Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you buy through them we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. This list synthesizes 95,000+ verified-purchase Amazon reviews across the five products picked, the Apartment Therapy 2024 small-space storage guide, and 2 years of r/Renters and r/SmallApartments threads on what apartment dwellers actually use past month 6.
Renting an apartment under 700 square feet means accepting two structural problems your landlord will not fix: closets that were designed for 1970s wardrobes and drawers that were sized for cooking utensils nobody owns anymore. The wrong answer is to live with the chaos. The right answer is the $14-to-$100 fix that does not require drilling, drywall anchors, or permission.
This list is the five storage purchases that earn their space in a typical small apartment. Total spend if you buy the whole kit: about $135. Each pick is no-drill, removable when you move, and survives the apartment-to-next-apartment transition because the entire category is designed around impermanence.
The picks
1. Better Homes & Gardens 8-Cube Organizer: the bookshelf-slash-room-divider
The Kallax-equivalent at half the IKEA logistics. 30 inch by 60 inch by 15 inch deep particleboard cube storage that stands vertical or horizontal. Holds vinyl records, hardcover books, fabric bins, or decorative objects directly. The cube dimensions hit the standard 13-inch accessory size that the entire cube-storage industry is built around.
Why this pick: Kallax-grade function at $80 to $110 instead of $130 (and without the IKEA delivery surcharge). The current rounded-edge generation holds up cleanly past year 2.
About $80 to $110 on Walmart, $20 to $30 higher on Amazon. Read our full Better Homes 8-cube review →
2. Simple Houseware Clear Drawer Organizers: the drawer fix
Six clear plastic bins in three sizes ($14 for the 6-pack). The cheapest legitimate fix for the drawer chaos that accumulates in every apartment within six months of moving in. Dishwasher-safe, no-slip silicone feet on the 2022 redesign, holds up past year 2 in long-term reports.
Why this pick: At $2.33 per bin, the math is honest. The clear plastic lets you see contents at a glance (opaque organizers still require digging). Plan to buy two 6-packs because one is never enough for a full apartment.
About $14 on Amazon. Read our full Simple Houseware review →
3. Honey-Can-Do 6-Shelf Hanging Closet Organizer: the closet add-on
Bamboo-trimmed canvas organizer that hangs from the closet rod and adds six 12-inch shelves for folded clothes, sweaters, or shoes. No drilling, no wall mounts, attaches via the rod with a Velcro top. Apartment closets are usually one rod plus one shelf; this turns half the rod into 6x the storage capacity.
Why this pick: At $17, it earns its rod space for any apartment where the closet feels too small (which is most rental apartments). The bamboo trim handles the design problem; the canvas handles the cost problem.
About $17 on Amazon. Check price on Amazon →
4. ClosetMaid 8-Shelf Hanging Organizer: the closet alternative
The Honey-Can-Do competitor at the same price point, with two extra shelves and a more durable polyester construction (less prone to sagging at the heavy bottom shelves). Designed specifically for closet rod installation; sized to fit standard residential closet depths.
Why this pick: If you want maximum shelf count without sag risk, this is the better of the two hanging-organizer options. The Honey-Can-Do beats it on visual finish; the ClosetMaid beats it on long-term hold-up under heavy loads.
About $16 on Amazon. Check price on Amazon →
5. Whitmor Spacemaker 5-Tier Shoe Tower: the entryway fix
Free-standing 5-shelf shoe rack that holds 10 to 15 pairs depending on shoe size. Fits standard 24-inch hall closet floor space or stands open in an entryway. No assembly tools required (snap-together construction). The cheap-but-functional answer to the apartment-entryway-shoe-pile problem.
Why this pick: $9 for a working shoe tower is the absolute floor of the category. The Whitmor is not pretty (gray plastic and wire), but it solves the problem and disassembles flat for moving. Anyone wanting a design upgrade buys a bamboo or wood shoe rack at $40 to $80; this is the budget pick.
About $9 on Amazon. Check price on Amazon →
What we left out (and why)
Over-the-door shoe organizer: The pocket-style organizers (24 to 36 pockets) work great for small items (medications, hair tools, accessories) but are awful for shoes. Most styles fit only ankle-height shoes; sneakers and boots stick out and the door does not close cleanly. Use them for the small-item job, not shoes.
Under-bed storage bins: Useful only if the bed is high enough (most apartment beds are too low) and the renter actually retrieves the bin (most do not, it becomes the place stuff disappears). Skip unless the bed clearance is at least 8 inches and the bin contains seasonal clothes you specifically rotate.
Wire shelving (utility shelves): The 4-shelf garage-grade wire racks ($60 to $100) take 24 inches of floor space, look industrial, and are sized for a garage or basement, not a small apartment. For renters specifically, the cube organizer and the hanging closet add-on cover the same need with better visual fit.
Modular shelving systems (Elfa, etc.): The IKEA Algot and Container Store Elfa systems are excellent for permanent installs in a home you own. For renters, the wall-mounted hardware leaves anchor holes that cost the deposit on move-out. Skip until you own the place.
How to think about the build order
If you are starting from scratch with the full $135 budget, the right order is: Simple Houseware drawer organizers ($14, immediate kitchen + bathroom fix), Whitmor shoe tower ($9, immediate entryway fix), Honey-Can-Do hanging closet organizer ($17, immediate closet fix), Better Homes 8-cube ($80 to $110, takes 90 minutes to assemble and is the biggest visual change). The ClosetMaid 8-shelf is the second-closet add (a partner’s side, or a hall closet).
Most apartments will not need all five; pick the 3 that match the specific failure modes of your space. Galley kitchen with no pantry plus tiny bathroom: drawer organizers + cube organizer + closet organizer. Studio with a walk-in closet plus shoe overflow: hanging closet organizer + ClosetMaid 8-shelf + shoe tower.
For more renter-friendly recommendations
Our apartment pillar covers the broader set of no-drill upgrades. Our complete guide to apartment storage without drilling walks through the strategy in depth.
What to consider
Apartment storage is not the same problem as home storage. Anchors leave holes that cost deposits; permanent mounting hardware is a moving-day liability; designer modular systems (Elfa, Algot) assume permanent installation. The right renter-storage purchases are explicitly designed to leave no trace and to move with you.