If Your Drawers Are Full and Countertops Are Cluttered, You Need This Smart Japanese-Designed Storage That Instantly Doubles Your Kitchen’s Prep Space

As a New Yorker with a truly tiny kitchen, I don’t impress easily – but this storage-doubling Yamazaki organizer may have done it

White Yamazaki Countertop Drawer styled with a Breville Espresso Machine and Fellow tea kettle atop of white marble kitchen countertop
(Image credit: Yamazaki Home)

Yamazaki’s latest addition to its kitchen archive promises to double your storage. As someone who lives in New York City, I was immediately intrigued.

Being an avid heel collector, I’m already well acquainted with the brand’s viral shoe rack (I’m somehow squeezing 24 pairs), and I'm still grateful for the extra inches its sleek dish rack has bought me on my barely-there kitchen counter. Naturally, I inquired further.

White Yamazaki Countertop Drawer styled with a white microwave and Fellow tea kettle atop of a clean white kitchen countertop overlooking a lush backyard

With a tabletop weight capacity of 48.5 pounds, even your heftier countertop appliances can live comfortably up top – toaster ovens, Breville espresso machines, and the like.

(Image credit: Yamazaki Home)

Also double-sided are the vanishing pull-out shelves, which extend nearly 10 inches, creating additional countertop surface space when you need it – a neat perch for your coffee mug mid-brew, or for plates and bowls awaiting their turn in the microwave above. This was, indeed, designed by a company headquartered in Japan.

While this storage system is intended for a small kitchen, I could easily see it moonlighting in an office as well, supporting a printer on top, cords and writing utensils tucked below. The world, frankly, is your oyster.

Could this be Yamazaki’s next Rolling Storage Cart-level viral hit? I wouldn’t be surprised.

How I'd Style It

With its clean lines and unfussy black-or-white palette, the styling potential of this Yamazaki Countertop Organizer is vast. Given its space-saving dimensions, here’s how I’d engineer the chicest little kitchen corner imaginable.


As a renter navigating the daily puzzle that is a studio-sized New York City kitchen, I’m constantly hunting for no-reno upgrades that make small kitchens feel bigger. With its clever two-way access and extendable surfaces, this might be the most genuinely useful organizer I’ve seen in a while.

I’m already plotting one atop my beloved IKEA kitchen cart – another small-space godsend.

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Julia Demer
Style Editor

Julia Demer is a New York–based Style Editor at Homes & Gardens with a sharp eye for where fashion meets interiors. Having cut her teeth at L’Officiel USA and The Row before pivoting into homes, she believes great style is universal – whether it’s a perfect outfit, a stunning room, or the ultimate set of sheets. Passionate about art, travel, and pop culture, Julia brings a global, insider perspective to every story.