Ali review
AliExpress wall-mounted mop holder: check the wall before the rack
A practical look at an AliExpress wall-mounted mop and broom holder: wall material, screw mounting, handle diameter, tool spacing, and single-clip comparison.
Mops, brooms, squeegees, and scrub brushes are awkward when they lean in a corner. One handle slips, then the whole utility corner looks messy again.
The product I would check first is this 3/4/5-position wall-mounted mop and broom holder. It combines roller grip slots for long handles with lower hooks for smaller brushes or light accessories, so it can turn a messy cleaning-tool corner into one wall-mounted row.

The Wall Matters More Than The Holder
For this category, the wall is the real fit check. Concrete and tile can be stable with screws and the right anchors, but tile can crack if drilled badly. Drywall needs studs or proper hollow-wall anchors. Wallpaper, rough paint, uneven plaster, and damp bathroom walls are poor matches for adhesive-only mounting.

If the listing option includes both adhesive and screw mounting, I would treat screws as the safer path for wet mops or long brooms. Moisture can weaken adhesive, and a damp mop head touching the wall can leave stains or smell.
Handle Diameter Can Make Or Break It
Cleaning-tool handles vary more than they seem. A slim stainless pole, a thicker plastic grip, a foam handle, and an oval telescoping handle may not all lock into the same roller grip cleanly.

Very slim handles can slide. Thick grips may not enter the slot. Telescoping handles can catch at the collar, so measure the part of the handle that will actually sit in the holder. Wet tools are heavier too, so keep the most awkward item in the most stable position.
Do Not Fill Every Slot Blindly
A multi-position holder does not mean every bulky tool will hang neatly side by side. Mop heads, broom heads, dustpans, and scrub brushes are wider than the handle rail suggests.

Leave space between larger tools and use the lower hooks for a hand brush, gloves, a small dustpan, or light accessories. Hanging heavy wet tools on one end can put extra stress on the wall and fasteners.
A Single Clip Is For One Tool
If you only need to hang one item, a stainless single mop clip is worth comparing. It takes little wall space and can work for a bathroom squeegee or one lightweight handle.

The downside is obvious: it does not organize a whole cleaning corner. Several single clips also require careful spacing, and each handle still has to match the clip. If multiple tools keep falling over, the multi-position holder is the more natural setup.
Final Take
The 3/4/5-position wall-mounted mop and broom holder is worth checking if you want to gather a mop, broom, squeegee, and small brush onto one wall. The important question is not how many tools the product photo shows. It is whether your wall can hold it and whether your handles fit the roller slots.
For one or two tools, single clips may be enough. For a laundry room, balcony, or utility wall where several handles keep tipping over, the multi-position holder should make the bigger difference.