This bathroom organizer solved all of my kitchen storage headaches – here's how it will make your space better, too

My chaotic bathroom cabinet is next on my to-tidy list, so I'll be clicking 'buy again'

Blue kitchen lifestyle, close up image of cabinet organizer
(Image credit: Alexandra Kaehler Design, photography Aimée Mazzenga / Lucy Searle)

Full disclosure: I have kidults, and while they're great at making their own food and drinks – and clearing up after themselves (the dream rather than the reality) – they will, quite literally, shove whatever they've used back into the refrigerator and food cabinets when they're done. Added to that, the most constant refrain I ever seemed to hear (until recently) was, 'Mom, where are all the good snacks?’'. So, I started hunting down a solution to fix both problems.

It didn't take long to spot the clever Simple Houseware pullout-organizers on Amazon. The two-tier organizers are designed for bathrooms but slide neatly into tall gaps in refrigerators and larders, or onto deep pantry shelves – and they helped me perfect and upgrade those kitchen organization ideas I didn’t get quite right the first time around.

Simple Houseware 2-Tier Narrow Basket Drawer Cabinet Pull-Out Organizer | View at Amazon

Simple Houseware 2-Tier Narrow Basket Drawer Cabinet Pull-Out Organizer | View at Amazon

These pull-out organizers sit on runners meaning you can slide the caddies in and out with ease, but because they’re not fixed, they can also be lifted right out so that you can see and reach exactly what you need immediately. The slider bases are perforated to cope with spills but also to counter humidity. Each unit measures L14 x W5.4 x H10.75in.

There are lots of complementary storage buys in Amazon’s Simple Houseware range.

I got a little carried away and ordered seven sets (believe me, they're all worth it) – and below is how I've used them.

1. For refrigerator organization

Simple Houseware pullout organizer lifestyle image

(Image credit: Future / Lucy Searle)

The pull-out caddies have made a massive difference to how I organize my refrigerator. I've put the containers in the middle shelf and have used them to group together food types that we access most often, or those that get easily bruised by being squashed – grapes, mushrooms and butter, for example. Note the sodas front and center: I know the kids are going for those most days, so I keep them where they'll reach them without moving around and messing with a tonne of other stuff. Ditto the dressings and sauces. So far, it's working like a dream.

2. To make everything in the snack and baking cabinet easy to find

Simple Houseware pullout organizer lifestyle image

(Image credit: Future / Lucy Searle)

I've got a particularly deep shelf at the top of my larder that is known in the house as The Shelf of Doom. When I originally designed the kitchen, I thought I'd be keeping larger items on this shelf – kitchen paper, maybe cereal boxes, and so on. It hasn't worked out that way because my kidults like to bake and snack, so for a long while I've had an expanding standing shelf divider, like this one from Amazon, with loose opaque storage boxes like these, also from Amazon in it to make it more functional. However, my early attempt at organizing kitchen cabinets wasn't working – don’t worry, I’ve redeployed them elsewhere.

This (above) does work, however. Again, it allows me to group the ingredients by type and the slide-out nature of the caddies means I can lift them out to pick out what I need really easily – plus reach anything at the back hassle-free. One great advantage of having see-through caddies? I can see what I need even if the shelf is high up (this one is) or the caddy is quite deep.

3. As a cleaning cabinet organizer

Simple Houseware pullout organizer lifestyle image

(Image credit: Future / Lucy Searle)

I have way too many cleaning products, all kept on shelves in another deep cabinet in my kitchen, and all pretty disorganized. The pull-out caddies have allowed me to double my usable space, as you can see on this particular shelf: tall bottles up top, cloths and sponges underneath.

I've repeated the formula on the other shelves below and above, organizing cleaning supplies by type: washing, polishing, stain removal, and so on. Like with the baking/snacking cabinet, the organizers have helped me stop doubling up on buying products I already had because I can see everything clearly. And, as I can clearly see where everything is now, that frustrating fumble through the cabinet to find something particular no longer happens.

I've yet to hear my kidults shouting, 'Mom, where's the countertop spray?' – but I'm hoping this system might help them start cleaning up after themselves a little more. That's the dream, anyway.


As well as Simple Houseware's range, i'm also a big fan of Nate Berkus' Nate Home Collection on Amazon. From fridge organizers to storage bins and turntable organizers, this sleek, functional collection has you covered.

Lucy Searle
Content Director

Lucy Searle has written about interiors, property and gardens since 1990, working her way around the interiors departments of women's magazines before switching to interiors-only titles in the mid-nineties. She was Associate Editor on Ideal Home, and Launch Editor of 4Homes magazine, before moving into digital in 2007, launching Channel 4's flagship website, Channel4.com/4homes. In 2018, Lucy took on the role of Global Editor in Chief for Realhomes.com, taking the site from a small magazine add-on to a global success. She was asked to repeat that success at Homes & Gardens, where she also took on the editorship of the magazine. Today, Lucy works as Content Director across Homes & Gardens, Woman & Home, Ideal Home and Real Homes.