My hallway closet used to be a game of pick-up sticks. Open the door, and the broom would slide out first, then the mop would follow, then the dustpan would clatter down behind both of them. I'd wedge them back in, close the door carefully, and the whole pile would tip right back over the next time anyone so much as brushed past it. This happened at my house in Ohio for two straight years before I finally did something about it, and that something was an eight dollar pack of Command Broom Grippers. Two hangers, four adhesive strips, zero holes in the wall.

I know a broom holder sounds like a small thing to write ten reasons about. But once mine went up on a random Tuesday night, I noticed how much that one little pile-up had been quietly wearing on me every single day, from the morning shoe scramble to the annoyed sigh every time I opened that door. Here's what actually changed, item by item, in case your closet looks anything like mine used to.

The $8 fix for the pile-up you deal with every single day

Two hangers, four strips, no drill required. If your closet floor looks like mine used to, this is the fastest fix on the list.

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1

It Stops the Morning Pile-On

Every school morning, my daughter Emmy needed her shoes out of that closet by 7:15, and every school morning she'd knock the broom loose reaching past it, which meant I was catching a falling mop with one hand while buttering toast with the other. Now the broom stays clipped to the wall a full foot above the shoe bin, and mornings in our hallway are noticeably calmer. It's a small thing until it's the thing that was making you late.

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Hand pressing an adhesive broom gripper against the inside wall of a closet before hanging a broom handle in it
2

No Drill, No Landlord Drama

We rented our last house, and the lease was clear about nail holes coming out of the deposit. These grippers use the same adhesive strips as any Command hook, so there's nothing to patch, nothing to spackle, and nothing to explain during a move-out walkthrough. I pressed the strip against the wall, held it for thirty seconds, and that was the entire installation. Two years later when we moved, the wall behind it looked completely untouched, and we got our full deposit back.

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3

Two Hangers Means Broom AND Mop, Not a Wrestling Match

The pack comes with two separate grippers, so I put one for the broom and one for the mop, spaced about six inches apart on the same wall. Before, they were both leaning against each other in the corner, and pulling one out always meant the other one toppled straight to the floor, usually taking the dustpan with it. Now they hang independently, and grabbing the mop doesn't disturb the broom at all.

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4

It Actually Holds the Weight

My mop isn't light. It's a heavy cotton-string mop that's soaked through more times than I can count, and I was genuinely worried a $2 dollar-store clip would just give up under a wet head. The Command gripper is rated to hold a few pounds per hanger, which covers most brooms, mops, and even a dustpan-on-a-stick, and mine has held that wet mop through a full year of laundry-room duty without sagging, slipping, or letting go once.

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Before and after chart showing the number of items cluttering the closet floor drops from six to one after installing a broom holder
5

Your Broom Bristles Stay Straight

A broom that leans on its bristles for months starts to curve, and a curved broom doesn't sweep the corners anymore, it just pushes crumbs around in a fan shape. Once mine started hanging by the handle instead of resting on its head, the bristles straightened back out within a couple of weeks on their own. It's a small maintenance win I never would have thought about before I had somewhere else to put it besides the floor.

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6

It Works Anywhere in the House

We started with one set in the hallway closet, then my husband Mark bought a second pack for the garage, where the shop broom used to lean against the lawn mower and fall over every time he opened the door. A friend of mine mounted hers inside a pantry door for a dustpan and a lint roller. It sticks to painted drywall, sealed wood, and the inside of a hollow-core door, which covers most of the spots a broom actually lives in a normal house.

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7

You Get Your Floor Space Back

With the broom and mop off the floor, I had room for the small shoe tray I'd been wanting to fit in there for months but never had the clearance for. That closet is only about 31 inches wide, so every inch of floor space matters more than it would in a bigger room. Getting two tall items up onto the wall freed up more usable floor than I expected from something that small and that cheap.

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Mother and young daughter putting shoes away in a closet that now has broom and mop stored neatly on the wall above
8

Installation Takes About Ten Minutes

I did this on a Tuesday night while dinner was in the oven, and I still had time to check on the chicken. Wipe the wall with a damp cloth, let it dry completely, peel and press each strip firmly for about thirty seconds, then wait a full hour before hanging anything heavy. That last step is the one people skip and then wonder why it fell off the next day. Give it the hour and it holds.

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9

It's Removable Without Wrecking the Paint

I moved my mop's hanger down two inches after I realized the head was dragging on the floor trim and picking up dust. Pulling the strip straight down slowly released it clean, no torn paint, no sticky residue left behind, no patch job needed. I re-stuck a fresh strip in the new spot and it went right back up in under a minute. Try doing that with a screwed-in hook and a wall full of spackle.

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10

It's Cheaper Than Any Closet System You'll Find

I looked at full closet organizer kits before landing on this, and most started around $60 and needed a Saturday afternoon and a stud finder to install. This pack runs under $10 and solves the exact problem I actually had, which was two tall cleaning tools with nowhere to lean that didn't end in a pile on the floor by the next morning.

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What I'd Skip

I wouldn't bother using these on textured or freshly painted walls, and I'd skip putting them anywhere that gets direct sun or heat, like right next to a laundry room dryer vent. Ours are on smooth drywall painted over a year ago, and that's exactly the surface Command adhesive is built for. I tried an extra strip on a lightly textured wall in the garage and it held for about a week before giving out and dropping the shop broom right onto the concrete. If your walls are textured, brick, or newly painted, wait the full cure time on the paint first, clean the surface well, and expect to press firmer and hold longer than you think you need to before trusting it with anything heavy.

The broom hasn't hit that floor once since the night I put these up.

Stop stepping over the broom on your way out the door

It's a small fix, but it's the kind you notice every single day once it's done. Two hangers, four strips, ten minutes.

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