A bathroom drawer organiser is a drawer-fit system for bathroom contents — moisturisers, makeup, hair tools, dental kit, the toiletries that don't sit in the shower. The category overlaps with kitchen drawer organisers structurally but differs in three ways: humidity, contents, and typical drawer dimensions.
What changes from the kitchen
Humidity is higher. Bathrooms run damp by default — showers and baths release more moisture than any kitchen activity. Materials that warp in kitchen humidity (bamboo) fail faster in bathroom humidity. PLA bioplastic's moisture resistance is one of the cleanest fits for bathroom storage.
Contents are smaller. Most bathroom drawers hold mid-size items (~5–15 cm in any dimension) — bottles, tubes, brushes. Sized cells matter more than size variety; the drawer typically benefits from a 4×3 or 8×4 rectangle module covering the floor in regular small bays.
Drawers are narrower. Bathrooms in UK homes typically have 30–45 cm drawer cabinets, sometimes narrower in en-suites or downstairs WCs. The narrow drawer guide covers the under-30-cm case.
What modular grids solve
- Sized cells for varied bottle sizes. Skincare bottles cluster around 50–100 ml; cosmetic tubes around 30–50 mm wide. A Versatile Rectangle 8×6 covers most of the variety.
- Vertical storage for tall items. Toothbrushes, mascara wands, eyeliner pencils. Slotted modules keep them upright.
- Moisture resilience. PLA modules don't warp at bathroom humidity levels. Wipe-clean care still applies.
What's coming
Modu Drawer's bathroom collection is currently in development. The same module library that handles kitchens scales to bathrooms; specific bathroom-sized modules (toothbrush slots, makeup brush stands) are queued. Sign up for early access via the footer to be notified when the bathroom range ships.
For the kitchen-tested fundamentals that translate to bathrooms, see modular drawer organiser and snap-lock fit.