
✓ The Good
✗ The Bad
My cordless tool collection grew way faster than my organization system could keep up. Drills, impact drivers, circular saws, oscillating tools — all scattered across the workbench with half-dead batteries everywhere. I'd grab a drill mid-project and the battery would die two screws in. Classic.
I needed one spot where every tool lives AND every battery stays topped off. The LBT organizer promised exactly that, so I put it on the wall and put it to the test.
The LBT is a wall-mounted unit with individual slots that hold power tools by the battery — upright, accessible, and off your workbench forever. The yellow color isn't just a styling choice — it actually pops in the garage so you can spot it from across the shop without your reading glasses.
Below the tool slots sits a shelf area designed to house your chargers and a power strip. Construction is genuinely sturdy — thick enough to hold fully loaded tools without any sag or flex. Mounting hardware is included, and you're anchoring this into studs, which you absolutely want when you've got five or six heavy cordless tools hanging on it.
This is the feature that sold me. Route a power strip to the organizer area, plug in your brand chargers, and every tool tops off while it's stored. The workflow becomes dead simple: grab a tool, it's charged, do the work, put it back. After three weekends of using it this way, I haven't hunted for a charged battery once. That's not a small win — that's time back in my pocket on every single project.
I ran DeWalt and Milwaukee tools through it without issue. The slots accommodate most major brands — Makita and Ryobi owners have reported the same. Some of the beefier larger tools fit a little snug, but nothing that made me want to yank it off the wall.
Stop wasting project time hunting for a charged tool. The LBT organizer solves that problem completely — everything in one spot, charged and ready when you are. At $40–70 depending on where you catch it, this thing pays for itself in saved frustration inside the first month. Workshop efficiency, Boss Dad style.
Liked this review?
Liked this review? Here's what I'm testing next — vote to move it up.
Boss Daddy
@bossdaddyteamFirst-time dad. Honest gear reviews. No corporate fluff.
I'm a first-time dad in the trenches — testing every piece of gear on my own kid, my own grill, and my own weekend projects. If I wouldn't buy it again, I'll tell you. If it changed the game, I'll tell you that too. Every review is earned, never sponsored.