Your garage door opens.
And you just stand there.
Because there’s no room for your car. Or your bike. Or even your kid’s scooter.
You’ve stared at that mess for months. Maybe years.
Where do you even start?
I’ve been there. Done that. And I’ve helped dozens of people do the same.
No magic tricks. No expensive systems. Just real steps that work.
I’ve spent over a decade turning garages like yours into spaces you actually use.
Not just store stuff in.
Garage Organizing Advice Livpristhouse is what you get here.
A step-by-step plan. One you can follow this weekend.
No overwhelm. No guesswork.
Just clear direction. From cluttered chaos to organized calm.
Step 1: The Ruthless Purge. Your Foundation for Success
You don’t organize clutter.
You delete it.
I tried organizing my garage first. Spent six hours sorting, labeling, stacking. Then I opened the door two weeks later and it looked worse.
Because you can’t arrange chaos. You have to gut it.
Start with four boxes: Keep, Donate, Trash, Relocate. Relocate is for things that belong elsewhere (not) in your garage. That toaster oven in a plastic bin?
It goes to the kitchen. Not “maybe later.”
Here’s what I toss without hesitation:
Expired chemicals (yes, even that half-empty can of deck stripper from 2019)
Broken tools with no repair path
Old paint cans. Unless you’re actively using that exact shade this month
Outgrown kids’ toys (if they haven’t touched it in 18 months, they won’t)
Duplicates. Three tape measures?
One stays.
Use the one-year rule. But be honest.
Not “I might need this.” Not “It was expensive.”
If you didn’t use it, wear it, or fix it in 365 days (and) it’s not seasonal or truly sentimental (let) it go.
Empty the whole space if you can. If that feels impossible, pick one 4×4 foot zone and clear it completely. No half-measures.
Garage Organizing Advice Livpristhouse starts here. Not with shelves or labels. It starts with saying no. Livpristhouse shows real people doing exactly this.
No fluff. Just before and after shots that’ll make you angry at your own hesitation.
I’ve done this eight times. Every single time, the purge takes longer than I think. And every single time, it’s the only thing that sticks.
Step 2: Map It Out (Garage) Zoning That Actually Sticks
Zoning isn’t magic. It’s just putting things where you use them.
I tried the “pile it and pray” method for years. Spoiler: it failed. Every time.
Supermarkets don’t toss cereal next to frozen pizza. Neither should your garage.
Start by sketching your floor plan on paper. Don’t overthink it. A rough rectangle with doors and windows is enough.
Now assign zones. Not categories. Zones are places, not labels.
The Transition Zone goes right inside the house door. Shoes. Coats.
Recycling bins. If it moves between house and garage daily, it lives here.
Workshop & Tools Zone? Pegboard above a sturdy workbench. Tool chest underneath.
No exceptions. If it’s not used weekly, it doesn’t belong here.
Lawn & Garden Zone needs airflow and floor space. Rakes lean against the wall. Shovels hang vertically.
Bags of soil go on pallets. Not stacked loose (they leak).
Sports & Recreation Zone is for bikes, balls, and camping gear. Hang bikes from ceiling mounts. Store tents in labeled tubs with handles (not) plastic sacks that split when you lift them.
Long-Term Storage Zone stays high or far back. Holiday decorations. Coolers.
Winter gear. Use clear bins with dates written on the side. Yes, with a Sharpie.
You’ll thank me in December.
You’re not organizing stuff. You’re organizing behavior.
Where do you grab your gloves? That’s your zone. Where do you drop the dog leash?
This is the core of Garage Organizing Advice Livpristhouse: stop fighting your habits. Build around them.
That’s your zone.
Pro tip: Take a photo of your sketch. Tape it to the garage wall. Redraw it every six months (your) needs shift.
You can read more about this in Garage cleaning advice livpristhouse.
Still staring at blank paper? Just draw one zone. Then stop.
Go Vertical (Or) Stay Stuck on the Floor

I stopped fighting gravity in my garage years ago.
Now I work with it.
The golden rule? Get everything off the floor.
Seriously. If it’s touching concrete, it’s losing.
Heavy-duty shelving goes up first. Not in the corner. Not as an afterthought. Right where you walk in.
That’s where I keep labeled bins, paint cans, and anything heavier than a sack of rice.
Clear bins only. No guessing what’s inside at 7 a.m. on a Saturday.
Wall-mounted track systems? They’re not fancy. They’re functional.
I hang bikes, ladders, extension cords, and even my kid’s scooter. One track holds more than three freestanding racks ever did.
Pegboards are not nostalgic. They’re tactical. My hammer lives there.
My tape measure. My screwdriver set. If I use it weekly, it hangs.
If I reach for it blindfolded, it stays.
Overhead racks? Save those for things you forget exist until December. Holiday decorations.
Beach chairs. That tent we used once in 2019. Lightweight.
Bulky. Rarely needed. Perfect for above.
Label everything. Yes, everything.
I use a $20 label maker. You can use masking tape and a Sharpie.
But if you open a bin and say “Wait… is this the Christmas lights or the spare lightbulbs?” (you’ve) already lost.
This isn’t just about looks. It’s about time. About not dropping a ladder trying to dig out a toolbox.
About finding your gloves in under three seconds.
Garage Organizing Advice Livpristhouse starts here (not) with cleaning, but with lifting.
And if you need help clearing the clutter before you go vertical, Garage Cleaning Advice Livpristhouse walks you through that first brutal sweep.
Don’t stack boxes on boxes. Mount. Hang.
Suspend. Your back will thank you. Your sanity too.
Step 4: The 15-Minute Weekly Reset
Garages don’t stay organized by magic. They revert. Fast.
I’ve watched it happen (tools) migrate, boxes pile up, and that “zone” you labeled? Gone in two weeks.
So here’s what I do instead of hoping.
Every Sunday night, I set a timer for 15 minutes. That’s it. No grand gestures.
I put away any tools used during the week. Break down cardboard boxes (immediately.) Sweep the floor. Not perfectly.
Just enough to see concrete again. Return anything that wandered off back to its zone.
This isn’t chore energy.
It’s boundary maintenance.
You built that system. Now protect it.
If you need help getting started with cleaning before the reset kicks in, check out How to clean your garage livpristhouse.
The 15-Minute Weekly Reset is the only thing keeping my garage from becoming a black hole.
Garage Organizing Advice Livpristhouse works (but) only if you show up for this part.
Take Back Your Garage This Weekend
I’ve seen garages buried under decades of stuff. Yours isn’t special. It’s just stuck.
You now know the four steps: Purge, Zone, Store, Maintain. Not theory. Not magic.
Just action.
That clutter isn’t just junk. It’s stress you carry every time you open the door. It’s wasted space you pay for twice (in) rent and in frustration.
You want peace. You want function. You want to park your car inside.
Garage Organizing Advice Livpristhouse works because it skips the fluff and starts where you are.
So ask yourself: what’s stopping you right now? The weather? The weekend?
Your energy level?
None of that matters more than one hour.
Don’t wait for the perfect time. Choose one small corner. Grab a trash bag.
Start your purge today.
You’ll be amazed at what you can accomplish in just one hour.


Ask Linda Rossindals how they got into interior design trends and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Linda started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Linda worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Interior Design Trends, Essential Gardening Tips, Outdoor Living Solutions. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Linda operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Linda doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Linda's work tend to reflect that.
