Some people only think about storage when they're already in a rush — moving day is tomorrow, the renovation starts Monday, or the spare room finally hit a breaking point. And in that rush, the question of which size unit often gets answered by guesswork.
The result? You either squeeze a sofa through a door that's six inches too narrow, or you end up renting something the size of a studio apartment to store a few boxes and an old bicycle.
Getting the size right saves you money and stress. Here's a straightforward breakdown of storage unit sizes, what actually fits in each one, and how to figure out what you need before you book.
Why Size Is the First Decision You Should Make
Before you compare prices, locations, or facilities, you need to know how much space you're actually working with. Storage facilities in the UAE typically measure units in square feet, and those numbers can feel abstract until you picture what goes inside.
A good mental model: think of it like a room in your home. A small studio room, a single bedroom, a large living area. Once you think in rooms instead of square footage, it clicks much faster.
Small Units (50 sq ft)
This is roughly the size of a large wardrobe or a walk-in closet. It sounds small, but it holds more than you'd expect when packed well.
What fits: 15 medium boxes, a couple of suitcases, small appliances, documents and files, seasonal items like holiday decorations or sports equipment.
Who needs this: Students between semesters. Residents going back home for the summer and leaving a few things behind. Businesses storing archived files or excess office supplies. Someone who just needs a clean, dry place to park the stuff that doesn't belong anywhere in their apartment right now.
What doesn't fit: Any furniture beyond a small side table. You're not going to get a sofa in here.
Medium Units (75–150 sq ft)
Now you're working with something closer to a large bedroom — roughly 10 x 10 or 10 x 15 feet. This is where most residential customers land, and for good reason. It covers a lot of situations without being oversized.
What fits: Contents of a one-bedroom apartment (without the kitchen appliances), a bed frame, mattress, chest of drawers, small sofa, TV unit, around 20–30 boxes, a bicycle, maybe a small motorbike.
Who needs this: Someone moving between apartments and needing a place to hold their things for a few weeks or months. Families relocating within the UAE. Home renovators clearing out one room at a time. Small online sellers who need a proper space for inventory without committing to a full warehouse.
This is also the sweet spot for people who are downsizing — moving from a villa to an apartment and keeping the furniture they can't part with.
Large Units (200–300+ sq ft)
At this point, you're looking at something comparable to a one-car garage or a small warehouse bay. There's genuine vertical height in most of these units, which means smart stacking gets you even more out of the space.
What fits: Full contents of a 2–3 bedroom home, large sectional sofas, dining tables with chairs, appliances including washing machines and fridges, wardrobes, multiple bed frames, a car in some facilities, and a significant volume of business inventory or equipment.
Who needs this: Families in transition between homes. Businesses with physical stock — retailers, importers, e-commerce sellers managing seasonal inventory spikes. Contractors storing tools and equipment. Expats who are leaving the country but keeping their belongings in the UAE.
If you're running a business and you find yourself constantly shuffling inventory through your office or your home because you have nowhere else to put it, a large unit often pays for itself within weeks.
Shared Warehouse Space: The Option Most People Don't Consider
Beyond individual storage units, shared warehouse facilities offer a different kind of setup — one that's particularly valuable for businesses.
Instead of a sealed unit, you rent a portion of a larger warehouse. You get more flexibility, often easier access for deliveries, and the infrastructure of a professional facility without the overhead of renting an entire building.
At Storely, this is something we see working really well for small businesses that are growing faster than their storage needs. You can start with a modest allocation and scale up month by month, without being locked into a lease that no longer makes sense six months down the road.
The Practical Test: How to Estimate What You Need
Rather than guessing, here's a simple approach that works:
Walk through the space you're clearing out. Make a rough list of large items — sofas, beds, wardrobes, appliances, large boxes. Count them.
As a rule of thumb: 1 medium room of furniture = around 100 sq ft of storage. 2–3 rooms = 150–200 sq ft. A full home = 250 sq ft or more.
If you're storing business inventory rather than household goods, think in pallets or shelf units instead. Most medium-to-large storage units can accommodate 4–8 pallets comfortably.
When in doubt, go one size up. A slightly bigger unit gives you room to organise properly, which means you can actually find things when you need them. A unit that's too small ends up being a chaos pile that you dread opening.
One Last Thing Before You Book
Don't just look at floor space — check the ceiling height. Some smaller facilities have lower ceilings that limit stacking. A unit with higher clearance effectively gives you more storage volume for the same footprint.
Also think about access. How often will you need to get in and out? If it's frequent, a unit near the entrance or on the ground floor matters. If it's long-term storage you'll rarely touch, that matters less.
At Storely in Ajman, our team is happy to walk you through the options before you commit. The goal is to match you with the right size — not the most expensive one.



