Boston Sunday Globe

Americans went all in on storage but demand is suddenly cooling

- By Martha C. White

Peter Chu, a retired lawyer living in Portland, Ore., pays nearly $400 a month for his storage unit in Seattle, where he used to live. That rate has gone up by roughly $150 since 2022.

Chu is caught in an industry that was booming a few years ago during the coronaviru­s pandemic but now finds it has built way too many rental units. As the industry cuts so-called street rates to entice new customers, its existing customers are paying substantia­lly higher rates that are sometimes raised twice or more in a year.

The demand for self-storage cooled right as a glut of new supply hit the market, particular­ly in cities such as Phoenix and Atlanta, said Tyson Huebner, the director of research at Yardi Matrix, a division of the property-management software firm Yardi.

“It was really attractive in the moment, but as soon as you go through planning, building, by the time you deliver, you’re kind of in a different market,” he said.

Many developers, spurred by the pandemic to invest money in new self-storage facilities, have been caught short by this drop in demand. In Sun Belt markets, where much of the self-storage spaces have been built over the past couple of years, falling rental rates combined with climbing constructi­on and financing costs prompted some developers to walk away from projects entirely.

According to SpareFoot, an online platform where people can search for storage units, the average monthly rent for a unit in the United States was $85.14 as of March, down from $108.58 two years earlier.

Last year, 245 self-storage constructi­on projects were abandoned, more than double the number from the year before, according to Yardi Matrix.

Yardi Matrix forecast that self-storage revenue could outright decline in 2024 for the first time since the financial crisis in 2008. The sector faces what Michael Elliott, an equity analyst at the investment research firm CFRA, characteri­zed as “significan­t headwinds” after years of growth. On average, the industry added 439 storage facilities annually from 2010 to 2019, according to Yardi Matrix. From 2020 to 2023, that number rose to 735.

One of the reasons for the drop in demand is that people aren’t relocating as much. During the pandemic, a wave of city dwellers fled their homes as offices closed, many searching for more outdoor space and residences closer to family. As people moved from apartments and condominiu­ms, they often needed a place to put their stuff — and storage businesses raced to meet that demand.

But Americans are no longer migrating from urban centers as much. And since the Federal Reserve began raising rates two years ago to rein in inflation, the commensura­te spike in mortgage rates put the housing market into a deep freeze. When the number of home sales hits a nearly three-decade trough, as it did in 2023, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors, demand for storage — roughly half of which comes from people moving — also took a hit.

According to the Self Storage Associatio­n, a trade group, around 11 percent of US households have a self-storage unit, but there isn’t enough new demand to make up for the many new facilities that have popped up around the country. Over the next two years, millions of square feet of self-storage projects are expected to open up.

For existing self-storage operators, it’s much more expensive to do business today, said Timothy Dietz, the president and CEO of the Self Storage Associatio­n. Property taxes have increased, he said, as tax assessment­s climbed along with real estate values over the past couple of years. Property insurance has also become more expensive, particular­ly in parts of the country that face regular threats from natural disasters such as hurricanes and wildfires. And higher interest rates make it more expensive for businesses to refinance existing loans.

Aside from a handful of large, publicly traded companies, such as Public Storage and Extra Space Storage, the sector is fragmented compared with other classes of commercial real estate. The Self Storage Associatio­n estimates that three-fourths of the nation’s roughly 60,000 self-storage facilities are owned by small operators, many of them family businesses that lack the deep pockets and access to financing of their larger competitor­s.

But even large players aren’t immune to rising costs. Executives at Public Storage told investors on their quarterly conference call in February that property taxes, which have risen quickly as real estate values have climbed, were the company’s largest line-item expense.

Storage companies have been making up for lower rates — usually offered as promotiona­l prices — by raising rates on existing customers. The rate increases are happening at a much faster pace, too. Previously, the increases would happen after customers had been renting for around a year, but “now, that’s hitting in month 2 or 3 — the move-in rates now are almost like a promotiona­l rate,” said Kristin Millington, the director of the selfstorag­e and manufactur­ed housing groups at Crow Holdings Capital, a real estate developmen­t and investment firm.

The businesses are banking on customers such as Chu, the retired lawyer who is staying put despite the rate increase. He said that although “it’s painful to see all my money going toward a storage unit,” he was unlikely to move the old computers and cellphones, photo albums, financial records, and other personal items he kept there because he liked the center and its location.

“Tenants have become accustomed to using their storage as an extra closet; the desire to move isn’t there,” Millington said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States