The bathroom is usually the last room renters think to organise — and the one that creates the most daily frustration when storage runs out. A small apartment bathroom can feel clean, calm, and surprisingly spacious with the right storage solutions. None of these require drilling into tiles, and most cost under $30.

1. Over-Toilet Shelving Unit
The space above the toilet is the most underused storage zone in most bathrooms. A freestanding over-toilet shelving unit (also called an etagere or toilet tree) sits behind the toilet with two or three shelves above it — no drilling required. Use it for toiletries, towels, candles, and small plants. These units typically cost $25–$60 and assemble in under 15 minutes.
2. Tension Pole Shower Caddy
A tension pole shower caddy stands in the corner of the shower or bath with no drilling or adhesive. It expands floor-to-ceiling using adjustable tension and holds shampoo, conditioner, soap, and razors on multiple shelves. This keeps the bath edge and shower floor completely clear — making the bathroom feel significantly larger and easier to clean.
3. Magnetic Strips for Metal Items
A magnetic strip mounted on the bathroom wall (using command strips) holds metal tweezers, nail scissors, bobby pins, and small tools that usually scatter across countertops. This keeps the vanity surface clear, makes items easier to find, and looks intentional rather than improvised.
4. Stackable Clear Acrylic Drawers
Stackable clear acrylic drawers on the vanity hold makeup, skincare, and small toiletries in a visible, organised format. Because they’re clear, you can find items at a glance without rummaging. Stack two or three units to use vertical vanity space efficiently — the total footprint stays the same as one unit.

5. A Mirrored Cabinet Instead of a Plain Mirror
If your bathroom has a plain mirror, replacing it with a mirrored cabinet (that screws into existing mirror fixings) gives you hidden storage for medications, toiletries, and small items without adding anything to the floor or vanity. Check with your landlord first — this swap is typically straightforward and reversible.
6. Wicker Baskets Under the Sink
The space under a pedestal sink or open vanity is often wasted. Two or three small wicker baskets in coordinating sizes hold cleaning products, spare toilet rolls, and bulky toiletries out of sight while adding a warm, organic texture to the bathroom. Label the baskets to keep the organisation system working long-term.
7. Towel Hooks Instead of a Towel Rail
A row of command hooks on the back of the bathroom door or beside the shower holds multiple towels without taking any wall space. Command’s large waterproof hooks hold up to 2.7 kg (6 lb) each — enough for a full-size bath towel. This frees the towel rail (if you have one) for hand towels and washcloths only.
8. Slim Rolling Cart Between Toilet and Wall
A narrow rolling cart (typically 15–20 cm / 6–8 inches wide) slides into the gap between the toilet and wall — space that’s otherwise completely wasted. These carts typically have three to four shelves and hold toiletries, cleaning supplies, spare rolls, and accessories. Pull it out when you need access; push it back in for a clean look.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I add storage to a small bathroom without drilling?
Over-toilet freestanding units, tension pole shower caddies, rolling slim carts, wicker baskets under the sink, and command hooks on the door all require zero drilling. Together these solutions can add significant storage to even the smallest bathroom without any permanent modification.
What’s the most space-efficient bathroom storage solution?
The over-toilet shelving unit offers the best ratio of storage gained to floor space used — it occupies the footprint of the toilet (which is already there) and adds two or three full shelves above it. Combined with a tension caddy in the shower, these two pieces alone can double a small bathroom’s usable storage.
📌 [INTERNAL-LINK: → “Small Bedroom Storage Ideas for Tiny Apartments” | “Renter-Friendly Bedroom Ideas”]



