Planning Your Garage Layout: Australian Dimensions, Storage Zones and Wall Systems
A well-planned garage does more than park a car. With the right layout, it becomes a functional workshop, a sports equipment hub, a tool room, and a storage solution all in one. But most Australian homeowners start fitting out their garage without a plan — and end up with a cluttered space that frustrates them every time they open the door. This guide walks you through standard Australian garage dimensions, how to think about zones, and how to choose a wall storage system that grows with you.
Standard Australian Garage Dimensions
Before you plan anything, you need to know what you’re working with.
Single Garage
- Standard size: approximately 3.0m wide x 5.5m deep (minimum)
- Recommended: 3.5m x 6.0m to allow comfortable door opening and storage along walls
- Typical wall storage area: one or two walls depending on access door position
Double Garage (2-Car)
- Standard size: approximately 5.4m–6.0m wide x 5.5m–6.0m deep
- This is the most common size for Australian homes built since the 1990s
- Key consideration: width determines whether you have a usable wall down the centre dividing the two bays
- Wall storage potential: significantly higher — typically 3–4 walls available
Triple Garage (3-Car)
- Standard size: approximately 8.4m–9.0m wide x 6.0m deep
- Less common but increasingly popular in new builds
- Wall storage across 3+ walls is achievable
Basement Garages
- Common in newer townhouses and apartments
- Usually tighter dimensions — 2.7m–3.0m wide per bay
- Height restrictions sometimes limit overhead storage
- Wall storage becomes even more important as floor space is at a premium
Before You Plan — Four Questions to Answer First
This section guides the reader through self-assessment before diving into layout.
How many cars need to fit?
The car footprint defines everything else. A standard car needs approximately 2.4m wide x 4.8m long of floor space, plus clearance. Plan this first, then work around it.
What else do you need the garage to do?
List everything: bikes, tools, garden equipment, sports gear, a workbench, a second fridge, seasonal items. Most Australian garages need to serve 4–6 functions simultaneously. Writing this list before planning prevents the most common mistake — designing for the car and forgetting everything else.
What are your walls made of?
- Brick or block — requires battening before slatwall installation (link to battening article)
- Plasterboard over timber frame — direct installation possible
- Metal shed frame — requires specific fixing approach
- Concrete block — similar to brick
Wall type determines your installation approach and should be understood before choosing a storage system.
Where are your fixed elements?
Power points, windows, the door from the house, the garage door mechanism — all of these constrain your layout. Mark them on a rough sketch before planning anything.
Dividing Your Garage Into Zones
Intro: The most functional garages treat wall space and floor space as separate planning problems. The walls handle storage. The floor handles activity and access.
The Car Zone
Define your car footprint first. Mark it on the floor with tape if it helps. Everything else in your planning works around this.
The Wall Storage Zone
Every wall that doesn’t have a window, door or garage door mechanism is a storage opportunity. In a standard double garage, this typically gives you:
- Full rear wall (most valuable — widest and most accessible)
- One full side wall
- Portions of the other side wall
- Sometimes above the garage door on the front wall
A slatwall system installed across these walls gives you continuous, configurable storage from floor to approximately 2.1m height — the practical reach limit for most adults.
The Workbench Zone
If you need a workbench, plan it along one wall — ideally under a window for natural light, or with dedicated lighting above. A slatwall system above the bench keeps tools within arm’s reach and off the bench surface.
The Overhead Zone
Ceiling space is often wasted in Australian garages. Overhead storage platforms or ceiling-mounted racks work well for seasonal items — Christmas decorations, camping gear, sports equipment used only occasionally. Keep regularly accessed items on walls and rarely accessed items overhead.
The Floor Zone
Anything that needs to stay on the floor — bins, freestanding tools, the car — should be defined and protected. If your wall storage is doing its job, your floor zone should be largely clear.
Choosing Your Wall Storage System
Once you know your zones, you need to choose a wall storage system that can serve all of them. There are three main options for Australian homeowners.
Pegboard
The traditional option. Inexpensive to buy, but hooks fall out constantly, weight limits are low (typically 5–10kg per hook), and MDF versions deteriorate with moisture. Suitable for light tool storage only.
Wire Track Systems (like StorEase from Bunnings)
More durable than pegboard, with a proprietary track and hook system. Limited accessory range compared to slatwall. Weight ratings are lower and the channel spacing is fixed, limiting configuration flexibility.
PVC Slatwall (like StoreWALL)
The premium option for Australian garages. Key advantages:
- Weight rating up to 75kg per panel
- 200+ compatible hooks, shelves, baskets and accessories
- Waterproof — no swelling or warping in humid or wet garage environments
- Fully configurable — accessories slide and reposition without tools
- Colour options to suit different garage aesthetics
- CamLok locking mechanism keeps accessories secure even under heavy loads
How Much Wall Storage Do You Need?
A common mistake is underestimating how much wall coverage you need. Here’s a practical way to work it out.
Step 1: Count the number of items you need to store off the floor or bench. Be specific — not “tools” but “drill, jigsaw, circular saw, sander”.
Step 2: Group them by category — power tools, hand tools, garden equipment, sports gear, seasonal items.
Step 3: Assign wall space by category. Power tools near the workbench. Bikes near the garage door. Garden tools near the side door.
Step 4: Use the StoreWALL Wall Panel Estimator to calculate panel coverage for each wall section.
A Practical Example — Planning a Standard Double Garage
Walk through a realistic example with a sketch or diagram if possible.
Scenario: 5.8m x 6.0m double garage, two cars, bikes, garden tools, power tools, seasonal storage.
- Rear wall (5.8m): Full slatwall installation, bike hooks on the left section, power tool storage above bench on the right section
- Left side wall (6.0m): Full slatwall, garden tools (rakes, shovels, hose reel) and kayak bracket
- Right side wall: Partial slatwall above workbench, shelves for parts and bins
- Overhead: Platform for camping gear and seasonal boxes
This configuration removes virtually everything from the floor while keeping all items accessible.
Getting Started
Planning a garage layout takes an hour of thinking but saves years of frustration. Start with dimensions, define your zones, choose a wall system rated for what you need to store, and work category by category. The most important principle: design for what you actually own, not a theoretical tidy version of it. If you have six bikes, plan for six bikes. If you have a large tool collection, plan wall space for it from the start.
Request a StoreWALL quote / Use the wall panel estimator / Shop wall panels.