I used to walk around my house looking for cleaning supplies like I was on a scavenger hunt. I’d start cleaning the bathroom, realize I forgot the spray bottle, walk to the kitchen to get it, see the cloth I needed was in the laundry room, grab that, then remember the scrub brush was under the other sink. By the time I had everything, I’d made seven trips and lost all motivation to actually clean.
- Why I Resisted Getting a Caddy
- What Finally Made Me Try It
- What Goes In My Cleaning Caddy
- The Caddy Itself
- Small Dawn Bottle
- Vinegar Spray Bottle
- Microfiber Cloths
- Magic Erasers
- Scrub Brush
- Bar Keeper’s Friend
- All-Purpose Sponges
- How I Actually Use It
- What Didn’t Work
- The Results After 6 Months
- Start With What You Have
My husband watched me do this one Saturday morning and said, “Why don’t you just put everything in a bucket or something?” I rolled my eyes because it seemed too obvious to actually work. Turns out, obvious solutions are obvious for a reason.
Why I Resisted Getting a Caddy
I genuinely thought a cleaning caddy was unnecessary. In my mind, cleaning supplies should live where you use them. Bathroom stuff under the bathroom sink, kitchen stuff under the kitchen sink. That made sense, right?
Wrong. What actually happened was I’d use the bathroom cleaner in the kitchen because it was closer. Then I’d leave it there. Then I couldn’t find it when I needed it in the bathroom, so I’d buy another one. I ended up with multiple partial bottles of the same thing scattered around my house, and somehow never had what I needed where I needed it.
I also thought caddies were for professional cleaners or people with huge houses. My apartment was small. Surely I could just grab what I needed as I went. That logic sounds fine until you’re actually trying to clean and making a dozen trips because you keep forgetting things.
What Finally Made Me Try It
One Saturday morning broke me. I was trying to clean before my in-laws came over, and I literally could not find the scrub brush. I knew I had one. I’d used it last week. But it had vanished into the chaos of my under-sink cabinet.
I stood there, frustrated and running out of time, and thought about what my husband had said. It was such a simple solution to an annoying problem. Why was I being stubborn about this?
I went to Target that afternoon and bought a basic cleaning caddy for $16. It felt almost silly spending money on what’s essentially a handled bucket, but I was desperate. Best $16 I ever spent.
What Goes In My Cleaning Caddy
I’ve refined what lives in my caddy over the past year. Too much makes it heavy and annoying to carry. Too little means I still have to make extra trips. This is the perfect balance for cleaning my whole apartment without going back for anything.
The Caddy Itself
I use the Casabella cleaning caddy because it has a comfortable handle and divided sections. The divided sections matter more than I expected. Small stuff doesn’t roll around and fall out when I carry it.
It’s also tall enough to hold spray bottles upright but not so big that it takes up tons of space. I can slide it under my bathroom sink when I’m not using it, which keeps everything contained and out of sight.
Small Dawn Bottle
I don’t keep the giant Dawn dish soap bottle in my caddy because that would make it too heavy. Instead, I bought a small travel-size bottle and refill it from the big one under my kitchen sink.
A few drops of Dawn in water cleans almost everything. I use it on counters, sinks, tubs, baseboards, walls, and even floors. Having it in the caddy means I can tackle whatever mess I find without going back to the kitchen.
Vinegar Spray Bottle
I keep one spray bottle filled with a 50/50 mix of white vinegar and water. This lives permanently in the caddy and handles glass, mirrors, most countertops, and daily bathroom wipes.
I label it with a piece of masking tape that says “vinegar” so I don’t confuse it with other spray bottles. The last thing I want is to grab the wrong one and spray something weird on my mirrors.
Microfiber Cloths
I keep three or four microfiber cloths folded in the caddy at all times. I use different colors for different jobs: blue for bathrooms, gray for general cleaning, white for kitchen. This prevents me from accidentally using the toilet cloth on my kitchen counter.
When they get dirty, I toss them in the laundry and replace them with clean ones from my stash. Having extras in the caddy means I can wipe multiple surfaces without needing to rinse and reuse the same cloth.
Magic Erasers
Magic erasers handle scuff marks on walls, mystery stains on baseboards, and that weird grime that builds up around light switches. I keep one or two in the caddy because I never know when I’ll spot something that needs them.
They fall apart as you use them, which is annoying, but they work on stuff nothing else touches. I’ve removed crayon from the wall, black scuff marks from the floor, and soap scum from the shower door with these things.
Scrub Brush
A small handheld scrub brush lives in the caddy for grout, tough tub stains, and anything that needs more scrubbing power than a cloth provides. I use this with Bar Keeper’s Friend for the shower and toilet.
The key is getting one that’s small enough to fit in the caddy but sturdy enough to actually scrub. Those giant brushes with long handles are great for floors, but they don’t fit in a portable caddy and you don’t need them for most cleaning.
Bar Keeper’s Friend
I keep a small container of Bar Keeper’s Friend in my caddy instead of the full canister. I bought a small plastic container with a lid and filled it about halfway. This makes the caddy lighter and gives me just enough for a typical cleaning session.
Bar Keeper’s Friend removes hard water stains, rust marks, and stubborn discoloration on sinks, tubs, and toilets. In Houston, where the water is hard and leaves mineral buildup on everything, this stuff is essential.
All-Purpose Sponges
I keep two or three non-scratch sponges in the caddy for regular cleaning tasks. These work for wiping down the tub, scrubbing the sink, and general surface cleaning that’s not delicate enough for microfiber but not tough enough to need the scrub brush.
I replace them every week or two because sponges get gross fast. Having extras in the caddy means I don’t have to interrupt cleaning to go find a fresh one.
How I Actually Use It
Every time I clean now, I grab the caddy. That’s it. Everything I need is in one place. I walk into the bathroom, set it down, and get to work. No running back to the kitchen for soap, no realizing halfway through that I don’t have a cloth.
I go room by room with the caddy. Bathroom first, then kitchen, then living spaces. If I spot something that needs attention, like a scuff mark on the wall or a sticky spot on the counter, I have what I need right there to fix it immediately instead of mentally filing it away for later (which means never).
The time savings is real. I used to spend 30 to 40 minutes cleaning my apartment because half that time was walking around gathering supplies or making return trips for things I forgot. Now the same cleaning takes 20 minutes because I spend the whole time actually cleaning instead of wandering around.
My kids can grab it too when they’re helping with chores. I don’t have to explain where everything is. It’s all in the caddy. Take it to your bathroom, clean the sink and toilet, bring it back. Simple.
What Didn’t Work
My first caddy was too small. I thought I was being smart by getting a compact one, but it couldn’t fit spray bottles without them tipping over. I ended up returning it and getting the bigger one, which was worth the extra few dollars.
I also tried keeping too many products in it at first. I had like 10 different things crammed in there, and it was so heavy I didn’t want to carry it around. I learned to keep it simple. The basics cover 95% of cleaning tasks. Specialty stuff can stay under the sink for the rare times I actually need it.
Don’t put anything with a loose cap in the caddy. I learned this when a bottle of cleaner tipped over and leaked everywhere. Now I only keep things that seal tightly or won’t cause a disaster if they spill.
The Results After 6 Months
I clean more often now because it’s not annoying. Before, the thought of gathering supplies made me procrastinate. Now I just grab the caddy and go. The barrier to getting started disappeared.
My house stays cleaner at a baseline level because I’m not letting things pile up while I avoid the hassle of cleaning. When I see something that needs attention, I can handle it right then instead of adding it to a mental list that never gets done.
The one-time $20 investment has saved me hours over the past six months. If I value my time at even minimum wage, this has paid for itself many times over. Plus, I’m not buying duplicate products anymore because everything has a home in the caddy.
It sounds too simple to make a real difference, but it genuinely changed how I clean. Sometimes the obvious solution actually is the best one.
Start With What You Have
You don’t need to buy a fancy caddy or all new supplies. Grab a bucket, a reusable shopping bag, or even a cardboard box with handles cut into it. Put your basic cleaning supplies in there. Try it for one week.
If you want to know exactly which basic supplies to keep in your caddy, check out the 7 cleaning products you actually need. And if you’re working on building better cleaning habits overall, I stopped deep cleaning and started doing this instead explains the maintenance approach that keeps my place clean without huge weekend cleaning sessions.
For organizing the rest of your home systems, the simple command center that keeps our family organized uses the same “everything in one place” strategy.
I promise you’ll wonder why you didn’t do this years ago. I know I did.
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What’s your must-have cleaning tool? Maybe this $20 caddy could be it! Check it out! #CleaningHacks #HomeOrganization #CozyCornerDaily