The DU-HA 48 in. Trunk Organizer is the top pick for reps with a repeatable load and enough trunk-floor space for its 48-inch format. Its compartmented layout suits a vehicle that carries the same core materials from one appointment to the next.

Quick Picks

Organizer Layout Choose it for Keep in mind
DU-HA 48 in. Trunk Organizer 48-inch compartmented organizer A fixed daily kit with folders, samples, supplies, and vehicle inventory Needs a trunk floor that can accommodate its 48-inch length
OxGord Car Trunk Organizer with Removable Dividers Adjustable sections with removable dividers Changing sample loads, event materials, and mixed weekly cargo Works best when divider zones stay assigned to clear categories
Better Breather Multi-Pocket Trunk Organizer Multi-pocket sorting layout Cables, chargers, documents, badges, pens, and other small gear Not the right shape for large boxes or tall presentation materials
Sevencraft Canvas Trunk Organizer with Handles Canvas organizer with carry handles Moving a full kit between cars, offices, hotels, or event spaces Prioritizes portability over a fixed trunk layout
OttoMax Trunk Organizer Upright storage format for taller cargo Binders, folders, stacked materials, and boxed samples Bottom-stored items take longer to reach than top-loaded materials

48-inch fit check: The DU-HA needs a clear 48-inch run on the trunk floor. Account for wheel wells, cargo trim, side storage areas, and any equipment built into the cargo space before selecting it.

Keep sensitive items separate: A trunk organizer can sort everyday materials, but it is not a secure case for laptops, confidential paperwork, or temperature-sensitive samples. Carry those items in dedicated bags or cases rather than leaving them as part of the trunk inventory.

Who These Organizers Suit

This list is for reps whose vehicle doubles as a mobile supply room. That can include territory managers, insurance agents, B2B sales reps, field representatives, and anyone who regularly carries paperwork, samples, demo materials, accessories, or event supplies.

The goal is not to pack every inch of the trunk. It is to prevent the familiar mid-day scramble for a folder, cable, badge, or sample box while heading into an appointment. A good setup keeps active materials together, separates them from personal and vehicle items, and makes the most-used supplies easy to grab.

Typical sales load Organizer style Why it fits
Same vehicle and same materials every day Compartmented organizer Each category can keep a permanent home.
Different samples and materials each week Removable-divider organizer Sections can expand or shrink with the load.
Lots of small accessories and paperwork Multi-pocket organizer Small items are less likely to disappear under larger cargo.
Rental cars, shared cars, or frequent transfers Handled canvas organizer The kit can move as one unit instead of several loose armfuls.
Tall folders, binders, and boxed materials Upright organizer Taller items stay grouped rather than spreading across the trunk.

A trunk organizer also helps keep the passenger area clear. Loose materials on seats tend to shift during a drive, create clutter at customer stops, and quickly become mixed with food wrappers, personal bags, and other non-work items.

How the Picks Were Chosen

These picks are organized around common sales-rep problems rather than a long list of unnecessary features. A trunk organizer needs to support the way the vehicle is used between appointments: loading in the morning, retrieving materials during the day, and cleaning out the leftovers at the end of the week.

The key differences come down to five practical points:

  • Fixed versus adjustable storage: A stable daily kit benefits from fixed compartments. Changing samples and event materials benefit from removable dividers.
  • Small-item control: Pockets are useful for chargers, pens, badges, adapters, and paperwork that would otherwise get buried.
  • Portability: Handles matter when the organizer leaves the vehicle regularly.
  • Cargo shape: Tall folders, binders, cartons, and stacked materials need a different layout than cables and brochures.
  • Trunk footprint: A large organizer can be useful, but only when it leaves room for the rest of the vehicle’s normal cargo.

Keep the organizer reserved for active work materials. Outdated brochures, old receipts, spare cables, snack packaging, and personal clutter can take over any storage system quickly.

1. DU-HA 48 in. Trunk Organizer: Best Overall

Best for a stable daily sales kit

The DU-HA 48 in. Trunk Organizer is the strongest match for a rep who works from the same vehicle most days and carries a familiar set of materials. Its 48-inch, compartmented format gives core items assigned areas instead of leaving everything in one open cargo pile.

That makes sense for a repeatable route. Brochures can stay in one section, routine supplies in another, and samples or product materials in their own area. The benefit is consistency: the same items are in the same place from the first stop of the day to the last.

Its size is also the reason to choose carefully. The organizer occupies a defined stretch of trunk floor, so it suits vehicles with enough cargo width and length to support it. It is less suited to narrow trunk openings, frequent vehicle swaps, or loads made up mostly of tall boxes.

Choose it if: Your vehicle carries the same sales kit every day and you want permanent storage zones for the materials you reach for most.

Skip it if: You move your kit between vehicles often, have limited trunk-floor space, or carry mostly tall binders and stacked boxes. The Sevencraft is better for transfers, while the OttoMax is better suited to taller cargo.

2. OxGord Car Trunk Organizer with Removable Dividers: Best Value

Best for changing weekly loads

The OxGord Car Trunk Organizer with Removable Dividers suits reps whose trunk contents change from one week to the next. The removable dividers let you make smaller sections for documents and accessories or larger sections for samples, event materials, and personal travel items.

That flexibility is useful for a territory with mixed appointment types. A day of office visits may call for folders, charging gear, and presentation supplies. A trade-show day may require wider storage zones for larger materials. Instead of living with fixed compartments that no longer match the load, the organizer can be arranged around the work ahead.

The trade-off is that adjustable storage needs a little discipline. If dividers move every morning without a clear plan, there is no dependable place to find anything. Assign sections by category—such as paperwork, samples, electronics, and personal items—and keep those categories consistent even when section sizes change.

Choose it if: Your materials vary by account, season, event schedule, or sales campaign.

Skip it if: You want the same item location every day without changing the layout. The DU-HA is the cleaner choice for a fixed kit.

3. Better Breather Multi-Pocket Trunk Organizer: Best for Small Gear

Best for cables, paperwork, and accessories

The Better Breather Multi-Pocket Trunk Organizer is the right specialist pick when the problem is not large cargo but small essentials. Charging cords, adapters, badge holders, pens, clipboards, wipes, receipt envelopes, and product literature can disappear quickly inside one large trunk bin.

A multi-pocket layout gives those items separate homes. That helps prevent chargers from ending up under brochures, loose paperwork from mixing with personal items, and small accessories from rolling around the cargo area after a few turns.

This style is less useful for large demo cases, tall binders, or cartons of materials. Pockets improve sorting, but they do not create the open vertical space those items need. It also helps to keep each pocket limited to one category; otherwise, a pocket organizer simply turns into several smaller junk drawers.

Choose it if: You carry a lot of small business supplies and want cables, documents, and accessories separated by type.

Skip it if: Your route requires bulky samples, stacked boxes, or upright presentation materials. The OttoMax is a better match for that cargo shape.

4. Sevencraft Canvas Trunk Organizer with Handles: Best for Vehicle Transfers

Best for reps who move the whole kit

The Sevencraft Canvas Trunk Organizer with Handles serves a different kind of road warrior: the rep who does not always use the same vehicle. Rental cars, pool vehicles, shared household cars, business travel, and office-based days all make portability more important.

Its built-in handles make it easier to move the organizer as one load. That is useful when taking materials from a trunk to an office, hotel room, trade-show space, or another vehicle. It also makes it easier to clear the vehicle after work when it is needed for family use or personal errands.

The trade-off is that a carry-focused canvas organizer is not the same as a permanent trunk station. Reps who want a fixed, compartmented setup for a daily route will likely prefer the DU-HA’s more structured format.

Choose it if: Your sales kit regularly moves between vehicles or needs to come inside at the end of the day.

Skip it if: The organizer stays in one vehicle full time and you want permanent sections for every category of material.

5. OttoMax Trunk Organizer: Best for Tall Materials

Best for binders, folders, and boxed samples

The OttoMax Trunk Organizer is the best fit for reps who carry taller materials that do not sit well in shallow, wide storage bins. Binders, vertical folders, stacked sample packs, and boxed presentation materials need containment that keeps them grouped instead of letting them tip or spread across the trunk.

This is especially helpful when customer-facing materials need to stay separate from cleanup supplies, personal bags, and vehicle equipment. Keeping taller items together makes the trunk easier to load and easier to reset after a busy day.

The downside is access depth. When items are stacked, the materials placed lower in the organizer take longer to retrieve. Put the folders, samples, or materials needed for the first few appointments near the top, and keep reserve inventory beneath them.

Choose it if: Your regular load includes binders, tall folders, boxes, or stacked sales materials.

Skip it if: Your trunk is mostly cables, pens, adapters, and loose paperwork. The Better Breather’s pocket layout is more useful for that kind of kit.

Match the Organizer to the Real Problem

The easiest way to choose is to start with the item that causes the most frustration during the workweek.

  • Trunk contents shift and mix together: Choose the DU-HA for a fixed, compartmented setup.
  • Samples and materials change constantly: Choose the OxGord for adjustable divider sections.
  • Cables and small supplies disappear: Choose the Better Breather for pocket-level sorting.
  • The kit moves between vehicles: Choose the Sevencraft for its carry handles.
  • Tall folders and cartons topple over: Choose the OttoMax for upright containment.

More compartments are not automatically better. Every section needs a purpose. Unused sections tend to collect receipts, old collateral, loose pens, food packaging, and miscellaneous items that should not be in the work kit.

Who Should Choose Something Else

A trunk organizer is not the right storage solution for every type of field work. Expensive demo equipment, confidential records, laptops, temperature-sensitive materials, and specialized products need dedicated cases or transport methods suited to those items.

A hard-sided rolling case is often a better fit for materials that travel from the parking lot into customer offices every day. The organizers in this list are better for managing vehicle inventory between stops.

Very small trunks can also limit the usefulness of a large organizer. In those vehicles, a portable handled organizer or a smaller adjustable layout may be easier to live with than a long, fixed storage unit.

Other Options We Considered

FORTEM, Drive Auto, Honey-Can-Do, and Picnic at Ascot offer trunk-storage products in this category. The five picks above stand out here because each one addresses a distinct sales-rep situation: fixed inventory, changing cargo, small-item sorting, portable transfers, or upright materials.

A generic collapsible trunk bin can still work for gym clothes, groceries, emergency supplies, or occasional personal cargo. It is less effective when work materials need to stay separated by purpose throughout a full day of appointments.

Final Buying Checklist

Before ordering, organize the decision around the workday rather than the organizer’s appearance.

  • Measure the usable trunk floor. Include wheel wells, trim, side compartments, and equipment installed in the cargo area.
  • List the items you reach for every day. Those categories should occupy the easiest-access sections.
  • Separate customer-facing materials from vehicle supplies. Brochures and samples should not share space with jumper cables, cleaning products, or loose personal gear.
  • Plan around the largest item. A banner case, sample carton, binder, or presentation box often determines the storage shape you need.
  • Decide whether the organizer stays in the vehicle. Permanent trunk setups favor fixed structure; frequent transfers favor handles.
  • Clear it out weekly. Remove old receipts, outdated literature, damaged samples, food packaging, and spare cords that no longer serve a purpose.

Fabric and canvas organizers benefit from occasional vacuuming around seams and pockets. Rigid compartments are easier to wipe out before loading paper materials, brochures, or packaged samples. Either style stays useful longer when it is treated as active work storage rather than a catch-all trunk bin.

Final Recommendation

The DU-HA 48 in. Trunk Organizer is the best overall choice for road warrior sales reps with a predictable daily kit and a trunk large enough for its 48-inch footprint. Its compartmented format makes sense when the same folders, materials, supplies, and samples need a consistent place every day.

Choose the OxGord Car Trunk Organizer with Removable Dividers for a flexible, budget-focused setup that can change with the week’s appointments. Choose the Sevencraft Canvas Trunk Organizer with Handles when your kit moves between vehicles. The Better Breather is the standout for small accessories and paperwork, while the OttoMax is the better pick for taller folders, boxes, and stacked materials.

FAQ

Should a sales rep choose a rigid or collapsible trunk organizer?

Choose a rigid, compartmented organizer when the same materials stay in one vehicle every day. Choose a collapsible or handled organizer when the kit frequently moves between cars, offices, hotels, or event spaces. The DU-HA suits a fixed vehicle setup, while the Sevencraft suits a portable one.

Is a trunk organizer a good place for a laptop and customer paperwork?

Use a trunk organizer for basic sorting, not for securing sensitive items. Carry laptops, confidential records, and other valuable materials in dedicated bags or cases rather than leaving them in the vehicle between appointments.

How should sales materials be arranged in the trunk?

Arrange materials by how often they are needed. Keep daily-use folders and supplies closest to the trunk opening, place reserve stock farther back or lower down, and keep customer-facing materials separate from personal items and vehicle supplies.

Which organizer is best for samples that change every week?

The OxGord Car Trunk Organizer with Removable Dividers is the best match for changing sample loads. Its adjustable sections can be set up for larger boxes one week and smaller categories of folders, electronics, and accessories the next.

Which organizer is best for rental cars?

The Sevencraft Canvas Trunk Organizer with Handles is the strongest option for rental-car use because the full kit can be carried out together. A long fixed organizer such as the DU-HA makes more sense when one vehicle handles the route every day.