May 5th 2026 by The UbeCube Team
How to Organize Camping Gear with a Modular Storage System
Camping gear has a way of spreading out fast. Sleeping bags end up in one corner, cookware gets shoved onto a shelf, hiking poles lean against the wall, and small essentials disappear into random bins until the next trip.
A good camping gear storage setup should do more than hide the mess. It should help you see what you have, keep important items grouped together, and make it easier to grab the right gear before heading out.
That’s where a modular crate system can make a big difference.
UbeCube™ crates are built to stack, connect, and reconfigure around your gear. Whether you’re organizing a garage, mudroom, cabin, basement, or outdoor gear room, the system gives you a flexible way to store camping equipment without locking yourself into one layout forever.
Why Camping Gear Is Hard to Keep Organized

Outdoor gear comes in awkward shapes and sizes. Some items are soft and bulky, like sleeping bags, jackets, and tents. Others are long and narrow, like trekking poles, fishing rods, camp tools, and paddles. Then there are the small essentials: batteries, fire starters, lures, first aid supplies, rope, repair kits, cookware, and headlamps.
Standard shelves can hold gear, but they usually don’t organize it very well. Large totes hide what’s inside. Open shelves get cluttered. Wall hooks help with some items, but not everything.
A better setup separates your gear by use, keeps small items contained, and gives bulky items a home without burying them.
Start with Zones
Before buying more bins or adding another shelf, divide your camping gear into simple zones.
A strong outdoor storage setup usually includes:
Trip-ready gear: The items you grab nearly every time, like headlamps, fire starters, cookware, rope, gloves, and small tools.
Bulky soft goods: Sleeping bags, blankets, jackets, rain gear, and tent accessories.
Long gear: Trekking poles, fishing rods, paddles, camp tools, and other tall equipment.
Small essentials: Repair parts, batteries, first aid items, lures, clips, cords, and cooking accessories.
Seasonal or specialty gear: Snowshoes, kayak gear, fishing kits, hunting accessories, or extra camp supplies.
Once these categories are separated, the storage system becomes much easier to build.
Use Stackable Crates for Vertical Camping Gear Storage
The easiest way to save space is to build upward.
Stackable crates let you turn unused wall space into organized storage without needing a permanent cabinet. A vertical crate tower works especially well for camping gear because each crate can hold a different category.
One crate might hold cookware and camp kitchen supplies. Another can store ropes, straps, and tie-downs. A lower crate can hold heavier items, while upper crates can store lighter gear like hats, gloves, or rain layers.
With UbeCube™, crates can be stacked into towers, connected side-by-side, or arranged around existing shelves and work surfaces. That makes it easier to build around your actual space instead of forcing everything into a fixed shelving unit.
Keep Small Camping Essentials in Bins and Trays

Small gear is usually where organization breaks down.
Items like lighters, batteries, multitools, repair kits, clips, paracord, first aid supplies, and fishing accessories are easy to lose inside large containers. Instead of throwing them into one big tote, use smaller bins and trays to divide the space.
Grab Bins work well for items you want to pull out quickly. Drop-In Trays are useful for gear that needs to stay visible and easy to access. CrateShelves can divide the inside of a crate so you can separate flatter items from bulkier ones.
This type of setup makes your gear easier to check before a trip. Instead of digging through a deep bin, you can open the crate and immediately see what needs to be restocked.
Store Bulky Gear Where It Can Breathe
Sleeping bags, jackets, tents, blankets, and soft camp goods take up space fast. They also don’t always fit well inside small drawers or closed bins.
Open crate spaces are useful for bulky gear because they keep items contained without completely burying them. You can use a crate tower for rolled sleeping bags, jackets, dry bags, camp pillows, and other soft items that need a dedicated home.
For gear that you use often, keeping it visible helps prevent the classic problem of buying duplicates because you forgot what you already had.
Add Hooks and Holders for Grab-and-Go Gear

Not everything belongs inside a crate.
Some outdoor gear works better when it hangs on the side of the system. Hats, helmets, small bags, gloves, tools, cords, and accessories can all be stored on the outside of a crate tower using modular attachments.
This is where the UbeCube system becomes more than just stacked storage. Accessories like CrateHooks, Tool Hooks, Plier Holders, Pole Holders, and other quarter-turn attachments let you build storage onto the sides of the crates.
That means your setup can hold both contained items and hanging gear in the same footprint.
For example, trekking poles can be stored vertically along the side of a crate tower. A helmet can hang on the front. Small bags can attach to the side. Frequently used tools can stay within reach instead of disappearing into a drawer.
Build a Grab-and-Go Outdoor Gear Station

The best camping gear storage systems make it easier to leave.
A grab-and-go station gives each category of gear a home so you can pack faster and forget less. Instead of searching through the garage before every trip, you can build a simple flow:
Start with everyday outdoor essentials near the top or front. Keep small items sorted in bins and trays. Store bulky soft goods in larger crate openings. Hang poles, helmets, and accessories on the outside. Keep specialty kits, like fishing, camp cooking, or emergency supplies, grouped together.
This setup works especially well in garages, cabins, mudrooms, and gear closets because it keeps outdoor equipment organized near the place you load and unload.
Make the System Fit Your Space
One of the biggest advantages of modular camping gear storage is that it can change.
A fixed cabinet might look clean at first, but outdoor gear changes over time. You add new hobbies, upgrade equipment, or shift between seasons. Summer camping gear might get swapped for hunting gear, ski gear, fishing gear, or emergency prep supplies.
UbeCube crates are designed to reconfigure as your setup changes. You can build a tall tower, split crates into smaller stations, add shelves, connect crates side-by-side, or move accessories to a new location.
That flexibility matters because the best storage system is the one you’ll actually keep using.
Camping Gear Storage Ideas You Can Build with UbeCube
Here are a few practical ways to use a modular crate setup for outdoor gear:
Garage camping gear wall: Stack crates vertically along a garage wall for sleeping bags, cookware, tent parts, tools, and small essentials.
Cabin gear station: Use crate towers near an entryway or storage room to organize hiking gear, fishing gear, hats, gloves, poles, and trail supplies.
Trip prep station: Keep grab-and-go items in trays and bins so you can quickly check what needs to be packed before leaving.
Outdoor hobby tower: Create separate sections for camping, fishing, hiking, climbing, kayaking, or hunting gear.
Seasonal storage system: Reconfigure crates and accessories as your gear changes from summer camping to winter outdoor storage.
A Better Way to Store Camping Gear

Camping gear should be easy to find, easy to pack, and easy to put away when you get home.
A modular crate system helps turn scattered outdoor equipment into a setup that actually works with your habits. You can stack crates, connect them, add shelves and bins, hang accessories, and build the exact gear station your space needs.
Whether you’re organizing a garage, cabin, mudroom, or outdoor storage area, UbeCube™ gives camping gear a flexible home that can grow with every trip.
UbeCube™: Expect Crate Things.