

When homeowners think “IKEA closet,” they usually picture PAX. It’s the familiar one—the system you’ve seen in before-and-afters, the one that looks built-in once doors go on, the one that feels like the obvious answer.
But then there’s BOAXEL. It’s quieter. More open. Less “wardrobe” at first glance. And because it doesn’t look like cabinetry, it’s the system a lot of people dismiss too quickly; sometimes even when it would solve the room better than PAX ever could.
At IKD, BOAXEL isn’t the system we design most often, but it can be the best fit for specific spaces. And when it does fit, it can be one of the most space-efficient and cost-effective ways to get organized. This is especially true in reach-ins, tight depths, multi-use rooms, and layouts where cabinet boxes create more limitations than solutions.
The BOAXEL design difference
BOAXEL also has more range than many homeowners expect. It’s not “just a basic shelf system.” IKEA offers a full set of BOAXEL components: rails, uprights, brackets, shelves, clothes rails, shoe shelves, mesh baskets, and more. This means the system can be planned for wardrobes, pantries, laundry rooms, and utility storage.
BOAXEL is a wall-mounted, open storage system built around a mounting rail and wall uprights, then finished with configurable interiors like shelves, baskets, and hanging rails.
This is the key difference from PAX:
- PAX is cabinet-box based. You’re working within fixed widths/depths and door clearances.
- BOAXEL is rail/upright based. You can build storage around the room’s constraints—tight depths, awkward corners, mixed-use walls—without forcing cabinet dimensions where they don’t belong.
That flexibility is also why BOAXEL benefits so much from professional planning. IKEA’s BOAXEL planner is a helpful starting point, but it’s still a configurator: it won’t evaluate your wardrobe habits, predict problem clearances, or proactively balance hanging vs. shelving vs. basket storage for how you actually live. The efficiency comes from the zoning and layout logic, not just selecting parts.
Top 5 reasons IKD clients choose BOAXEL over PAX
1. A smart solution for anyone who wants flexibility
Because BOAXEL is wall-mounted and modular, layouts can be adjusted as needs change; more shelves now, more hanging later, more baskets as your storage evolves. The system is designed to be reconfigurable, which makes it a practical fit for renters (where “future-proofing” matters) and homeowners who don’t want to be locked into one fixed closet layout.

2. Perfect for commercial and business storage
BOAXEL works well anywhere you need high-function storage without paying for full cabinetry: supply closets, back rooms, break areas, product storage, and utility zones. The open format keeps items visible and accessible, and the modular components make it easy to re-balance storage as inventory changes.

3. Ideal for reach-in closets and shallow depths
Reach-ins (often around 24″ deep) are where PAX can start to feel bulky—especially with door clearances, trim, and tight walkways. BOAXEL’s slimmer format makes it easier to build a functional layout that works with the depth you actually have, while still creating clear zones for hanging, folded items, shoes, and bins.

4. One system, multiple rooms
BOAXEL isn’t limited to bedrooms. It’s commonly used beyond closets because the components adapt well to different storage types—pantries, laundry rooms, cleaning closets, and utility spaces. IKEA also positions BOAXEL as a wall-mounted storage system for broader home organization, not only wardrobes.

Why BOAXEL still needs professional design
BOAXEL looks simple on the surface, but the difference between “temporary storage” and a space-efficient system is planning.
A strong BOAXEL design accounts for:
- Storage zoning: short/long hang, fold zones, daily-use vs. seasonal
- Vertical strategy: using height without creating awkward, wasted shelf spacing
- Load and layout logic: placing components where they’ll function best (and feel stable and intentional)
- Real-room constraints: trim, vents, outlets, doors, and uneven walls
IKEA also notes that mounting requirements vary by wall material and that appropriate mounting hardware is selected separately, another reason planning matters before you buy.
It’s not BOAXEL or PAX. It’s often both
Choosing BOAXEL doesn’t mean you can’t use PAX. Many IKD designs combine systems:
- BOAXEL where flexibility and shallow depths matter most
- PAX where closed storage and a cabinet look is the priority
We never want to be limited to one single line of IKEA products. Instead, our goal is to design the most efficient storage plan for the room, the budget, and how the home is used, so you get more function per inch than you’d typically achieve with IKEA’s Home Planner or quick in-store guidance.
Choosing the best fit, not the most common one
Work with our certified designers to get a personalized IKEA closet designed around your needs and vision. If you’re interested in learning more about our service, make sure to check out our IKEA Closet Design Services.





















