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How Big Is a 10x15 Storage Unit? Dimensions, What Fits, and Who It’s For

by 10 Federal Storage

Published on May 11, 2026

The 10x15 is one of the most useful sizes in self storage — big enough to hold the contents of a two- or three-bedroom home, but smaller (and cheaper) than a full one-car garage unit. If you’re between homes, renovating, downsizing, or running a business that’s outgrown the spare room, the 10x15 hits a sweet spot most people don’t even know exists until they compare sizes side-by-side.

This guide breaks down exactly how big a 10x15 storage unit really is, with real-world comparisons, a clear list of what fits inside, who it’s best for, and tips for getting the most out of every square foot.


Table of Contents

  1. 10x15 Storage Unit Dimensions at a Glance
  2. What 150 Square Feet Actually Looks Like
  3. What Fits in a 10x15 Storage Unit
  4. What Won’t Fit in a 10x15
  5. Who Is a 10x15 Storage Unit Best For?
  6. 10x15 vs. Other Storage Unit Sizes
  7. 10 Tips for Maximizing a 10x15 Storage Unit
  8. How Much Does a 10x15 Storage Unit Cost?
  9. Is a 10x15 Storage Unit Right for You?
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

10x15 Storage Unit Dimensions at a Glance

If you only have 30 seconds, here are the numbers that matter:

  • Width: 10 feet
  • Depth: 15 feet
  • Floor Space: 150 square feet
  • Ceiling Height: Typically 8 feet (some facilities offer 9–10 ft)
  • Total Volume: About 1,200 cubic feet
  • Typical Monthly Cost: $150–$300 depending on climate control and market

That cubic footage is the real story here. With 1,200 cubic feet to work with, a well-packed 10x15 can swallow a surprising amount — entire rooms of furniture, appliances, and dozens of boxes — while still leaving room to walk in and grab what you need.


What 150 Square Feet Actually Looks Like

Square footage is abstract. Here are some everyday spaces that are roughly the same size as a 10x15 storage unit:

  • A large bedroom in a typical home
  • About three-quarters of a one-car garage
  • A small home office combined with an attached walk-in closet
  • The cargo area of a 15-foot moving truck
  • Three standard parking spaces, end to end

Picture a room you can comfortably stand in the middle of with furniture stacked along every wall, plus enough room left over to walk a clear path from the door to the back. That’s a 10x15.


What Fits in a 10x15 Storage Unit

A 10x15 is built to handle real household-scale storage. Here’s what typically works:

A Two- to Three-Bedroom Home’s Worth of Belongings

  • Contents of a master bedroom, second bedroom, and living room
  • 50 to 75 standard medium moving boxes
  • Plastic storage bins, file boxes, and document storage

Large Furniture

  • A full sofa or sectional
  • A loveseat or recliner
  • King or queen bedroom set (mattress, box spring, frame, headboard, dressers, nightstands)
  • A dining table with chairs
  • An entertainment center or large TV stand
  • Bookcases, armoires, and china cabinets
  • A desk and office chair

Major Appliances

  • Refrigerator
  • Washer and dryer
  • Stove or range
  • Dishwasher

Seasonal and Specialty Items

  • Holiday decorations and seasonal decor
  • Multiple bicycles, kayaks, or paddleboards
  • Golf clubs, skis, snowboards, and fishing gear
  • Camping equipment, tents, and coolers
  • Lawn equipment (mower, trimmer, leaf blower)
  • Tools, toolboxes, and small workshop equipment
  • Patio furniture for off-season storage

Rule of thumb: If you can move everything in a 15-foot moving truck, a 10x15 will likely handle it — with room to spare if you pack vertically.


What Won’t Fit in a 10x15

This unit handles most household needs, but there are limits. Here’s where it falls short:

  • The full contents of a four- or five-bedroom home
  • A car, truck, or boat (you’ll want a 10x20 or vehicle storage)
  • Industrial or commercial inventory at scale
  • Multiple full living rooms’ worth of bulky sectionals plus all the rest of a home
  • Anything you’d need a 26-foot moving truck (or two trips with a 15-foot truck) to transport

If you’re storing a larger home, a vehicle alongside household items, or business inventory in volume, look at a 10x20, 10x25, or 10x30.


Who Is a 10x15 Storage Unit Best For?

The 10x15 solves a particular set of problems that smaller units can’t and larger units overshoot. It’s ideal for:

Families Moving Between Homes

When you’re selling one home and waiting on another, a 10x15 holds most of a typical family’s belongings without forcing you to choose what to leave behind. It’s the right size for the gap between closings or for staging while your current home is on the market.

Homeowners Renovating Multiple Rooms

Gutting a kitchen, redoing a master suite, or refinishing floors throughout the house? A 10x15 can hold the furniture and contents of several rooms at once so contractors have a clear workspace.

Downsizers

Moving from a larger home to a smaller one but not ready to part with everything? A 10x15 buys you time to sort, sell, and gift things at your own pace rather than under move-out pressure.

Military Families on Deployment or PCS Orders

For a service member receiving orders or deploying overseas, a 10x15 can hold the household goods of a small family unit affordably and securely during the assignment.

Small Business Owners

E-commerce inventory, trade show booths, seasonal product overflow, retail backstock, contractor equipment — the 10x15 functions as a low-cost warehouse for businesses that don’t need a full commercial lease.

Estate Management and Inheritance Storage

After a family member passes, families often need somewhere to hold a home’s contents while they sort through belongings, distribute items to heirs, and decide what to keep, sell, or donate. The 10x15 handles a full estate without rushing the process.


10x15 vs. Other Storage Unit Sizes

Here’s how a 10x15 stacks up against the sizes above and below — useful if you’re on the fence:

  • 5x10 (50 sq ft) — Contents of a small bedroom. Fits a queen mattress set, dresser, and boxes.
  • 10x10 (100 sq ft) — A one- to two-bedroom apartment’s worth of furniture, appliances, and boxes.
  • 10x15 (150 sq ft) — A two- to three-bedroom home, including larger items like sectionals and dining sets.
  • 10x20 (200 sq ft) — Roughly a one-car garage. Holds a three- to four-bedroom home or a vehicle plus household items.
  • 10x30 (300 sq ft) — Comparable to a two-car garage. Holds a four- to five-bedroom home or a vehicle plus a full home’s contents.

Prices and availability vary by facility and market. Check live availability for current rates near you.


10 Tips for Maximizing a 10x15 Storage Unit

The difference between a 10x15 that feels cluttered and one that feels organized comes down to how you pack it. Try these proven strategies:

  1. Map the layout before you load in. With 150 square feet, planning the placement of large items first prevents the “tetris” nightmare of having to unload and reload.
  2. Heavy and bulky items go to the back. Appliances, dressers, and bedroom sets line the back wall. Lighter and more-accessed items stay near the door.
  3. Build vertically with uniform boxes. Use the full 8 feet of ceiling height. Same-sized boxes stack cleanly all the way up.
  4. Disassemble all furniture. Bed frames, table legs, shelving units, and entertainment centers come apart and store flat against walls, saving enormous floor space.
  5. Use furniture as containers. Fill drawers, wardrobes, and refrigerators with linens, clothes, or boxes. Empty space inside furniture is wasted space.
  6. Leave a center aisle. In a unit this size, you’ll almost certainly need to access things mid-rental. Plan a path from the door to the back wall.
  7. Store mattresses vertically. A king mattress laid flat eats serious floor space. Stood upright against a wall, it reclaims most of it.
  8. Use vacuum bags for soft goods. Clothing, bedding, pillows, and curtains compress to a fraction of their size, freeing up bins and boxes for other items.
  9. Label boxes on multiple sides. When boxes are stacked four or five high, you need to see labels no matter how they’re oriented.
  10. Keep an inventory list. For a unit this size, a simple list (or a note in your phone) of what’s in each labeled box saves hours of digging later.

How Much Does a 10x15 Storage Unit Cost?

Pricing varies widely based on location, demand, and whether the unit is climate-controlled. As a general range:

  • Standard 10x15 (non-climate-controlled): $150–$250 per month
  • Climate-controlled 10x15: $200–$350 per month

Factors that affect price include:

  • Local market demand (urban facilities cost more than rural ones)
  • Ground floor vs. upper floor access
  • Drive-up access vs. interior hallway access (drive-up tends to cost more for this size because of move-in convenience)
  • Climate control (worth it for wood furniture, electronics, leather, artwork, and anything else humidity-sensitive)
  • Time of year (peak moving season — May through August — usually means higher prices)

Always ask about move-in specials. Many facilities offer the first month free or 50% off for new renters, which is meaningful savings on a unit this size.


Is a 10x15 Storage Unit Right for You?

A 10x15 is the right call if most of these are true:

  • You’re storing the contents of a two- or three-bedroom home
  • You have multiple pieces of large furniture and at least one major appliance
  • You want to walk into the unit and access items without unloading the whole thing
  • You’re between homes, renovating, deploying, or sorting an estate
  • You have business inventory or equipment that’s outgrown a 10x10

If you’re storing less than a full home or you’re mainly dealing with boxes plus a few small pieces of furniture, a 10x10 will likely save you money. If you’re storing a four- or five-bedroom home, a vehicle alongside household goods, or commercial inventory at volume, jump up to a 10x20 or larger.

The general rule of thumb: When in doubt, sizing slightly up costs less than the hassle of upgrading mid-rental.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can a 10x15 storage unit fit the contents of a three-bedroom home?

Yes, in most cases. A typical three-bedroom home’s furniture, appliances, and boxes will fit in a 10x15 with careful packing. If the home is heavily furnished, has unusually bulky pieces (like multiple full sectionals), or includes a lot of recreational equipment, you may want to size up to a 10x20.

What is the ceiling height of a 10x15 unit?

Most facilities have 8-foot ceilings, though some have 9 or 10. At this size, ceiling height makes a real difference — a 10-foot ceiling adds 300 cubic feet of usable vertical storage compared to an 8-foot ceiling. Always confirm with the specific facility if vertical capacity matters to you.

Can I fit a car in a 10x15 storage unit?

Most standard cars are between 14 and 16 feet long, so a 10x15 is right at the edge — some compact cars will fit, but most sedans and all SUVs and trucks will not. For reliable vehicle storage, look at a 10x20 or larger, or a dedicated vehicle storage option.

Should I get climate control for a 10x15?

For most renters at this size, yes. The 10x15 typically holds wood furniture, mattresses, electronics, leather goods, artwork, and important documents — all items that benefit from temperature and humidity control. If you’re storing tools, plastic bins, lawn equipment, or seasonal items only, a standard unit is usually fine.

How do I access my 10x15 storage unit?

Most facilities offer either drive-up access (you pull right up to your unit’s door, which is ideal for moving in and out of a unit this size) or interior access (climate-controlled hallways, often with carts available). For a 10x15, drive-up access is especially convenient on move-in day because you’ll be loading larger items.

Do I need to rent a 10x15 for a full year?

Almost all modern storage facilities rent month-to-month with no long-term commitment. You can usually move out with just a few weeks’ notice, which works well for renovation projects, deployments, or transitions between homes.

What size moving truck do I need for a 10x15 unit?

A 15-foot moving truck typically holds about the same volume as a 10x15 storage unit. If you’re moving everything in at once, plan on a 15-foot or 17-foot truck. For heavier loads or longer-distance moves with larger appliances, a 20-foot truck gives you more breathing room.

Do I need insurance for a 10x15 storage unit?

Most facilities require some form of coverage on stored items, and at this size the contents are usually worth protecting. Your homeowner’s or renter’s insurance may already include off-premises personal property coverage; if not, the facility usually offers an affordable tenant protection plan at sign-up.


Reserve a 10x15 Storage Unit Near You

The 10x15 is one of the most versatile sizes in self storage — big enough to hold a real household, small enough to stay affordable. Whether you’re between homes, renovating, downsizing, or running a business that’s outgrown your spare room, it’s a clean fit for a long list of common needs. Browse available 10x15 units, check pricing, and reserve online to lock in current rates.

View Available 10x15 Storage Units Near You