Comparison Guide · KidCarCastle

Car wash or drawers. They are not the same upgrade.

One belongs to Stage 03. The other belongs to Stage 04. Confusing them means buying the wrong birthday twice.

Stage 03 Car wash garage
Stage 04 Drawers garage
Ages 6–9 vs ages 9 and up
94 slots vs 90+ with overflow

The mix-up

Most parents treat these as the same category. They are not.

Both are premium wooden garages. Both are significantly more than a 91-slot base model. Both are the kind of thing that gets photographed on Christmas morning and talked about at the dinner table for years.

But a car wash and a drawer unit are solving different problems for different children at different moments in their collecting life. Buying the wrong one is not a small mistake. It is a two-year mistake. The garage you buy at this level will live in the room until the child outgrows the phase entirely.


Rainbow Neptune 94-slot wooden toy car garage with built-in car wash and LED lighting
The Neptune Rainbow · Stage 03

Before the comparison

Four signals that tell you which stage you are in.

Look at the child’s room before you look at the product page. The room will tell you which garage is right.

  1. i

    Count the cars, not the shelves.

    Stage 03 starts at around fifty cars. Stage 04 starts when the collection has grown past ninety and there are doubles, overflow bags, and cars that have never found a permanent spot. If the cars fit in one visible place, you are still in Stage 03 territory.

  2. ii

    Watch what the child does with the cars.

    A Stage 03 child races them, washes them in pretend play, parks and re-parks them with a story attached. A Stage 04 child curates. They have opinions about display order, about which cars deserve the front row, about separating the racing cars from the monster trucks. The play has become a collection.

  3. iii

    Ask whether storage or display is the real problem.

    A car wash garage is about play architecture. The wash bay, the LED lights, the 94 parking slots — it is a city for the cars to live in. A drawer unit is about overflow management. The display stays on top; the rest goes below. If the problem is too many cars and not enough home for them, the drawers are the answer. If the problem is that the garage needs to feel like a real garage, the car wash wins.

  4. iv

    Think about the next two years, not tomorrow.

    A six-year-old who gets a drawer unit may not understand why half of it is for overflow yet. The play behavior comes first; the storage need catches up. A nine-year-old who gets a car wash may find the play-feature less relevant than the display space. The timeline matters more than the price point.

Stage 03 · Ages 6–9

The Car Wash Garage

Neptune line · 94 slots

Built around a working car wash bay with dual LED systems — one for the main garage, one for the wash. Ninety-four total slots: Hot Wheels bays, monster truck compartments, showroom doors that open, three large display sections. The play is the point.

This is the garage for the child who is in the middle of the obsession. Active play is still happening every day. The collection is serious but not overwhelming. The car wash feature gets used, not just admired.

What we’d choose: Neptune Rainbow or Mint for a six- to eight-year-old with fifty-plus cars and strong pretend-play habits.

Stage 04 · Ages 9+

The Drawers Garage

Kronus line · 90+ slots + 3 drawers

Display slots on top for the best cars. Three pull-out 11-litre drawers below for everything else. LED lighting, road ramps, stop barriers, side-opening showroom doors. The storage problem is built into the design itself.

This is the garage for the child who has graduated from active play into active curation. The doubles go in the drawer. The favourites go on display. The room gets a piece of furniture that also happens to hold ninety cars.

What we’d choose: Kronus Wine or Olive for a nine-year-old-plus with a collection that has outgrown every previous home.

Wine Kronus wooden toy car garage with built-in drawers and LED lighting — Stage 04
The Kronus Wine · Stage 04

The car wash is for the child still playing. The drawers are for the child who has started collecting. Only one of them is right for your birthday.

— A note from the workshop

The practical difference

What each garage actually looks like in a child’s room.

A car wash garage is a city. You park cars at the entrance, run them through the wash, park them in the bays, open the showroom doors, arrange the monster trucks in the wide compartments. The whole surface is play surface. Nothing is hidden. Everything is accessible.

The child interacts with the structure itself — the wash, the ramps, the lights at night. The garage is part of the play, not just a holder for the cars.

A drawer garage is an institution. The best cars live on the upper display platform where they can be seen from across the room. The overflow, the doubles, the cars waiting for a promotion, go into the drawers. The surface stays curated. The room stays calm.

The child interacts with the collection — what belongs on the top, what goes in storage, how the display is arranged. The garage has become a piece of the room, not just a toy inside it.

Both are the right garage. Just not for the same birthday.

A note from the workshop

The question we get asked most often.

About once a week someone writes to us with a version of the same question: “My child is seven and has around sixty cars. Should I get the car wash or the drawers?” The honest answer is almost always the car wash. Seven is Stage 03. The play behavior is still active. The drawers will sit half-empty for years if you buy them now.

The drawer garage starts making sense when the collection has crossed ninety cars, when display and overflow are genuinely two different categories, and when the child has started making curatorial decisions about the collection. That usually happens somewhere between nine and eleven, though some collectors arrive earlier.

The other signal: if the child has already owned a 91-slot garage for a year or two and outgrown it, the drawer unit is the natural next step. It is an upgrade, not a lateral move. The car wash garage at that stage would feel like a step sideways — similar slot count, similar features, no new storage solution for the overflow problem.

Hot Wheels cars filling the pull-out drawer of a Kronus wooden garage
The drawer — where the overflow finally has a home

Stage 03

The car wash garage — Neptune line

For the serious collector aged six to nine. Working car wash, dual LEDs, 94 total slots.

Stage 04

The drawers garage — Kronus line

For the child whose collection has outgrown every previous home. Display on top, overflow below.

Still not sure which stage you are shopping for?

Browse both lines side by side, or look at the full collection. Personalized, handmade in Warsaw, shipped across the EU.

Shop Stage 03 Shop Stage 04