Bulk methods to fractionate organelles lack the resolution to capture single-cell heterogeneity. While microfluidic approaches attempt to fractionate organelles at the cellular level, they fail to map each organelle back to its cell of origin-crucial for multiomics applications. To address this, we developed VacTrap, a high-throughput microfluidic device for isolating and spatially indexing single nuclei from mammalian cells. VacTrap consists of three aligned layers: (1) a Bis-gel microwells layer with a 'trapdoors' (BAC-gel) base, fabricated atop a through-hole glass slide; (2) a PDMS microwell layer to receive transferred nuclei; and (3) a vacuum manifold. VacTrap operation begins with cell lysis using DDF to release intact nuclei into the Bis-gel microwells, while cytoplasmic proteins are electrophoresed into the Bis-gel. Upon exposure to DTT and vacuum force, the trapdoors open, allowing nuclei to transfer to the PDMS microwells. VacTrap dissolves the trapdoors within 3-5 minutes and achieve synchronized nuclei transfer with 98% efficiency across 80% of trapdoors in a 256-microwell array, surpassing the <1% efficiency of passive transfer without vacuum. Morphology analysis confirmed preservation of organelle integrity throughout VacTrap operation. By enabling spatial indexing of nuclei back to their original cell, VacTrap provides a robust, high-throughput tool for single-cell multiomics applications.