social Security cut that amount in half which affects my monthly disability payments. IRS doesn’t keep records for that long either
    So I suggest people should save their tax records till death then family members can dispose of them then.

  2. Credit card company and banks are going to monthly e-statements online. If a relative passes away, how do survivors know where the relative’s assets and liabilities are? When my Mom passed away, the survivors figured her assets and liabilities from “paper” statement mailed to her home address. I asked this question to several banks and CC companies and even the federal regulators, and there were no aaceptable response at all. They implied that is not their problem and this is a problem of the family to make arrangement. I therefore insist on paper statements.

  3. I would add employment records, especially government employment. I worked for OPM and discovered they did not have my unused sick leave from previous service. I had paper copies from 20 years before and they restored my leave. BTW, it saved my life. I was able to retire one year earlier because of this. 30 days later, I suffered a 5-way heart bypass at home and was rushed to a life-savinh hospital. Without early retirement, I would probably have been on a c9mmuter bus, stuck in traffic, not a good Outlook.

  4. Michael B. Krowitz Jr.

    Great advice and the timing was helpful for those of us who already keep these things but do not know when we can shred the physical copies.

  5. I visited Kruger National Park about 1970 when i was young wiith a few friends. Nobody went there then. We had to stay in a thatched hut. We had to be back within the big gate before dark It was wild and wonderful!

  6. Excellent advice. I have maintained every document/record you mentioned here. Where I fail is not having everything in one place. Thank you not only confirming that I am on the right track with what documents should be kept but also giving me a wake up call as to being proactive in having a centralized system.

  7. This could be a good article with vital information. But WHY do we have go to 500 pages for the information. Why can’t it just be one article, single page form.
    Dare to be different, go back to the old format!!!!!!!!

  8. you forgot car titles, military records (DD214),wills trust documents, digital records (passwords,pins) ,deeds
    and critical-tell Family members WERE ARE ALL THESE DOCUMENTS!
    and safe deposit box? NO difficult to access upon death of box owner- need at least a death certificate and more to open (and where is key?)

  9. William Rivera

    Ever since we married in 1975 my wife and I been filing joint tax returns. now I got a letter (supously) from IRS saing that she own taxex from 2006. In 2006 she was not working (we sold our Landscaping business in 2001). We always had our taxes done by a licenses CPA. She pass away last year in July 2024 and now I’m getting this letter only on her name (even we always file joint returns). What is your advise?

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