How to Organize Your Home Without Buying Plastic Bins
Walk into almost any home organization store and you’ll be told that the secret to a tidy home is buying more plastic bins, baskets, drawer organizers and storage containers in every shape and size. But the truth is that organization ISN’T ABOUT CONTAINERS. It’s about creating systems that make your home easier to live in.
If you’re trying to reduce clutter, save money, or simply avoid bringing more plastic into your home, you can create an organized space using what you already have. In fact, many of the most effective organizing solutions cost nothing at all.
You can follow my SHOO system to help you get started.
Start by Decluttering First
Before looking for storage, have a real look at what you’re storing.
No amount of organizing will make too much shit easier to manage. Go through each room and ask yourself:
- Do I use this regularly?
- Do I love it?
- Would I buy it again today?
Donate, sell, recycle or discard items that no longer serve a purpose. Once you’ve reduced the volume of belongings, organizing becomes much simpler.
Shop Your Home Before the Store
Most homes already contain useful containers and organizers hiding in plain sight.
Consider repurposing:
- Shoe boxes for drawers and shelves
- Glass jars for pantry items and small supplies
- Tin cans for pens, tools or craft supplies
- Decorative bowls for keys and loose items
- Cardboard boxes covered with fabric or paper
- Wooden crates for books and storage
- Mugs for office supplies
You might be surprised how many organizing tools you already have.
Use Vertical Space
One of the biggest organizing mistakes is focusing only on floor space.
Look up instead:
- Install hooks behind doors
- Add wall-mounted shelves
- Hang pots and pans in the kitchen
- Use pegboards in workshops or craft rooms
- Mount baskets on walls for lightweight storage
Vertical storage give you more capacity without adding bulky containers.
Create Zones Instead of Containers
Many people think organization means putting everything into labelled bins. In reality, it’s more important to create designated zones.
For example:
Kitchen
- Baking supplies together
- Coffee/tea station together
- Cooking utensils by the stove
Entryway
- Keys in one specific spot
- Shoes in one specific area
- Mail sorted immediately upon bringing it into the house
Bathroom
- Daily-use items within easy reach
- Backup supplies stored separately
When items have a specific “home,” they’re easier to find and to put away.
Open Storage
Not everything needs to be hidden.
Open shelving can be functional and attractive when used in a thoughtful way.
Display:
- Cookbooks
- Frequently used dishes
- Folded linens
- Houseplants
- Craft supplies in jars
Seeing items clearly often makes it easier to maintain organization because you can quickly identify when things are out of place.
Furniture as Storage
Multi-purpose furniture can reduce the need for additional storage products.
Examples include:
- Ottomans with storage compartments – like the IKEA Uppland collection
- Benches with hidden storage
- Coffee tables with shelves
- Beds with under-bed storage
- Bookshelves used as room dividers
Making better use of furniture you already have eliminates the need for extra containers.
One-In, One-Out Rule
Organization isn’t a one and done. It’s an habit.
For every new item that enters your home, consider removing one similar item. This simple rule prevents clutter from slowly creeping back into organized spaces.
Function Over Perfection
Social media showcases picture-perfect pantries filled with matching containers. While they look beautiful, they aren’t necessary for an organized home.
The goal isn’t creating a showroom. The goal is creating a home that works for you.
If a repurposed shoe box keeps your drawer organized, it’s doing its job just as effectively as an expensive acrylic organizer. I have a storage tower in my closet with a very short space at the bottom of the tower. It perfectly fits the shoes boxes from my Docs and now hold all my travel pouches and bottles.
Organizing your home doesn’t need a shopping trip or a massive collection of matching plastic bins. By decluttering, repurposing items you already own, using vertical space and creating simple systems, you can build a home that feels calm, functional, and easier to maintain.









