Width guide
Under Sink Organizer for a 21-Inch Cabinet
In a 21-inch under-sink cabinet, size storage to the clear zones, not the label. Subtract 0.5 in for clearance, check the door opening, then map the trap. At this width the trap usually splits storage into two narrow lanes.
21-inch cabinets are common under small bathroom vanities. Interior width is workable, but vanity plumbing tends to hang lower than kitchen plumbing, so height, not width, is the usual dealbreaker at this size.
Measure floor to the lowest trap bend first. If that number is under about 11 inches, plan around short stackable bins and skip two-tier shelves entirely; if it is 14 inches or more, a compact two-tier unit on the clear side becomes realistic.
Recommended layout
Use the checker result above as the shopping ceiling for this width, then confirm the door opening and the lowest bend before ordering.
Start here: Split the cabinet into left and right lanes of about 7.1 in each. Use organizers that stop short of the trap bend, plus a low bin in the front strip.
Use this page's approach if
shoppers who know the cabinet width but have not mapped the trap yet; the numbers here assume a centered trap, the most restrictive common case.
Skip or adjust it if
your trap sits clearly to one side; open the matching layout page for side-pipe cabinets instead, because your clear zone is much wider.
| Storage zone | Max width | Max depth | Max height | Best use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Left zone | 7.1 in | 17.5 in | 10 in | Narrow slide-outs, bin stacks, side baskets |
| Right zone | 7.1 in | 17.5 in | 10 in | Narrow slide-outs, bin stacks, side baskets |
| Front strip | 20.5 in | 8.4 in | 6 in | Low trays and one-motion daily bins |
| Back strip | 20.5 in | 14.5 in | 10 in | Only if every joint stays visible and reachable |
Size classes that match this layout
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| Size class | Shop at or under | Fit | Where it goes | Notes | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slim side basketvery narrow, 5-6 in lanes | 5.5 in W × 14 in D × 10 in H | Exact fit | Left zone | Rescues the sliver of space beside offset plumbing. Small capacity: best for brushes and refill packs stored upright. | Search this size |
| Stackable binnarrow, 5-7 in lanes | 6 in W × 14 in D × 7 in H | Exact fit | Left zone | Fits the tight lane every other class gives up on; rental-safe. Buy open-front: the lower bin must stay reachable without unstacking. | Search this size |
| Compact two-tier shelfside-lane, 7.5-10 in wide | 8 in W × 15 in D × 14 in H | Exact fit | Across the trap (cutout aligned) | Doubles shelf area in one lane without any mounting. Check lower-tier clearance against your tallest daily bottle. | Search this size |
| Shallow vanity binsmall-format, low vanities | 8 in W × 10 in D × 5 in H | Exact fit | Front strip | Sized for low-bend vanities and 13-15 in door openings. Made for vanities; wastes space in a full-depth kitchen base. | Search this size |
| Stackable binstandard, 8-11 in lanes | 9 in W × 13 in D × 8 in H | Exact fit | Largest clear zone | The zero-risk default for any plumbing layout. Stack two high at most; the top bin needs 1 in of lift-out room. | Search this size |
| Cleaning caddycarry kit, handle included | 10 in W × 13 in D × 11 in H | Exact fit | Largest clear zone | The grab-and-go zone: parks front-center of the widest lane. Height listed with handle: the handle must clear the bend on lift-out. | Search this size |
| Low turntableflat, spins under the bend | 10 in W × 10 in D × 3.5 in H | Exact fit | Front strip | Puts small bottles a spin away in heights nothing else uses. Keep it off the trap ring: the spin needs a flat clear footprint. | Search this size |
| Low open trayfront strip, under the bend | 15 in W × 12 in D × 4 in H | Exact fit | Front strip | Lives under the trap where nothing else fits; doubles as a leak spotter. Must lift straight out in one motion without threading around the trap. | Search this size |
What not to buy here
Anything wider than your door opening as a rigid one-piece box, and any shelf whose legs would stand under the trap bend.
Mistakes this page exists to prevent
- Trusting the height in product photos. A 15-inch-tall organizer photographed in an empty prop cabinet will not clear a vanity trap that bottoms out at 11 inches.
- Measuring outside face-to-face instead of inside wall-to-wall; face-frame cabinets lose 2 to 3 inches to the frame.
- Ignoring the hinge hardware: euro hinges bulge 2 to 3 inches into the opening right where a wide box needs to pass.
Common questions
What usable height should I expect in a 21-inch vanity?
Commonly 10 to 16 inches to the lowest bend. Measure your own: it varies with sink depth and how the trap was assembled.
Do I subtract anything from the 21-inch label?
Yes. The label is often the outside or nominal size. Measure inside wall to wall, then subtract at least 0.5 in on width and depth as a working margin.
Which measurement kills most purchases at this size?
Usable height to the lowest bend; vanity traps hang low.
Where do these numbers come from?
From the published fit rules on the About page: a 0.5 in safety margin, a trap band estimated from cabinet width, and the door opening as a hard pass-through limit. Your tape measure always wins over the estimate.