Here's the work that fills most weeks. If the job's around the house and reasonable for a handyman, it's almost certainly a yes — and if it isn't, you'll hear that straight.
Holes, cracks, popped nails, water stains, and texture matched — then primed and painted so the repair disappears.
Baseboard, crown, casing, shelving, and the small builds and repairs that make a room read finished.
Doors that stick or won't latch, tired hardware, torn screens, and weatherstripping that finally seals out the heat.
TVs, floating shelves, mirrors, blinds, curtain rods, and fixtures — set level, anchored properly, cables hidden.
Faucets, toilets, supply lines, garbage disposals, and the slow drips that quietly run up the bill.
Light fixtures, ceiling fans, towel bars, cabinet pulls, smart doorbells, and switch/outlet plate swaps.
Flat-pack furniture, shelving units, grills, and the "some assembly required" box that's been sitting in the garage.
Pressure-relevant touch-ups, weather-worn trim, gate and fence fixes, and the outdoor odd jobs Florida sun keeps generating.
The running pile of small stuff. Hand over the whole list and clear it in one efficient visit.
Note for PT: service list above is built from standard handyman scope — confirm or trim to match what Russ actually offers, and add any specialties (e.g., specific trades he's licensed for).