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A ladder leaning against a garage wall is one of those things that seems fine until it isn't. It takes up floor space, it slides when you bump it, and eventually someone trips over it or it falls on something important. Getting a ladder off the floor and onto the wall takes about 20 minutes and maybe $20. There's no good reason to keep procrastinating it.

The options range from simple single hooks that hold one ladder to ceiling-mounted T-bar racks that handle bikes, lumber, and equipment from above. Which one makes sense depends on your ladder type, how much wall or ceiling space you have, and what else you're trying to get organized in the same pass.

I've covered the full range here, from $8 basic utility hooks to more substantial ceiling storage systems. The right choice for most people is simpler and cheaper than they expect.

Quick Picks

Product Best For Price
TORACK 2-Pack 12.4" Hooks (B0882XX5FZ) Best dedicated ladder hooks $22.99
KOFANI 16-Pack Hook Set (B092MQSYKD) Best for multiple items including ladder $25.99
ALWORG Single Ladder Hook (B095X9FWBZ) Best minimal single hook $16.99
hidyuuoo 4-Pack Ceiling Hooks (B0FQ5X7G67) Best ceiling-mount option $33.49
LUPYJI 28-Pack Set (B0DQ7Z8XC6) Best full hook variety set $39.99

Full Reviews

hidyuuoo 4-Pack Overhead Ceiling Storage Hooks

If you want to keep the wall clear and move the ladder to the ceiling, the hidyuuoo T-bar ceiling hooks are the answer. Four hooks, each measuring 17.1 x 10.2 x 7.2 inches, rated for 33 pounds per side. The double T-bar design cradles ladders, pipes, lumber, and other long items across two contact points rather than one.

The EVA foam padding on the contact surfaces is a practical detail. It protects the ladder's finish and prevents the aluminum creaking that happens when metal rests directly on metal. The powder-coated iron construction resists rust.

Installation requires drilling into the ceiling joists, which is straightforward if you can locate them with a stud finder. All mounting hardware is included.

At $33.49 for four hooks, this is a ceiling storage system that handles more than just a ladder. Long lumber, fishing rods, kayak paddles, and other items that are awkward to wall-mount all fit the T-bar design. The 33 lb per side rating is ample for most extension ladders, which typically weigh 25-40 pounds.

The honest concern is the review count. One review at 5 stars tells me almost nothing. The specs are reasonable and the design is sound, but I'd want to see 100+ reviews before recommending this confidently for a heavy ladder installation.

Pros: - Ceiling mount keeps wall space free - T-bar design cradles long items securely - EVA foam padding protects ladder finish

Cons: - Only 1 review, no meaningful validation - Ceiling joist installation requires proper locating - 33 lb per side may not cover the heaviest extension ladders

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Tebgeag 4-Pack Heavy Duty 7.7-Inch Garage Hooks

Four 7.7-inch hooks forged from solid steel with PVC coating. Simple, straightforward, and at $16.99 with 37 reviews at 4.9 stars, the early feedback is very positive.

The 7.7-inch length is enough for most step ladders and 6-foot A-frames. For extension ladders, two of these hooks side by side on the wall handle the width comfortably. The PVC coating prevents the ladder from scuffing the hook and vice versa.

Installation hardware is included and works on drywall, wood, brick, or concrete. For a concrete garage wall, you'll use the masonry anchors. For standard drywall over studs, screw directly into the stud for proper holding strength.

The limitation is the 7.7-inch profile. An extension ladder in the closed position is deeper than a step ladder, and on a shallower hook the ladder can slide forward if bumped. For a leaned-flat ladder storage setup where the ladder sits nearly horizontal against the wall, longer hooks like the TORACK 12.4-inch below are more secure.

Pros: - 4.9 stars from 37 early reviewers - PVC coating on all contact surfaces - Compatible with all common wall types

Cons: - 7.7-inch depth may not securely hold thick extension ladders - 37 reviews is still a limited sample - Four hooks only, not expandable to a full hook system

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KOFANI 16-Pack Heavy Duty Garage Storage Hooks

The KOFANI 16-pack is the right choice when you want to hang the ladder and solve several other garage storage problems at the same time. Sixteen hooks in 5 sizes: 5 small U-hooks, 3 medium U-hooks, 2 large U-hooks, 2 large J-hooks, and 2 small J-hooks. Two extension cord organizer straps included.

The large J-hooks handle ladders particularly well. A J-hook supports the bottom rail of a ladder so it hangs diagonally off the wall, visible and accessible. The triple-layer reinforced plates are rated for significant loads, and the non-slip PVC coating keeps the ladder from shifting on the hook.

At 2,788 reviews and 4.8 stars, this has more real-world validation than anything else on this list. The variety of sizes means you'll actually use all 16 hooks rather than using 4 and wondering what to do with the rest.

The one limitation for ladder hanging specifically: the large J-hooks work best for medium ladders. A full-size 24-foot extension ladder needs the heavy-duty 12.4-inch hooks from TORACK below. For a typical 6-foot or 8-foot household ladder, the KOFANI handles it with room to spare.

Pros: - 2,788 reviews at 4.8 stars - 16 hooks in 5 sizes handle multiple storage tasks - Large J-hooks work well for standard ladders

Cons: - Not designed specifically for heavy extension ladders - Fixed-position hooks unlike modular track systems - Mixing hook sizes on one wall can look disorganized

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TORACK 2-Pack Heavy-Duty 12.4-Inch Garage Hooks

These are the hooks I'd use for an extension ladder. Two 12.4-inch double hooks, rated for 300 pounds each, with rubber coating on the hook surfaces and powder coat on the steel body. The 12.4-inch length is the critical dimension: it holds a folded extension ladder well away from the wall so it doesn't press against the drywall when stored flat.

The double-hook design means the ladder rests on two contact points per hook position rather than one, which distributes the weight and prevents tipping. Pair two of these hooks vertically on the wall and a full-size extension ladder sits securely without any strap or clip needed.

At $22.99 for 2 hooks with 1,018 reviews at 4.8 stars, this is among the best-validated heavy-duty options on this list. The 300-pound capacity is substantial overkill for a ladder, which is exactly the right amount of margin for something that's hanging above your car.

If you're hanging a heavy ladder and want confidence it won't come down, start here. The garage storage guide has broader context on organizing the rest of your garage around the ladder storage you set up.

Pros: - 300 lb capacity handles any residential ladder - 12.4-inch depth keeps stored ladder clear of wall - 1,018 reviews at 4.8 stars

Cons: - Only 2 hooks per pack, need multiple packs for multiple items - Longer hooks require more wall clearance depth - $11.50 per hook is on the higher end

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ALWORG Single Ladder Hook

Sometimes you just need one hook. The ALWORG is a single 5 x 3.87 x 2.2-inch carbon steel hook designed specifically for ladder and folding chair storage. At $16.99 for one hook with 898 reviews at 4.8 stars, the validation here is solid.

The low-profile design keeps the ladder close to the wall. For a step ladder or 6-foot A-frame, one ALWORG hook hung at the right height holds the middle rung while the ladder leans flat against the wall. It's the simplest possible solution.

The versatility is worth noting. The same hook works for wheelbarrows, folding chairs, step stools, and laundry drying racks. If you want to hang multiple items across the garage without buying a 16-pack, buying two or three of these specific hooks is a more targeted approach.

Installation is quick: one hook, a few screws, done in under 10 minutes. For renters or anyone who doesn't want to commit to a full hook system, this low-investment option solves the specific ladder storage problem without creating a bigger project.

Pros: - 898 reviews at 4.8 stars - Works for ladders, chairs, wheelbarrows - Minimal wall footprint

Cons: - Single hook, not a storage system - Small 5-inch length may not secure thick ladder rails - At $16.99 for one hook, the value isn't great versus packs

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KURUI 2-Pack Small Utility Wall Hooks

Two 2.75-inch U-hooks at $8.99. These are the minimum viable solution for light-duty ladder storage: a step stool, a small A-frame, or any ladder that's light enough that a 2.75-inch hook handles it.

758 reviews at 4.8 stars show consistent satisfaction. Carbon steel with rust-resistant coating and non-slip PVC on the hook. Works on wood, drywall, brick, and concrete.

The honest constraint: 2.75 inches is genuinely small. These aren't hooks for a full-size extension ladder. For a 4-foot folding ladder or a step stool, they work fine. For anything heavier or bulkier, you'll want the TORACK 12.4-inch or KOFANI large J-hooks.

At $8.99 for two hooks, this is the cheapest entry on this list. If your ladder situation is a single small step ladder and you want it on the wall right now, two of these solve it.

Pros: - $8.99 for two hooks, lowest price entry - 758 reviews at 4.8 stars - Works on all common wall materials

Cons: - 2.75-inch size limits use to light-duty ladders and small items - Only two hooks per pack - Not suitable for extension ladders or heavy equipment

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Kodreat 18-Pack Heavy Duty Garage Hooks

The Kodreat 18-pack gives you more size variety than most competitors at this price. Sixteen hooks in 6 different profiles (small and large U-hooks, J-hooks, S-hooks) plus 2 extension strap organizers. Triple-layer coating on the steel plates and PVC rubber on the hooks.

The S-hook inclusion is the distinguishing detail here. S-hooks allow hanging items from shelving units, wire racks, and overhead structures, not just from wall-mounted points. That flexibility is useful in a garage with various hook anchor points.

At $19.99 for 18 hooks with 362 reviews at 4.8 stars, the price-per-hook is competitive. The review count is lower than the KOFANI set at a similar price, which is a minor concern but not a deal-breaker.

For a complete garage organization pass where you want hooks for everything including the ladder, the Kodreat set handles it all at once.

Pros: - S-hooks for non-wall applications - 18 hooks in 6 sizes at $19.99 - Triple-layer plate reinforcement

Cons: - 362 reviews smaller than the KOFANI alternative - Some sizes duplicated where variety would be more useful - Smaller S-hooks have limited load capacity

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Rlipily 24-Pack Garage Hooks Steel Heavy Duty

Twenty-four hooks at $34.99, with a variety of sizes handling bikes, garden tools, ladders, and bulk items. The steel construction with PVC anti-slip coating is consistent with the other hook sets on this list.

246 reviews at 4.8 stars is a smaller sample than the KOFANI set, but the rating is consistent with the category average. The 24-pack count is the main advantage: if you're doing a full garage organization project and want to run hooks across multiple walls without running out, starting with 24 makes sense.

The marketing copy in the product listing uses a storytelling format that I find unusual for a garage hook, but the actual product specs align with what you'd expect from a quality hook set.

Pros: - 24 hooks covers full garage organization - $34.99 for 24 hooks is reasonable per-hook cost - Variety of sizes included

Cons: - 246 reviews is a moderate sample - Storytelling product description doesn't add useful spec information - Price premium over 16-pack options without proportional benefit

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LUPYJI 2-Pack Heavy Duty U-Hooks

Two 2.75-inch U-hooks at $7.99. The cheapest product on this list. Solid steel with anti-rust coating and non-slip PVC, compatible with wood, drywall, and concrete.

At 238 reviews and 4.8 stars, this has solid early feedback. The use case is identical to the KURUI 2-pack: light-duty ladder storage or small item hanging where budget is the primary consideration.

The honest difference between this and the KURUI at $8.99 is minimal. Both are two small U-hooks at roughly $8. For a step ladder or lightweight item, either works. I wouldn't overthink the choice between them.

Pros: - $7.99 is the lowest per-hook price on this list - 238 reviews at 4.8 stars - Works on concrete with included anchors

Cons: - 2.75-inch size for light-duty use only - Two hooks limits application to a single ladder or small item - No size variety in the pack

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LUPYJI 28-Pack Heavy Duty Garage Hooks

The 28-pack from LUPYJI is the largest hook set on this list. Twenty-six hooks in 6 types (S-hooks, small and large J-hooks, small, medium, and large U-hooks) plus 2 extension cord organizer straps. Orange color makes these distinctive on a dark garage wall.

At $39.99 for 28 hooks with 207 reviews at 4.8 stars, the price is reasonable. The variety covers everything you'd need for a full garage organization project. The orange color is either a plus or a minus depending on your preference for the aesthetic.

For a complete garage hook installation where you're doing walls, ceiling hooks, and organizing everything at once, having 28 varied hooks on hand means you won't run out before finishing. The garage can storage guide covers how hook storage integrates with bin and can organization if you're planning a broader organization approach.

Pros: - 28 hooks in 6 types for complete coverage - S-hooks add hanging flexibility beyond wall mounts - Orange color makes hooks visible on dark walls

Cons: - Orange color may clash with other garage hardware - 207 reviews is a smaller sample - $39.99 is higher than smaller packs at similar per-hook cost

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What to Look For When Hanging a Ladder in the Garage

Hook Size and Ladder Depth

The most common mistake: buying hooks that are too short for the ladder you're trying to hang. A closed extension ladder is 4-6 inches deep. A 2.75-inch hook barely holds it. For extension ladders, use hooks that are at least 8-10 inches long to keep the ladder clear of the wall and stable on the hook. The TORACK 12.4-inch hooks are sized for this use case specifically.

Weight Capacity Per Hook

Most extension ladders weigh 20-40 pounds. Most step ladders weigh 8-20 pounds. Check your ladder's weight before buying hooks. Any hook rated for 50+ pounds per mounting point handles residential ladders without stress. For industrial extension ladders over 40 feet, choose hooks rated for 100+ pounds.

Wall Versus Ceiling Mount

Wall mounting keeps the ladder vertical or nearly so, which takes up wall space but is easy to access and install. Ceiling mounting (like the T-bar hooks) gets the ladder completely out of the way, freeing both floor and wall space. Ceiling mounting requires locating joists and is more involved to install, but it's the right solution for garages where wall space is already occupied.

Number of Contact Points

Two hooks per ladder is more secure than one. A ladder hung on two hooks at different heights stays vertical. Hung on one hook, it can twist or slide sideways when bumped. For any ladder over 8 feet tall, two mounting points is the right approach.

Fixed Hooks Versus Track Systems

Individual hooks drilled into studs are cheaper and simpler. They're also permanent in that exact position. If you rearrange the garage, you're filling holes and drilling new ones. Track systems like Rubbermaid FastTrack let you reposition the hook anywhere on the rail without new holes. For a garage that rearranges frequently, track systems are worth the premium.


FAQ

Where is the best place to hang a ladder in a garage?

On the wall closest to where you use it, at a height that keeps it off the floor and out of the path of car doors and foot traffic. Ideally, on an outside wall or above a workbench where the space wouldn't be used for anything else anyway. Keep it below the garage door spring mechanism if your garage has an overhead door, since ladders stored too close to the spring can interfere with the door operation.

Can I hang an extension ladder vertically or does it need to be horizontal?

Both work. Horizontal storage (lying flat on wall hooks) keeps the ladder lower and more accessible but requires more horizontal wall space. Vertical storage takes less wall width but requires the hooks to handle the full weight at one or two points. Either orientation is safe with properly rated hooks and stud mounting.

How many hooks do I need to hang a ladder?

Two is the minimum for safe storage. One hook lets a ladder rotate and fall. Two hooks at different heights (one near the top of the folded ladder, one near the bottom) keeps it stable. For a 24-foot extension ladder, three hooks provides extra security.

What if I have a concrete garage wall?

Concrete masonry anchors (Tapcons work well) let you mount hooks directly into concrete without studs. Most hook sets include concrete anchors. Drill with a masonry bit, insert the anchor, drive the screw. The holding strength in concrete is often better than in drywall over studs, provided you use the right anchor diameter for the screw size.

Is it safe to hang a heavy ladder from ceiling hooks?

Yes, if you install into ceiling joists, not just into drywall. Ceiling drywall alone will not hold a ladder. You must locate the joists and drive screws into them. A properly installed ceiling hook into a 2x6 or 2x8 joist handles far more than a ladder's weight. Use a stud finder before drilling.

Can I hang a fiberglass ladder the same way as an aluminum ladder?

Yes. Fiberglass ladders are typically heavier than aluminum for the same size, so they need the same attention to hook capacity. The rubber-coated and PVC-coated hooks protect fiberglass from scratching just as well as they protect aluminum. The hanging method is identical.


Bottom Line

For a standard household ladder: two TORACK 12.4-inch hooks at $22.99 for two is the straightforward choice. The 12.4-inch length handles extension ladders securely and the 300-pound capacity is appropriate for the job.

For a budget solution with one step ladder: a single ALWORG hook at $16.99 or two KURUI hooks at $8.99 solves the problem with minimal cost and installation time.

For a full garage organization pass that includes the ladder: the KOFANI 16-pack at $25.99 handles the ladder plus 10 other storage needs in one purchase.

For ceiling storage to keep walls completely clear: the hidyuuoo 4-pack ceiling hooks at $33.49 is the only ceiling-specific option on this list, though the low review count means going in with some caution. The garage with storage guide covers how to plan overhead storage alongside wall and floor storage for a complete approach.

However you choose to do it, get the ladder off the floor. It's a 20-minute fix that makes the garage safer and better organized in one move.