When did you last think about what's actually happening to the equipment sitting in your storage unit?
Temperature swings, humidity, and a bad padlock can quietly destroy assets most small businesses can’t afford to replace. The good news: it’s entirely preventable. This guide walks you through exactly how.
Different kinds of business equipment carry varied risk. Knowing the difference will affect every decision that follows including the type of unit you rent, how you pack, and how much security you need.
High-risk equipment: This includes anything with electronics or sensitive components. Think laptops, monitors, cameras, audio equipment, point-of-sale systems, and medical or diagnostic devices.
These are vulnerable to heat, humidity, and temperature fluctuations. They're also the most expensive to replace.
Once you know what category your equipment falls into, you know what to prioritize. For example, if you have more high-risk items going into storage, you might have to opt for climate-controlled storage units with 24/7 security or surveillance.
On the other hand, if you only have a few boxes or sets of lower-risk items, you can rent small to medium standard storage units.
Pro tip: Before anything goes into the unit, photograph each item and record serial numbers. It takes 20 minutes and it’s the single most useful thing you can do for insurance purposes if something goes wrong.
The type of unit you choose has a direct impact on whether your equipment comes out in good condition. And the two most important features to be considered here are climate control and security.
If your equipment has a circuit board, a screen, or moving parts sensitive to moisture, yes, you need climate-controlled storage.
Generally, it’s recommended to store electronics in HVAC-regulated environments kept between 50°F and 80°F, with humidity control as moisture is one of the biggest causes of electronic damage in storage.
Standard storage units don't regulate either. Additionally, the inside of a non-climate-controlled unit can reach temperatures 30 degrees higher than the outside temperature in the summer in certain regions.
Even short exposure to high humidity and high temperatures can cause moisture uptake inside components, leading to corrosion, electrical leakage, and material deterioration.
Here's a practical breakdown of what needs climate-controlled storage and what doesn't:
|
What Business Equipment Should be in Climate-Controlled vs Standard Storage
|
|
|---|---|
|
Needs Climate-Controlled
Storage |
Can Handle Standard Storage (Short Term)
|
| Laptops, computers, monitors, and servers |
Power tools and hand tools (cleaned and dried before storing) |
| Cameras and audio/visual equipment | Metal shelving, display racks, and fixtures |
| Point-of-sale systems and tablets | Plastic bins and non-sensitive containers |
| Instruments, medical devices, or any precision equipment |
Outdoor or job-site equipment built to handle the elements |
| Instruments, medical devices, or any precision equipment |
|
If you're storing a mix of both, we still recommend you choose climate-controlled. While the cost of a climate-controlled unit is 20% to 50% more than a standard unit, it is still far smaller than the cost of replacing damaged equipment.
For a deeper look at how to decide, check out our guide: Climate-Controlled vs. Standard Storage Units for business storage.
Climate control protects your equipment from the environment but security protects it from everything else.
When evaluating a facility, these are the features you should take note of:
However, these cameras are only useful if they run continuously and are positioned without blind spots
Pro tip: Ask facilities about both and try to locate these cameras yourself when visiting.
When evaluating a facility, treat security as a checklist, not an assumption. Remember, a clean-looking facility isn't the same as a secure one. So, it’s best to ask about each of these features directly before signing.
How you prepare and pack your equipment before it goes in matters just as much as choosing the right self storage unit. Here's how to do it right, broken down by equipment type.
Electronics are the most unforgiving items to store incorrectly. Heat degrades internal components while humidity causes corrosion. Static electricity during packing can also silently damage circuit boards. Here's the correct approach:
Tools are more durable than electronics, but they're not immune to storage damage. Some of the most common challenges you face with these are rust, corrosion, and physical damage from poor packing.
Here are the best tips to protect them in storage:
Inventory is often a business's most liquid asset and one of the most commonly mishandled items in storage. The priority here is preservation, organization, and accessibility.
Desks, chairs, shelving, and other office furniture are lower-risk than electronics or inventory, but they can still be damaged by poor packing and storage technique. Here are a few steps to follow before storing them:
This category is easy to overlook but commonly stored. This includes banners, foam boards, display signage, branded packaging, and event materials.
How you arrange your storage unit affects how you use your unit overall. So, here are a few things that can make a difference in keeping it neat and your things easy to access:
Create a simple inventory list: Write down everything that goes in including equipment name, quantity, and serial numbers if relevant. Store this list digitally, not inside the unit.
Putting the wrong items in a unit creates liability, violates facility policies, and can damage everything around them. As a general rule, avoid storing:
Reports and studies cite varied incident numbers of storage theft all across the US. For instance, in Nashville, authorities report that 75% of the 100 facilities they checked received calls regarding theft, robberies, and holdups.
In Portland, authorities received around 1800 storage unit theft reports within 3.5 years, averaging about 10 thefts per week.
The good news is that most storage theft is opportunistic. While a good storage facility handles a lot of the security heavy lifting, there are steps you can take to make a bigger difference both in deterring theft and in recovering your equipment quickly if something does go wrong.
Here are some tips to consider:
Invest in a high-quality disc lock or cylinder lock. These are significantly more resistant to bolt cutters and tampering than standard padlocks. Avoid combination locks as they offer convenience at the cost of security.
Thieves make fast decisions based on visible cues. So, don't label boxes with brand names, model numbers, or anything that signals high resale value like "Sony camera equipment" or "MacBook Pro x3." Use neutral, generic labels instead.
Before storing any equipment, photograph each item and record its serial number, make, model, and approximate value. Store this inventory digitally in a cloud drive or spreadsheet, not inside the unit itself.
Most storage theft perpetrators are not caught, and even when they are, prosecution is inconsistent which makes your own documentation the most reliable tool you have. A detailed record of serial numbers and photos will allow a police report to move forward and an insurance claim to be processed without dispute.
For cameras, laptops, power tools, or any high-value gear that moves in and out of storage regularly, a GPS tracker is worth the investment. Modern trackers send instant alerts if equipment leaves a designated zone without authorization. They also provide real-time location data that law enforcement can act on quickly.
Facilities that rely on shared gate codes are particularly vulnerable. This is especially when the same code circulates among several employees.
This makes facilities with individual, account-based digital access meaningfully more secure. Access is tied to a verified identity, not a code that can be passed along, photographed, or guessed.
At Stuf Storage, units are keyless and access is tied directly to your account credentials. For business owners who occasionally need a staff member or contractor to access a unit, permissions can be managed at the account level without handing over a key that can't be taken back.
Combined with 24/7 camera surveillance and facilities embedded inside active commercial buildings, it addresses several of the vulnerabilities that standalone drive-up facilities can't easily resolve.
It’s easy to assume that your existing policy covers everything you own, including your equipment in storage, but it often doesn’t.
Commercial property insurance typically excludes tools and equipment stored more than 100 feet from your primary business premises. And even when off-site coverage exists, most policies cap it at around 10% of your total property limit, which may fall well short of what your stored equipment is actually worth.
The fix most business owners need is inland marine insurance or warehousemen’s legal liability insurance.
Inland marine insurance is specifically designed for equipment kept or transported away from your main location. Warehousemen's legal liability insurance covers damage or loss that occurs while goods are in the care of a third-party storage operator.
Additionally, before storing anything significant, call your broker and ask directly: "Does my current policy cover equipment in a third-party storage unit, and up to what limit?" Don't assume. One phone call is significantly cheaper than an uncovered claim.
A quarterly visit, even just 20 to 30 minutes, is enough to catch problems before they become expensive ones.
During each check-in, look for early signs of moisture or condensation, check that stacks are stable and nothing has shifted, and confirm the lock is fully engaged and undamaged. Update your inventory list any time something goes in or comes out.
Use check-ins to also reassess what's actually in there. If your unit is consistently overcrowded, you can upgrade. This often costs less than the accidental damage that happens when you're working in a cramped space.
Protecting business equipment in storage comes down to four decisions: choosing the right unit, packing correctly, securing against theft, and making sure you're insured. Get those right, and your equipment comes out the same way it went in.
If you're looking for a secure, climate-controlled storage unit built for urban business owners, Stuf Storage has flexible unit sizes, keyless access, and locations across the city, so your equipment stays protected and accessible whenever you need it.
Find secure business storage units near your you now.
Does business insurance cover equipment in a storage unit?
Not automatically. Most commercial property insurance policies exclude equipment stored more than 100 feet from your primary business premises. Even when off-site coverage exists, it's often capped at 10% of your total property limit.
Do I need climate-controlled storage for electronics?
Yes. Electronics should be stored in environments kept between 50°F and 80°F with active humidity control. If your equipment has a circuit board or a screen, climate-controlled storage is non-negotiable.
What type of lock should I use on a business storage unit?
Use a disc lock or cylinder lock. Both are significantly more resistant to bolt cutters than standard padlocks, which are the most common target in storage unit break-ins. Avoid combination locks. They prioritize convenience over security, which is the wrong trade-off when storing business equipment.