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Self-Storage
Drive-up units to climate-controlled urban vaults: dynamic pricing, high NOI margins, and REIT-scale platform premium.
Property Types
- Drive-up / outdoor surface units
- Climate-controlled interior building
- Multi-storey urban infill facility
- Boat and RV storage (outdoor or covered)
- Wine and specialty storage (temperature and humidity controlled)
- Container / portable storage (mobile units)
Physical Attributes
- Unit mix by size tier: 5×5, 5×10, 10×10, 10×20, 10×30 (SF distribution)
- Climate control system: HVAC zoning, humidity control, air exchange rates
- Access control and security: individual unit alarms, keypad entry, CCTV coverage
- Drive aisle width, loading bays, and elevator access for multi-storey facilities
- Visibility and street presence: signage allowance, pylon, proximity to arterial roads
Value-Add
- Revenue management software implementation: demand-based dynamic unit pricing
- Unit mix reconfiguration: subdivide large units or add premium climate-controlled tiers
- Ancillary revenue streams: truck rental, packing supplies, tenant insurance
- Expansion of existing facility: add floors or additional structures on surplus land
- Conversion of underutilized commercial buildings to urban self-storage
Appraisal Approach
- Income approach dominant: direct cap or DCF on stabilized NOI
- NOI margins among highest in real estate (55-70%+ at stabilized facilities)
- Physical occupancy vs economic occupancy distinction: street rate vs in-place rate
- Comparable sales on price-per-rentable-SF and per-unit basis
Management
- On-site or remote management model: staffed kiosk vs fully automated facility
- Lien law compliance: provincial / state notice, auction, and disposal procedures
- Revenue management: rate optimization software, promotional rates for new tenants
- Delinquency management: late fees, overlocking, auction cycle administration
Strategic Concepts
- Recession-resilient demand: life transitions (divorce, downsizing, moving) drive occupancy
- Platform premium: REIT and institutional operators achieve higher valuations via scale
- Low tenant improvement and management intensity relative to other asset classes
- Urban infill scarcity: zoning barriers and land cost limit new supply in core markets
- Cap rate compression driven by institutional capital seeking high-margin income assets