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Bathroom Storage Ideas

27/05/2026
Read Time 6 mins
Written by Ryan Evans
Bathroom Storage Ideas

Whether you're working with a compact ensuite or a full family bathroom, bathroom storage that actually works comes down to one thing: making every centimetre count. The right combination of wall-mounted cabinetry, built-in furniture and floor-level storage can take a cluttered room and turn it into something that feels considered and calm. This guide covers practical storage ideas for bathrooms of all sizes, to help you organise your space.

Bathroom wall storage ideas

Using vertical space well is one of the most effective ways to add storage without touching the floor plan.

1. Hang open shelves

Open shelving is one of the most flexible creative bathroom storage ideas you can add to a room. A few well-placed shelves above the toilet, beside the basin or in an alcove give you space for everyday products without closing the room in. Keep them tidy with matching containers or small baskets to group items together. Shelves work especially well in smaller bathrooms where a full cabinet would feel heavy.

2. Fit a mirrored cabinet

A mirrored cabinet does two jobs at once. It replaces the bathroom mirror you'd have fitted anyway, and gives you a concealed storage space behind it for medicines, toiletries and anything else you'd rather keep out of sight. They're particularly useful above basins where counter space is limited. Most models come with adjustable internal shelves, so the depth works for everything from cotton pads to tall bottles.

For more help choosing, read our bathroom mirror cabinets buying guide.

3. Add a wall-hung cabinet

A wall-hung cabinet sits flush to the wall, keeping the floor beneath it clear and making the room feel larger and much easier to clean around. They're a good option if you want enclosed storage without the footprint of a freestanding unit. Available in a range of widths and finishes, they can sit alongside a vanity unit to create a coordinated look or function as standalone storage in a spare bathroom. Check your wall type before fitting to make sure your wall can handle the weight. Read our guide to wall-hung vanity units for more information.

4. Use a tallboy unit

A tallboy is a tall, narrow cabinet, usually around 300–350mm wide, designed to slot into tight spaces. The narrow footprint means it fits between a toilet and a wall, in the gap beside a basin unit, or at the end of a run of fitted furniture without taking up much width at all. Despite its slim profile, the height provides a surprising amount of internal shelf space. They’re a good option when you need more storage but genuinely have very little room left to work with.

5. Consider a wall-hung vanity unit

Wall-hung vanity units fix directly to the wall, leaving the floor beneath completely clear. That gap makes the room feel bigger and makes mopping the floor considerably easier. It also means you can set the height to suit whoever uses the bathroom most, which is a practical advantage over floor-standing units. These need a solid wall behind them (or a stud wall with the right support in place), so check before you commit.

Our wall-hung vanity units guide has everything you need to know about fitting and specification.

6. Add a towel rail

A heated towel rail does the obvious job of keeping towels warm, but the right model can hold multiple towels at once on separate bars, reducing the need for additional hooks or rails elsewhere in the room. It also keeps towels off the floor and off chairs, which makes a genuine difference to how tidy the bathroom looks day to day. They’re available in chrome, black, brushed nickel and gold finishes, so there's a style to match most schemes.

Bathroom cabinet storage ideas

Cabinetry is where the real storage work happens. Getting the specification right, not just the style, is what makes the difference between a bathroom that functions well and one that looks good but frustrates you daily.

7. Choose a vanity unit with integrated storage

A vanity unit combines your basin with a cabinet beneath, which is the single most efficient use of that space in the room. Drawer-based designs are more practical than door-and-shelf combinations as they let you see and reach everything without rooting around at the back. If space allows, go wider: a 600mm or 800mm unit will hold noticeably more than a compact 400mm option.

Read our guide to vanity units for more details on the different options.

8. Use a corner vanity unit

A corner vanity unit fits into the corner of the room and makes use of a spot that would otherwise sit empty. They're a clever solution in smaller bathrooms, freeing up the main wall space for other fixtures while still giving you a basin and storage in one. If you're working with a cloakroom or compact ensuite, this is often the most efficient layout choice available.

See our small bathroom storage ideas guide for more on getting the most from a compact space.

9. Organise cabinet interiors with dividers and tiered trays

Even the best cabinet becomes a jumble if the interior isn't organised. Tiered shelf inserts, pull-out trays and drawer dividers mean every product has a place, and you can find things without emptying the whole unit. Group items by use and put the things you reach for daily at the front.

Bathroom floor space storage ideas

Free floor space in a bathroom often goes unused. Strategic placement of the right products can add significant storage without making the room feel busy or cramped.

10. Make use of the space at the end of your bath

The floor space at the end of a freestanding or built-in bath is an overlooked storage spot. A low stool, a small shelf unit, or a bath caddy are all practical ways to keep towels, products, and accessories within easy reach without adding wall fixtures. If your bath has a panel, the space beneath it is worth considering as well.

Read our bath panel ideas guide for more inspiration.

12. Place a slim floor-standing cabinet or caddy in a tight gap

The narrow gap beside a toilet, between a shower enclosure and a wall, or at the side of a bath is often exactly the right width for a slim floor-standing storage unit. A unit 150–200mm wide can hold a reasonable amount, including rolled towels, spare toilet rolls, bottles and cleaning products. Look for units with adjustable shelves so you can fit taller items when needed.

13. Utilise space underneath cupboards

The gap beneath a wall-hung vanity unit or wall-hung cabinet is easy to overlook, but it's genuinely usable space. A row of small baskets on the floor directly beneath a floating unit keeps rolled towels, spare products or cleaning supplies within reach without cluttering the worktop. Hooks fixed to the underside of a cabinet work well for hairdryers, straighteners or hanging wash bags, keeping leads off the floor and surfaces clear.

14. Use accessories that work harder

Bathroom accessories like shower caddies, toilet roll holders and towel rings all take up wall or floor space, so it makes sense to choose ones that carry more than one function. A shower basket with multiple tiers holds far more than a single-shelf option and keeps the shower organised. A toilet roll holder with a storage shelf on top keeps spares accessible without needing a separate unit. They’re small choices, but they add up across the whole room.


Good bathroom storage doesn't have to mean starting from scratch. Solutions that fit your space and routine, and make smarter use of what you already have, can go a long way. If you need more help planning your bathroom design or want to explore storage options in person, visit us at our Birmingham showroom, where our staff will be happy to help.