You know that moment when you’re moving house, renovating, or trying to reclaim a spare room… and the “temporary pile” has evolved into a permanent indoor landfill?
That’s usually when people call a storage place and say:
“Erm… what size unit do I need?”
Totally fair. But most people do one of two things:
- Overestimate and pay for a unit that’s mostly oxygen
- Underestimate and create a cardboard Jenga nightmare they can’t access
This guide makes it simple. You’ll get a quick way to work it out, a practical cheat sheet, and the packing tips that save you money.
Don’t guess. Use the 60-second Quick Size Calculator.
If you want the fastest answer without playing “describe your sofa over the phone”, use our Quick Size Calculator and get a sensible recommendation.
Try it here: Quick Size Calculator here
Step 1: Think “stuff”, not “square feet”
Humans love asking for an exact answer to a messy question. Storage sizing is mostly volume and shape, not how many bedrooms you have on Rightmove.
To choose the right unit size, focus on:
- Bulky items (beds, sofas, wardrobes, white goods, bikes)
- Number of boxes (and whether they’re stackable)
- Awkward items (TVs, mirrors, artwork, prams, gym gear)
- Access needs (do you need to get to things weekly or is it long-term storage?)
If you only remember one thing: bulky items decide the unit. Boxes fill gaps. Sofas don’t.
Step 2: Do the 10-minute inventory that saves money
Open your notes app. Split your stuff into five buckets:
A) Big furniture
Beds, mattresses, sofas, wardrobes, dining table, chairs, bookcases, desks.
B) Appliances
Washer/dryer, fridge/freezer, dishwasher, microwave, dehumidifier (yes, some of you are organised).
C) Boxes
Rough count: 10 / 20 / 40+.
If you’ve got time, count one room and multiply.
D) Weird stuff
Bikes, tools, garden kit, kids’ toys, suitcases, seasonal decorations, business stock.
E) Access level
- Regular access: you need a walkway/aisle, so you may need a bit more space
- Set-and-forget: you can pack tighter and often go smaller
Once you’ve done that list, the guesswork disappears.
Shortcut: The calculator basically does this thinking for you.
https://brownboxstorage.co.uk/quick-size-calculator/
Step 3: A realistic “room size” cheat sheet (no nonsense)
People ask for “room size” because it’s easier than “cubic volume and stacking efficiency”. Fair.
Use this as a starting point. Your results will vary depending on how much stuff you own and whether you pack like an adult.
Small unit (best for: decluttering and “just get it out of my house”)
Usually works for:
- Boxes from a small room / studio
- A few small furniture pieces (chairs, small desk, sideboard)
- Seasonal gear, kids’ stuff, hobby kit, suitcases
Great for:
- Clearing space before selling a house in Tamworth
- Students between terms
- Trades wanting tools/kit stored clean and secure
Medium unit (best for: one room of furniture + boxes)
Usually works for:
- Contents of a 1-bed flat (if packed properly)
- Bed + mattress + drawers + sofa plus boxes
- Business stock with sensible stacking
Great for:
- Moving house with breathing space
- Renovations where you want furniture out of the dust and chaos
- Small businesses that have outgrown the spare room
Large unit (best for: house moves and bigger life changes)
Usually works for:
- Contents of a 2–3 bed home (depends on furniture and box count)
- Multiple bulky items plus lots of boxes
- Trades/business storage that needs real space and access
Great for:
- Full house moves
- Downsizing without binning everything in a panic
- Divorce/merging households (aka “why do we own four toasters?”)
Want the correct answer, fast?
Use the Quick Size Calculator: Link to Brown Box Size Calculator
Step 4: The 7 mistakes that make you rent too big
This is where people leak money.
1) Bin bags instead of boxes
Bin bags don’t stack. They collapse, waste space, and tear. Boxes win.
2) Not dismantling furniture
Beds, tables, wardrobes. Take them apart. Flat-pack is your friend.
3) Half-empty boxes
Air is expensive. Fill boxes properly and keep sizes consistent.
4) Packing like you’re hiding evidence
If you can’t find anything, you’ll keep opening it all and making a mess. Label properly.
5) No plan for access
If you need regular access, you need an aisle. If you don’t, pack tighter and save money.
6) Forgetting vertical space
Storage units are tall for a reason. Stack safely and use the height.
7) No protection for fragile items
TVs, mirrors, soft furnishings, artwork. Protect them properly so you don’t regret your life choices later.
(Yes, we sell proper packing materials. No, bin bags are still not “packing materials”.)
Step 5: Pack your unit properly (so Future You doesn’t hate Present You)
Good packing = smaller unit = lower monthly cost. This is the boring truth.
A simple packing order
- Big flat items at the back (wardrobes, mattresses upright where safe, tables on edge)
- Heaviest boxes on the bottom
- Build stable “walls” of boxes (not a leaning tower of regret)
- Put long-term stuff behind, short-term stuff near the front
- Leave a small access strip if you’ll need anything regularly
Label like a grown-up
Write:
- Room
- Contents
- Priority (1 = need soon, 3 = can ignore for months)
This one habit saves hours.
Why this matters in Tamworth (and how Brown Box helps)
Tamworth has the full menu of “life admin chaos”: house moves, refurb projects, downsizing, landlords with paperwork, trades with tools everywhere, and small businesses swimming in stock.
Brown Box Storage is secure, indoor self-storage in Tamworth, built for people who want their space back without drama. If you’re unsure on size, we’ll guide you based on your inventory list or a couple of photos. And if you need help getting it all moved, our Man & Van option takes the sting out of it.
Start here and stop guessing:
https://brownboxstorage.co.uk/quick-size-calculator/
Conclusion
Choosing the right unit size isn’t complicated. It’s just easy to get wrong when you’re stressed and surrounded by stuff.
Use the calculator, get a sensible recommendation, and if you’re between sizes, we’ll sanity-check it with you.
If you’re in Tamworth and need breathing space, get in touch and we’ll help you pick the right unit and get moved in.

