How Big is a 10×20 Storage Unit?

200
square feet
·
10×20
dimensions (ft)
·
Storage Unit
category

What Does 10×20 Actually Look Like?

At 200 square feet, this unit matches the footprint of a standard one-car garage—20 feet deep by 10 feet wide. Picture a typical bedroom in a newer home, then double it. You have enough floor space for a car plus narrow walkways, or you can dedicate the entire area to household storage with comfortable access aisles between your belongings.

Identical to the floor space of a standard one-car garage, or roughly the size of a large master bedroom.

A 10×20 storage unit gives you 200 square feet of serious storage capacity—the same footprint as a standard one-car garage. This is where you graduate from cramming boxes into corners to having actual room to organize and access your belongings. You can walk through the space comfortably, stack items strategically, and still reach everything you've stored.

This size handles major life transitions with ease. Moving from a 3-bedroom house? The entire contents will fit, though you'll need to stack furniture and pack efficiently. Storing a vehicle? A standard car, motorcycle, or small boat will fit with minimal room for additional items. Most facilities offer drive-up access at this size, making loading and unloading significantly easier than smaller units that require wheeling items down hallways.

The 10×20 represents the sweet spot for families who need substantial storage without paying for more space than they'll actually use. It's large enough for seasonal decorations, sporting equipment, business inventory, or that workshop setup you're not ready to part with.

What Fits in 10×20?

  • Complete contents of a 3-bedroom house including major appliances
  • One standard passenger car with 2-3 feet of clearance on sides
  • 15-20 large moving boxes stacked 6 feet high with walking space
  • Full dining room set plus living room furniture with organized stacking
  • Small boat up to 18 feet on a trailer
  • Workshop tools, workbench, and lumber storage with organization system
  • Seasonal inventory for a small retail business with shelving units

10×20 Storage Unit Pricing

Type Low High
Standard $95/mo $180/mo
Climate-Controlled $130/mo $280/mo
Drive-Up Access $110/mo $220/mo

How Much Does a 10×20 Storage Unit Cost?

Expect to pay between $95 and $280 per month. Prices vary by location, climate control, and access hours.

Compare Storage Unit Prices →

Common Uses for 10×20

Storing contents during home renovations or moves Long-term vehicle storage for classic cars or seasonal vehicles Business inventory and equipment storage Military deployment storage for entire household Estate storage while settling family property Seasonal equipment for landscaping or construction businesses

Pro Tips

  • Request a unit on the ground floor if available—the drive-up access saves significant time and effort when moving large furniture or appliances in and out.
  • Leave a 3-foot center aisle even when the unit looks full; you'll need access to items stored in the back, and cramped units become unusable quickly.
  • Place your most frequently needed items within the first 6 feet of the entrance, even if it looks less organized—you'll thank yourself later.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I fit a car and household items in a 10×20 unit?
You can fit a standard car OR substantial household items, but not both comfortably. A typical sedan takes up about 16-17 feet of the 20-foot depth, leaving only 3-4 feet for storage. Most people choose one or the other for practical access.
How much does a 10×20 storage unit cost per month?
Expect to pay $95-280 per month depending on location and features. Standard units in suburban areas typically run $95-150, while climate-controlled units in major cities can reach $200-280 monthly.
What's the ceiling height in a 10×20 storage unit?
Most 10×20 units have 8-10 foot ceilings, giving you 1,600-2,000 cubic feet of total storage volume. This height allows for efficient vertical stacking of boxes and furniture without requiring a ladder for most people.

A Short Story

Uncle Marcus measures the crack with his thumb—three inches long, hairline thin, running vertically up the back wall of his 10×20 storage unit. For thirty years, this concrete barrier has held back something his grandfather never fully explained, only whispered about in half-sentences that trailed into silence. The fluorescent light flickers overhead as he kneels among cardboard towers that nearly touch the eight-foot ceiling. In this 10-by-20 space, every sound bounces strangely—his breathing, the rustle of old newspapers, the distant hum of traffic. But now there's something else. A whisper seeps through the crack, soft as moth wings. Then another, slightly different but unmistakably the same voice. His voice. Dozens of versions of himself speaking in overlapping murmurs, each one a half-second behind the last, creating an endless cascade of words he hasn't spoken yet. Marcus presses his ear closer to the concrete. The voices multiply, each echo carrying a different choice, a different path, a different version of this moment. His hand trembles as he reaches toward the crack, knowing that once he widens it, all those other selves might finally—

uncle Echo The Boundary Breach

Quick Reference: 10×20 in Different Units

200
sq feet
28,800
sq inches
22.2
sq yards
18.6
sq meters