22 Clever Pill Bottle Crafts and Reuse Ideas You’ll Actually Use
From fire starters to seed storage, discover 22 pill bottle crafts and reuse ideas that turn empty containers into something useful and fun.

I do my best to rely on herbal remedies around here, but I’ll be honest… plastic pill bottles still sneak in now and then. And since I hate tossing things (seriously, it makes me twitchy), I’ve gotten pretty good at finding new uses for old containers. At this point, I’m probably an upcycling addict. But honestly, there are worse habits to have.
So when I found myself staring at a mountain of empty pill bottles, I hopped on Pinterest for inspiration. (If you’re not following me there, you should. It’s where I stash all my harebrained homestead ideas.)
Here are some of my favorite ways to repurpose pill bottles: some practical, some just for fun.
#1 Fire Starters
Pill bottles make easy little fire starters. I’ve seen people call this a fun project to do with kids… I’m not sure my crew qualifies as calm enough for that, but if you’ve got responsible kids, this could be a good bonding project. Stuff them with cotton balls or dryer lint dipped in wax and they’ll catch fast, even if the wood’s a little damp.

#2 Hide-A-Key
Make a cheap, quick hide-a-key by gluing a rock or pinecone to the lid. I can’t promise it’ll last forever outside, but since it costs basically nothing, replacing it now and then doesn’t hurt. Pro tip: pick a spot that blends in naturally and rotate locations so it’s not too obvious.

#3 Travel Bottles
These bottles are just the right size for shampoo, conditioner, and lotion when traveling. I’m pretty sure they meet airline liquid rules, but double-check before you pack so you’re not stuck tossing them at security. I slap some painter’s tape on them so I’m not stuck guessing which one’s conditioner halfway through a shower. Permanent marker (it turns out) isn’t actually permanent.

#4 Portable Sewing Kit
Turn a pill bottle into a mini sewing kit with a bit of thread, a needle, and a few buttons. Bonus points if you glue a tiny pincushion to the lid. I like keeping one in the car for those “oops, lost a button” moments. Toss in a couple safety pins, too. They’ve saved me more times than the needle and thread.

#5 Survival Kit
My outdoorsy boyfriend has made about twenty of these survival kits, and they live in every glove box, backpack, and tackle box he owns. I’ll admit, they’ve saved the day more than once on hikes. Think waterproof matches, a bit of fishing line, and a couple of bandages (the kind of little things that feel huge if you’re stuck outside).
#6 Crafting Storage
These little bottles are perfect for craft odds and ends: cake piping tips, beads, needles, paper clips, safety pins. I use them to keep the gems from my diamond painting kits corralled, too. A quick label on the lid makes it easy to know what’s inside without digging through a drawer.

#7 Halloween Decor
Spray paint a few bottles and turn them into Halloween potion bottles. I made some last year for the mantle, and they were a hit! Just the right touch of spooky to mix in with my pumpkins. A ring of hot glue around the cap gives you that old ‘wax seal’ vibe if you really want to go all in.

#8 Snowman Ornament
Not into spooky? Use them to make winter snowmen. My youngest once built an entire snowman village out of pill bottles. Did they clash with my vintage Christmas village? Yep. Did I still display them? Absolutely. Paint sticks better if you rough up the plastic with sandpaper first.

I’ve got plenty more thrifty holiday craft ideas where that came from. Check out my favorite Christmas decorating projects on a budget for more Santa-approved inspiration.
#9 Rainbow Crayons
Use pill bottles as molds for rainbow crayons. Extra credit if you’re also upcycling broken crayons. (Yes, I hoard broken crayons too. Don’t judge.) Just remember the bottles aren’t oven-safe. Melt the crayons first, then pour them in.

#10 Unique Vase
Nest pill bottles together and you’ve got yourself a faux bamboo vase. The vacuum seal makes them watertight without glue (bonus science lesson included). Wrap them in jute or give them a coat of paint and they actually look pretty classy.

#11 Nail Polish Remover
Make a quick nail polish remover tub: stuff a pill bottle with cotton balls and pour in acetone. It’s way less messy than pouring from the bottle, and you’ll waste less polish remover too. Cut a sponge to size and swap it in if you want that salon-style dip jar.

#12 Ammo Storage
Pill bottles keep ammo dry and organized. Around here, those bottles get tucked into an old Christmas cookie tin in the gun cabinet. Sadly, it’s not cookies. Toss in a silica packet and it’ll stay dry even longer.

#13 Yarn Baller
Knitters and crocheters, this one’s for you. Use a pill bottle to make a center-pull yarn ball so your skein doesn’t roll across the floor. Before my friend gifted me a “real” yarn ball winder, this trick saved my sanity. Drill a hole in the cap for the yarn to thread through. It keeps the tension nice and steady.

#14 Ink Dauber
You can even make ink daubers. At first, I had no idea what those were (BINGO night, maybe?), but it turns out scrapbookers use them too. Glue a bit of felt on the bottom and you’re good to go for stamping or blending.
#15 Coin Storage
Need a spot for quarters? Toss them in a pill bottle coin holder and stash it in the glove box. Handy for car washes, vacuums, or laundromats. (Not that I’d know. My kids swipe my change before I get to it.) Adding a slit in the lid makes it a mini piggy bank for kids.

#16 Party Lights
I’ve seen pill bottles turned into quirky amber-colored party lights. I’m not sure when you’d use them. Maybe at a med school graduation party? Still, it’s a quirky little project if you’re the crafty type. Paint the outsides different colors for a string-light effect.

#17 First Aid Kit
Mini first aid kits in pill bottles are a lifesaver. I keep one in my purse for scraped knees and mystery bruises. (Let’s be honest… usually caused by one rambunctious child in particular, but I won’t name names.) A couple of antiseptic wipes fit in there too, and trust me, they’re worth their weight in gold.

If you want to take it a step further, here’s how I stock a homestead first aid kit that actually works. You’ll find practical, affordable essentials that go way beyond a few bandages in a box.
#18 Tooth Storage
Parents: this one’s for you. Put a tooth in a pill bottle so the Tooth Fairy can actually find it in the bed sheets. Trust me, it’s a lot less stressful than digging through stuffed animals at midnight. A dab of glitter nail polish on the lid turns it into a magical “Tooth Fairy jar.”

#19 Hair Supply Container
Perfect for corralling bobby pins and elastics. I swear I’ve been working off the same pack of bobby pins for 15 years because they just vanish. The elastic bands wrap nicely around the outside of the bottle too. Add a strip of magnetic tape inside to keep the pins from scattering.

#20 Q-Tip Holder
Keep cotton swabs in one so the kids don’t decide to “help” each other with ear cleaning. (Yes, that happened here. Never again.) Stick a label on it if you also keep them for makeup. No one wants ear swabs touching mascara wands.

#21 Seed Storage
Don’t want to make printable seed packets? Pill bottles are perfect for storing seeds, and the childproof caps mean no accidental spills all over the floor. Taping a seed packet label to the outside helps keep varieties straight.

#22 Battery Organizer
And finally, battery storage. Because the bottles are watertight, your batteries are less likely to corrode. Group them by size so you’re not digging through a messy junk drawer when the remote dies.

Your Pill Bottle Upcycling Questions, Answered
Still curious about what to do with those bottles once the medicine is gone? Here are a few of the questions I hear most often about reusing pill bottles and the simple answers that make it less of a headache.
If you liked these ideas, pin the image below and share it with your Pinterest crew.

Health doesn’t come from a plastic bottle, but if it does, at least you can turn that bottle into something useful afterward.
Want more ideas? Check out 12+ Fun Ways to Upcycle Holiday Cards After the Season, Mason Jar Crafts You’ll Love to DIY, and 12 Uses for an Old Milk Jugs.
Repurposing pill bottles proves a little creativity goes a long way. From seed storage to quirky decor, they definitely don’t have to end up in the trash.
What’s your favorite way to reuse pill bottles? Share in the comments. I’d love to hear!

I do a lot of crafting & have a hard time finding storage. I took an old tool box (just tall enough for the bottles to fit in) & put buttons in them & hot glued a button on the top so I’d know which button is in the bottles.
Another thing I saw using old pill bottles is. Drill holes in them all the way around, in any where doesn’t have to be a pattern, and then fill the bottle with moth balls and hang in your apple trees to keep the deers and other animals away.
That’s a great idea. It would keep pets and children safe while keeping the tree safe. Brilliant!
Malawi Project Inc
3314 Van Tassel Drive
Indianapolis, IN 46240
Here is the address for the collection of empty pill bottles. Labels removed and clean. Great idea for schools or scouts to get involved too.
Thank you so much for sharing the address with us!
i use pill bottles to put my ear buds in so they don’t get tangled in the car or glove box. Works well. I also use for bobby pins and clip pies when I travel.
Would it be possible for J, Welsh to post info. re: who is collecting medicine bottles, or where they can be shipped. Thanks Great post. 🙂
I emailed her earlier today to get the address. If she gets back to me, I’ll email the address to you and be sure to add it to the post. Thanks!
Some of the people in our church are saving them. We have an address for a place in Indiana that will send them to medical missionaries in Malawi. Sometimes they don’t have anything to put the medicine they give the people….only wrap it in a piece of paper. That’s where we are sending ours.
My dad used both pill bottles and baby food jars to sort/store nails and screws. He would attach the lids to a board, fill with nails or screws and attach the whole thing to his garage walls (like shelves).
My husband does something similar.
Pill bottles are great for storing floss sticks in my travel kit.
i use them to keep mints and sugars in for my car and purse. I also use them for condiments in lunch bag. if you get a tall one, they are perfect for tampons and short ones for pads, so they dont get a mess on them in ur purse.
Love the seed storage idea. – Margy
TOO funny, worrying about the kids and the pill containers ! Where was everyone when gummy vitamins became the new normal? Gummies aren’t really safe candy for very small children, and now if they get a vitamin bottle open they could eat 50 vitamins yikes.
Gummies nor Gummy vitamins come into my house. You have a really good point.
My 3yo daughter ate half a bottle of gummy vitamins once… 3 days after she ate a whole tube of chapstick. .. poison control must think we’re nuts here! She was fine both times- they have to eat an obscene amount to even have a chance at causing issues but still!
When I was around 4 yrs old, Flintstone vitamins were the new child vitamin and yes the lids were easy screw ons. I really enjoyed those fruity candies, but the rest of the family had to deal with me not sleeping for 3 days! Needless to say, when my daughter came along , I hid her vitamins!! Lol
I use the pill bottles to store my seeds of flowers and vegetables. I wrap masking tape around the bottles, and the seeds are in the dark and I can write the name of the seed and the date. Sorry for my bad english writing. I’m a french canadian friend of Québec and I don’t master english perfectly. Greetings!
Hello neighbor! Your English was fine 🙂 That is a wonderful idea for saving seeds. I might have to try it. My toddler ripped open and dumped all of last year’s seeds. Child-proof caps might help keep them safe.
I use my pill container to put salad dressing
I made up some of those smoothie straw spice holders. I had all these straws that were around 3 inches long and wanted to keep them separated by salts, peppers, Italian seasonings, etc. I painted some of my old pill bottles and labeled them. Then I put them in my bug out bag in the event we have to leave the house. If I don’t use them by summer I will be using them for camping.
I have an extra large pill bottle that my reading glasses fit into. Keeps them from getting scrunched in my purse.
I have literally hundreds of these!!!! My workshop, crafts, sewing and more. I refuse to just throw them out! Anybody need some?
I donate my pill bottles to a local low income vet clinic. They reuse them for animal medications. Just wash them out first. I’m all for up cycling and homesteading but animals get sick too. 🙂
That’s a great idea too. Anything to keep them out of the landfills 🙂
Use the lids that have side splits (cvs). weave ribbon/string into the splits to make a necklace then decorate the tops. makes medals for kids that do not look like medicine.
That’s a great idea. My kids love stuff like that.
My favorite use for medicine bottles is the following: Hubby drilled a tiny hole in the lid and I drop used sewing machine needles in the bottle. When I get a few in there I just throw away the bottle with no worry about someone being stuck.
I use my husband’s empty insulin test strip bottles to store small items.
I have been using my old pill bottles for years to put rocks, beans, rice etc in side and glue the top on just to be on the safe side of things….and have made stuffed animals and put a “SHAKER” on the inside…small children love these…even my crocheted animals have them…..like my snake has a “RATTLE” on his tail……….now that i have read this i can use these bottles for so much more!!! Thank you.
Love this idea!! My playful little weenie dog will too! 😉 Thanks so much!
That’s a great idea! Thank you for sharing it Lisa. I might have to steal it 🙂
I use one for used and broken sewing machine needles and straight pins. I store my wound bobbins in one too.
A great way to remove the labels is to put some water in the bottle and microwave it for 15-20 seconds. Use caution removing from the microwave. The water will get hot enough to loosen the adhesive and the label peels right off!!
My girls used to love playing with my good lipstick. I put them in pill bottles and now they’re safe!!!
I use pill bottles to store my tapestry needles. They are also good for small quantities of beads.
I have recycled so many of these. Guess I will start to collect them again. Good for those who do crafts or scrapbook to store all the bling.