Keter Storage Cabinet with Doors and Shelves for Laundry Room, Garage, Bathroom Accessories, Closet and Home Organization, White & Grey

Storage Cabinet with Doors and Shelves for Laundry Room, Garage, Bathroom Accessories, Closet and Home Organization, White & Grey

Features

  • DIMENSIONS: 25.5"D x 19.6"W x 72.6"H
  • RESIN CONSTRUCTION: Durable resin construction so no worry of rust, rot or moisture damage
  • LOCKABLE: Doors are lockable to keep contents safe; padlock not included
  • FIVE SHELVES to keep things organized
  • LOADING CAPACITY of 55 pounds per shelf
  • IDEAL STORAGE SPACE: Perfect for garages, laundry rooms, basements, storage closets and more
  • Note:-The assembled dimensions of this item are 25.5"D x 19.6"W x 72.6"H H inches. The measurements are determined based on the widest points so the width includes the handles of the cabinet as well as the feet on the bottom.

Specifications

Color White & Grey
Size Large
Unit Count 1

A freestanding resin storage cabinet measuring 25.5 in D x 19.6 in W x 72.6 in H with five shelves, each rated to hold up to 55 lb, for organizing items in garages, laundry rooms, basements, closets and similar spaces. The resin construction resists rust, rot and moisture, and the doors feature a lockable hasp (padlock not included) to secure contents.

Model Number: Utility Garage

Keter Storage Cabinet with Doors and Shelves for Laundry Room, Garage, Bathroom Accessories, Closet and Home Organization, White & Grey Review

4.2 out of 5

I picked up the Keter cabinet to tame a messy corner where laundry supplies, paint cans, and light power tools had started to pile up. I wasn’t looking for shop-grade steel—just something clean-looking, moisture-resistant, and easy to move if I change the room layout. After a few weeks of use, here’s how it performed.

Build and materials

This is a tall, freestanding resin cabinet with a white-and-gray scheme that blends into a laundry room as easily as a garage. Resin has the obvious advantage over particleboard and mild steel in damp spaces: it won’t swell, rust, or rot. Right out of the box, the individual panels feel lightweight and a bit flexible, which can be unnerving if you associate “sturdy” with cold-rolled steel. Once assembled, though, the structure stiffens up considerably. The doors align, the body squares, and the whole thing feels solid enough for household storage.

The stated size is 25.5 inches deep by 19.6 inches wide by 72.6 inches tall. Take note that the width measurement includes the handles and feet, so the interior is narrower. The depth is generous; I can store 5-gallon buckets, stacked organizers, and a couple of longer tools diagonally. If you’re planning to store very wide bins, measure the interior before you buy those bins.

The finish is matte and forgiving—no fingerprints and easy to wipe down. Resin is still plastic, so you won’t get the heirloom feel of a wood cabinet, but you also won’t worry about a humid basement or a splash from the washer.

Assembly experience

Assembly is mostly a snap-fit affair with a handful of screws. I’d budget 45–75 minutes at a calm pace. The pictogram instructions could be clearer, and there are a few gotchas:

  • Dry-fit the side panels and top/bottom before you commit. Orientation matters, and it’s easy to seat a panel backward.
  • Use a rubber mallet and a block of scrap wood to seat the joints fully. The clicks matter; partial engagement is what makes shelves feel wobbly later.
  • Pay close attention when installing the door hinges. There’s a step where a hinge piece must engage the door and the side panel at the same time. If you skip the door engagement, you’ll end up having to backtrack and risk stressing the plastic tabs.
  • Don’t overtighten screws. You’re threading into plastic—snug is enough.

I set the cabinet on a level floor during assembly; that helps the doors hang correctly. If your floor isn’t level, plan to shim the front feet so the doors stay square and closed.

Capacity and organization

You get five tiers total (the base plus four full-width shelves), each rated for up to 55 pounds. I’ve loaded shelves with a mix of gallon jugs, paint cans, a circular saw and router in their cases, and assorted fastener bins. Staying within the rating, the shelves have not sagged.

If you need to store taller items, you can remove a shelf to create a bay. For bulky, dense items—liquids, batteries, heavy tool cases—I keep those on the lowest two tiers to keep the center of gravity down. This isn’t a tip-over-prone cabinet, but that’s a good practice with any tall storage.

The interior footprint is efficient for household items. It’s not deep or wide enough for very large totes side-by-side, but it handles commonly sized organizers, cleaning caddies, and garage odds and ends without wasted space.

In daily use

The doors swing smoothly and close flush. The integrated handles are comfortable, and the doors stay shut with a light internal catch—no magnets, just molded engagement. I like that the resin doesn’t mind moisture; I’ve had it in a laundry area where humidity spikes and near a basement door that sees temperature swings. No warping or swelling so far. If you’re considering outdoor placement, I’d keep it under cover. Resin tolerates rain, but prolonged full sun and heat are hard on any plastic over time.

Because it’s relatively light, I can shift the cabinet a foot or two by myself when I sweep or reconfigure the space. That’s a huge advantage over particleboard units that become boat anchors once assembled. At the same time, the cabinet feels planted when loaded; the footprint and height are well balanced for home use.

Security and safety

There’s a lockable hasp on the doors; you supply your own padlock. This is useful for keeping kids away from chemicals or sharp tools. It’s not a security cabinet—resin won’t stop a determined thief—but it’s a practical deterrent for household safety. If you want extra tip resistance (say, in a house with curious climbers), add a universal anti-tip strap to a wall stud. There aren’t dedicated brackets, but a strap placed discreetly behind the top panel does the job.

Fit and finish

Aesthetically, it looks better than most utility cabinets in this price range: clean lines, neutral colors, no fake wood grain. Door gaps are even, and the faces sit flat. Panels come out of the box with a few mold marks typical of resin furniture, but nothing unsightly. After assembly, the look is tidy enough for a pantry or laundry room, not just the garage.

A practical note on dimensions: because the width spec includes the handles and feet, the interior shelf width is a bit tighter than the outer number suggests. If you’re hoping to store a particular piece of gear, check the interior width and the door opening clearance. The door swing also eats into hallway space, so plan placement accordingly.

What could be better

  • Instructions: The pictograms gloss over critical steps, especially around the door hinges. A single exploded view with clearer sequencing would save headaches. I’d love part labels on the actual pieces, not just in the booklet.
  • Bottom stability if underloaded: Like many snap-together resin cabinets, the base relies on the side panels locking in fully. If you rush assembly or don’t seat the tabs, the bottom tier can feel springy. Take the extra minute to confirm each joint is fully engaged.
  • Shelf supports: The shelves are strong within their rating, but they’re still resin resting on resin. If your use case is row upon row of dense items (think bricks or gallons of solvent), consider a metal-shelved unit or keep the heaviest loads low and spread out.
  • Shipping protection: Resin is durable in use but can crack if a panel takes a hard edge hit in transit. Inspect the parts before assembly and exchange anything that arrives damaged. It’s much easier than discovering a hairline crack after you’ve built it.

Who it’s for

  • Homeowners and renters who need clean-looking storage in laundry rooms, basements, garages, or storage closets.
  • Anyone dealing with humidity—resin shines where wood swells and steel rusts.
  • People who want a cabinet that’s light enough to move without disassembling.
  • Parents who want a simple way to keep kids away from chemicals or tools (use the hasp with a padlock).

Who should look elsewhere: If you need a cabinet for truly heavy-duty, daily industrial use—stacks of metal parts, heavy compressors, or constant load/unload cycles—go for welded steel with higher shelf ratings. If top-tier aesthetics are priority for a living room, a furniture-grade piece will look nicer, at the cost of weight and moisture sensitivity.

Practical setup tips

  • Assemble on a truly flat surface; it pays dividends in door alignment.
  • Use a rubber mallet to seat joints fully; “clicks” are your friend.
  • Load the heaviest items on the bottom shelves.
  • Add felt pads or shims if the floor is uneven to keep the doors square.
  • If you need to lock it, choose a small to medium padlock with a thin shackle; oversized shackles don’t pass through the hasp neatly.

Final thoughts and recommendation

The Keter cabinet does exactly what I hoped: it corrals everyday household gear in a clean, moisture-proof, easy-to-live-with package. It’s not a tank, and it doesn’t pretend to be. The magic here is in the trade-offs—lightweight materials that assemble into a sturdy-enough structure, sensible shelf ratings for typical home storage, doors that align and stay shut, and a finish that looks at home beyond the garage.

I recommend this cabinet for general home organization in humid or mixed-use spaces where weight, moisture resistance, and ease of assembly matter more than industrial ruggedness. If you stay within the shelf ratings, take care during assembly, and keep the heaviest loads low, it’s a reliable, tidy, and good-looking storage solution. If your needs skew toward heavy-duty shop storage or you want bulletproof instructions, look to metal alternatives; otherwise, this is a solid, low-maintenance choice for most homes.



Project Ideas

Business

Pop-up Market Backstock & Kiosk

Use the cabinet as locked backstock for farmers markets or craft fairs—store extra inventory, packaging and a small change drawer. Add branding vinyl to the doors, lock goods between shifts, and mount a flat top board as a temporary checkout/display surface. Wheels make it easy to transport to events.


Micro-fulfillment Station for Online Sellers

Set up the cabinet as a compact packing/fulfillment station for an Etsy or e‑commerce shop: dedicate shelves to SKUs, packing supplies and printed labels, keep high-value items locked, and use inventory bins with SKU labels for quick picking. The cabinet’s footprint keeps your workspace tidy and scalable.


Event Decor Rental Organizer

Offer a rental service for event decor using padded inserts inside the cabinet to safely transport and store delicate pieces between jobs. Charge per-rental or subscription for multiple cabinets, include inventory lists on each door, and use the lockable feature to secure items during transit or storage.


Class Kit Library for Workshops

If you run local craft classes, use the cabinet as a kit library: preassemble project kits and store them on labeled shelves for quick check-out during classes. Offer a rental or subscription (weekly kits) for parents/teachers—secure valuable tools and charge for lost/damaged items through the cabinet’s locked storage.


Community Tool/Equipment Rental Kiosk

Partner with a makerspace or co‑op to host a locked rental cabinet for small power tools and equipment. Label shelves by item, include QR-coded check-out instructions on the door, charge hourly or daily rental fees, and keep batteries/chargers organized on a designated shelf. The resin build protects gear from moisture in shared spaces.

Creative

Portable Potting Station

Turn the resin cabinet into an indoor potting bench: add locking casters to make it mobile, install a removable plastic liner or shallow tray on one shelf to catch soil/water, mount pegboard to the inside of the doors for hand tools, and use the 55 lb-rated shelves for pots, fertilizer and seed trays. The resin construction resists moisture so it’s ideal for wet potting tasks.


Rolling Craft Supply Hub

Organize craft supplies by installing stackable clear bins and labelled drawer inserts on each shelf for paper, fabric, paints and tools. Add magnetic strips to the doors for metal tools and a small fold-down work surface on the inside of one door for quick projects. Use vertical dividers to keep rolls and canvases upright and accessible.


Seasonal Decoration Vault

Convert the cabinet into a seasonal-decor organizer with padded dividers and removable bins sized for ornaments, lights and wreaths. Use shelf labels and clear boxes for quick inventory, and lock the hasp to secure valuable or fragile items between seasons. The tall 72.6 in height is perfect for storing taller decorations upright.


Mini Makerspace Tool Locker

Make a compact, secure tool locker: mount small pegboards and a battery-charging shelf (with drilled vents) for cordless tools, add foam-cut inserts for hand tools, and use the cabinet lock to restrict access. Each shelf’s 55 lb capacity supports most power tools and accessories.


Children’s Art & Activity Station

Create an organized kids’ activity center by dedicating shelves to paints, crayons, paper and craft kits; add labeled, easy-to-grab bins and a lower shelf at kid-height. Affix a fold-out lap table to a door and use child-safe locks for storage when not in use—resin is easy to wipe clean after messy projects.