Everyday life is not made up of isolated practices but includes multiple activities across different consumption domains that relate to one another in many ways. With a lack of understanding of how certain practices foster or constrain other practices, changes toward more climate-friendly societies are challenging. Hence it is essential to understand how practices relate in the everyday life to act on the urgent climate crisis. This research looks at how the three main greenhouse gas-emitting consumption domains food, mobility, and housing relate. The analysis is based on longitudinal qualitative data of young adults’ everyday life in Denmark, before and after moving house, collected with mixed method approaches. Starting with a practice theoretical approach to treat all domains and practices equally, an overall pattern is that location of the house has the highest priority when people are moving, whereas the mobilities practices adapt to the location of the house, and going grocery shopping is oftentimes based on daily mobilities practices. Hence, for this organization of everyday life, with the impact of moving to a new house, the relation between the domains shows how housing is given more significance than mobility and food. The research will further show, how giving more significance to one practice over another can have implications for obtaining climate-friendly practices