The Cabinet Door Spray Bottle Holder on Printables solves a messy cleaning-supply problem with a simple move: use the inside face of a cabinet door instead of fighting for shelf space under the sink. That makes the model easy to understand at a glance and gives it a clear everyday use case for kitchens, bathrooms, laundry rooms, and utility cabinets.
Public source signals are strong for this kind of household utility file, with roughly 2,999 likes, 4,555 downloads, 45 makes, about 24,943 views, 1,414 public collections, and 47 ratings averaging about 4.85 out of 5 on Printables. That is enough visible proof to treat it as a proven storage idea instead of a random low-signal upload.
Why this holder stands out
A lot of bottle holders ask for screws, adhesive pads, or a permanent wall location. This design goes after a more flexible path. It hooks over a cabinet door, which means people can add storage without drilling tile, patching walls, or committing to a fixed mount in the wrong spot.
- frees up usable shelf space under the sink
- keeps bottles upright and easier to grab
- fits cleaning cabinets where wall space is limited
- works for renters or anyone avoiding holes and adhesive residue
Where it fits best
This is an especially good match for cramped storage areas where tall spray bottles usually flop around or block access to smaller items.
- kitchen sink cabinets with glass cleaner, degreaser, and surface spray
- bathroom vanities with multi-bottle cleaning supplies
- laundry setups with spot remover or fabric-care bottles
- utility closets where one more shelf would not actually solve the access problem
What to check before printing or ordering
The key question is door fit. Cabinet doors vary, and over-the-door parts only work when the thickness and swing clearance make sense together.
- Door thickness: confirm the hook section matches the cabinet door you actually have.
- Clearance: make sure the door can still close cleanly with the holder installed.
- Bottle diameter: check the spray bottle neck and body against the holder opening.
- Material choice: PETG is often the safer baseline for repeat flex and warmer utility spaces.
The source description also strengthens the model's credibility by calling out no-support printing, thicker-layer strength guidance, 3 to 5 walls, and brim advice for the thinner bracket section. That makes the listing more useful than a bare upload with no real print notes.
If you are comparing materials for this kind of storage part, pair this with PLA vs PETG for functional parts, wall thickness and perimeters, and the downloaded-model screening guide.
When outsourcing makes sense
This is the kind of file many people would rather receive finished than dial in themselves. If the goal is a cleaner cabinet and not another test print, ordering the finished part can make more sense than experimenting with fit, flex, and door clearance at home.
Need help from a professional 3D print farm? Reach out to JC Print Farm and they can help.
Need parts printed? Get a quote at quote.jcsfy.com. We ship globally, offer multiple materials, and keep the quoting process simple.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this need screws or adhesive?
No. The whole point of this model is cabinet-door storage without drilling or adhesive mounting.
Is PLA enough for this holder?
PLA may work in some indoor cabinets, but PETG is usually the safer choice when the hook section may flex repeatedly or live in a warmer utility space.
Who is this best for?
Anyone tired of loose spray bottles under the sink, especially renters, apartment dwellers, and households that want cleaner storage without permanent mounting.
Related reading
- Under-sink storage shelf organizer
- Wall toothbrush holder
- Featured Files hub
- Downloaded-model rights and permissions guide
Ownership and print-offer note
Public Printables page data exposes excludeCommercialUsage: false, which suggests commercial use may be allowed, but the exact human-readable license wording should still be confirmed directly on the source listing before anyone treats the exact file as a broad sellable catalog item. Editorial coverage is clear, but broad print-offer rights for the exact file should still be treated carefully until that wording is confirmed directly.