Today’s organizing challenge: Prioritize convenience
In your high-traffic areas
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Clean Everything

March 14, 2025

Make tidiness easier by prioritizing convenience

IKEA Hultarp Magnetic Knife Rack, Rubbermaid Brilliance Pantry Food Storage Containers, OXO lazy Susan.
NYT Wirecutter

Some of the places most prone to disorganization are, unsurprisingly, those you visit the most—we’re talking your fridge, pantry, and medicine cabinet.

In these places, establishing a system that prioritizes convenience is paramount. Yes, everything should have a designated and discrete home—but the things you reach for frequently should also be very easy to find, take out, and most important, put back.

Today your organizing challenge is to pick one high-traffic space and reorganize it. Make the things you use most often easier to access. You’ll be more likely to actually put things back where they belong, instead of cluttering your countertops or floors.

Here are five ways our journalists have applied this basic strategy:

  • A “genius” bathroom-organizing hack: Senior staff writer Rose Maura Lorre keeps her everyday bathroom essentials hanging on a magnetic knife rack (yes, the kind that goes in kitchens). It’s on the inside of her medicine cabinet doors, so it’s out of sight. But it keeps many daily essentials, like bobby pins and tweezers, in an easily accessible place.
  • File your food storage container lids: If you find yourself sorting through a mismatched avalanche of lids for the containers you use everyday, consider using this $20 slotted organizer to file them standing up. That way, the lids are easy to see at a glance, take out, and file back in.
  • Organize your pantry into themed zones: Instead of placing, say, all 14-ounce cans or 18-ounce jars together, group your pantry items into themed categories: snacks, baking supplies, condiments and spreads—almost like grocery store aisles. Keep the most-used “aisles” at eye level. Clear storage containers can help keep everything in your pantry visible, which makes it easier to use up ingredients before buying more.
  • Put a lazy Susan in your fridge: Since the fridge is an area that tends to be in flux, a spinning turntable can help keep your essentials within easy reach. Our kitchen experts offer a lot of advice in our full guide to taming a fridge, but a basic principle to follow is to put the things you use often (or want to finish first) front and center, and store ingredients you’ll use only occasionally in corners that are harder to reach.

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More for organizing your commonly used things

A rolling caddy with cleaning supplies in it.

How a cleaning expert organizes her cleaning supplies

What to do with those myriad bottles and cloths→

Four different shoe racks with various pairs of shoes set in front of a green background.

The best way to sort your shoes

For a tidier entryway: Our favorite shoe racks are wobble-free and pretty good-looking→

Dinnerware and drinkware well-organized in a kitchen cabinet equipped with vinyl-coated wire shelf risers.

Get your kitchen cabinets under control

Including our expert’s favorite way to organize pot lids→

One last thing: A beautiful brush set you can leave out

An Iris Hantverk Table Dustpan and Brush.
Connie Park/NYT Wirecutter

This 5-inch dustpan-and-brush set is handsome enough to be left out nearly anywhere around the house (perhaps conveniently displayed for easy access, a la today’s challenge). It’s especially useful for mini everyday messes: coffee grounds, morning toast crumbs, and fallen petals. And because the brush nests neatly in a semicircle, it stays out of the way between uses.

For your mini messes→

Thanks for reading. Just one day of our challenge left! See you tomorrow.

You can reach the Wirecutter Newsletters team at newsletters@wirecutter.com. We can’t always respond, but we do love to hear from you.

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