From Spotlight: A New Spin on Old Laundry Problems

How to Have an Efficient and Organized Laundry Room

Get creative with storage space and work surfaces. Bonus: no clutter with (almost) no effort!

Front loading washing machines built in with extra storage in a utility room with dark green cabinets and white counter with sink.
Image: arselozgurdal/Getty

Unless you do your laundry in the buff, it’s one chore that’s never really done. Follow these laundry room storage ideas, however, and you can breeze through your dirty duds in no time.

Create Better Laundry Room Storage

Declutter by keeping laundry room necessities out of sight.

Drawer units. Front load washers and dryers are easy on your back when elevated with base pedestals, which offer drawer storage. Pedestals usually are made by individual manufacturers to fit their brand. Cost: $250 to $400.

Stock cabinetry. Home centers offer stock kitchen cabinetry that you can install above and/or beside the washer and dryer. For a laundry near the kitchen, select cabinetry that complements existing units. Cost: about $250 for five linear feet.

Freestanding laundry room storage. To keep clutter out of sight behind doors, position a freestanding cabinet between or beside the washer and dryer. Some armoires feature hanging space inside.

Extras. Equip a stock or freestanding cabinet with a fold-down ironing board and a holder for the iron and related supplies.

Bins. Canvas or solid metal bins keep small items corralled and out of sight inside a cabinet or on open shelves. Wire baskets make it easy to inventory supplies while keeping similar items together.

Lined baskets. A canvas lining provides visual appeal and prevents wicker from snagging folded linens or other items you store inside.

Pullouts. Rather than bending and rooting around in the back of a base cabinet, equip it with a pullout hamper, wastebasket, or shelves.

Sorters and hampers. You’ll find a variety of bins for storing and sorting soiled laundry, including canvas versions with an overhead rod for hanging clothes.

Include Easy Access Surfaces

Open shelves. Melamine or wire shelves above or beside the washer and dryer provide a good spot for quickly accessing often-used supplies.

Countertops. A countertop on base cabinets or installed above a front load washer and dryer (that aren’t elevated on pedestals) provide a place for folding clothes.

Don't Forget About Hanging Clothes

Include a spot to hang clothing fresh from the dryer or to drip dry. For example, stretch a pole between tall cabinets flanking the washer and dryer. For compact laundry room storage spaces, look for collapsible hanging units or retractable clotheslines.

The Right Location

Put your laundry room or area near bedrooms where you generate the most laundry so you can minimize steps and clothes clutter. To carve out space for a laundry station inside a bathroom or hall closet, you’ll need:

Electric outlets. Electric dryers require a 240-volt dedicated outlet. Cost: $255 to $310, professionally installed.

Plumbing. The washer needs hot and cold water connections as well as a drain or a hose fed into a standpipe. All dryers require a vent to the outside to exhaust heat from the drum. Gas dryers require a gas line. Cost: $850 to $2,500.

Space requirements. A side-by-side washer and dryer need space measuring and 56 inches wide. Standard sizes are less common these days, so depth and height can vary. Note that the measurements will vary based on whether side-by-side machines are top load or front load and the stackable versions are full size or compact. Measure carefully and measure twice.

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Jan Soults Walker
Jan Soults Walker

Jan Soults Walker Nationally published home improvement writer Jan Soults Walker has more than 30 years' experience, remodeling several of her own homes and reporting on everything from kitchen sinks to luxurious mansions. Even now, a deck of paint chips still makes her heart sing.