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Rent-a-Room Won't Cover Your Basement Storage Income in Ireland — Here's What Does
Practical notes before you choose
Use the quoted monthly price as a starting point, then judge the space by access, dryness and host responsiveness.
For storage, the practical test is not just floor area. Ask what fits through the entrance, how often you can visit, and whether the host has used the space for storage before. One useful rule: access and proximity often matter more than headline price — a smaller space near home usually beats a larger unit across town.
Before you commit, it is worth checking how the door locks, when you can collect, whether the route in has stairs or narrow turns, and what happens if you need something back mid-month — those details decide whether the space actually works for what you are storing. Rent-a-Room Relief — up to €14,000/year completely tax-free for letting a room (or rooms) in your principal private residence. A lot of hosts assume this relief shelters every euro or pound their spare space earns. For a basement used for storage, it does not, and knowing why saves you an unpleasant conversation with the tax office. The honest position, with worked numbers on the real national-average basement figure of €94/month (€1128/year), follows.
Does a basement storage let qualify? (No — here's why)
No. Rent-a-Room relief exempts up to €14,000/year of income from letting furnished residential accommodation in your own home: space someone lives in. A basement let purely for storing boxes is not residential accommodation, even when the space is inside your home, so the relief does not apply to a storage let. Revenue treats storage receipts as ordinary Case IV/V income instead. The same basement CAN fall under Rent-a-Room if you let it as part of genuine lodger accommodation, but that is a different arrangement from a storage let, with a person living in your home.
What applies instead: Case IV/V casual income
Storage income in Ireland is taxed as Case IV/V income: declare it on Form 12 (or Form 11 above the chargeable-person thresholds). There is no tax-free band. Read the full picture for this asset: Case IV/V casual income and your basement.
The worked example, in plain numbers
If you take in a live-in lodger paying €12,000 over the tax year, that is under the €14,000 limit and tax-free under Rent-a-Room. Let the same room to someone purely to store boxes and the relief does NOT apply: the income is Case IV/V — under €5,000/year net you declare it on Form 12 and pay tax at your marginal rate. For this specific asset: a basement at the Irish benchmark brings in €94/month, which is €1128/year gross. Renters use the space for wine storage, long-term boxes, tools, white goods.
| Tier | Typical monthly | Annual | Tax position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry (small / no power) | €65 | €780 | Case IV/V — declare on Form 12 (no tax-free band) |
| Standard | €94 | €1128 | Case IV/V — declare on Form 12 (no tax-free band) |
| Optimised (secure, accessible) | €146 | €1752 | Case IV/V — declare on Form 12 (no tax-free band) |
Watch-outs
- All-or-nothing cliff edge: if gross receipts go even €1 over €14,000, you lose the relief entirely and the WHOLE amount becomes taxable — not just the excess.
- The limit is GROSS income (before deducting any expenses).
- Only covers rooms within your own home. A standalone garage, lock-up, shed or driveway let on its own does NOT qualify.
- Does not apply to your second home or a buy-to-let.
- Short-term/guest lets (e.g. under 28 consecutive days) are excluded.
If you run this as a business
Relief is for individuals only. A company or sole trader letting space as a business cannot use Rent-a-Room — that income is taxed as trading income (Case I) or rental income (Case V): you pay tax on the profit after allowable expenses at the relevant rate (12.5% corporation tax on trading profits for a company, or income tax + USC + PRSI for an individual trading above the casual threshold).
Frequently asked
Is income from letting a basement for storage taxable in Ireland? Yes: storage income is always taxable income. The question this page answers is which rule applies and what paperwork it triggers. At the national-average rate a basement earns about €94/month (€1128/year). Does Rent-a-Room Relief apply to a basement? No. Rent-a-Room relief exempts up to €14,000/year of income from letting furnished residential accommodation in your own home: space someone lives in. Where do these figures come from? The earnings figures are the Irish national-average storage rate scaled by the typical basement benchmark, the same methodology used across Packhood's earnings pages. The tax rules are summarised from Revenue.ie — Rent-a-Room Relief (Tax and Duty Manual Part 07-01-32). Always confirm your own position.
List your basement — it takes about nine minutes
Packhood is account-first: create a free account, then build the listing with photos, dimensions, access type and your monthly rate. You approve every renter before anything is confirmed, payment is held in escrow, payouts run weekly, and you keep 95% of the rate you set (Packhood's commission is 5%; renters pay a separate 20% service fee). Verified damage by a verified renter is covered by the Host Guarantee of €300 per booking.
Related pages
- Rent out your basement in Ireland
- Garage and the same rule
- Spare room and the same rule
- Driveway and the same rule
- The full Rent-a-Room Relief guide
_Summary, not tax advice — confirm with the Revenue Commissioners (revenue.ie)._
How Packhood compares to self-storage in Rent a room ireland basement
If you are looking for storage in Rent a room ireland basement, the main commercial alternatives include Elephant Self Storage, National Self Storage, Store4U, U Store It. These operators run purpose-built facilities on commercial estates, typically on the outskirts of the city. Pricing ranges from €60 to €450 per month depending on unit size, with admin fees, mandatory insurance and padlock purchases adding to your first bill.
Packhood offers a fundamentally different approach. Instead of driving to a commercial facility, you book unused space from a verified neighbour — a garage, spare room, driveway, attic or basement within a few streets of your home. Packhood hosts set their own monthly price, which is typically 30-50% lower than commercial self-storage rates. There are no admin fees, no mandatory padlock purchases and no insurance upsells. The listed price is the all-in monthly cost.
Commercial self-storage facilities have genuine advantages in specific scenarios. Climate-controlled indoor units are better for temperature-sensitive items like electronics, wine or artwork. Facilities with 24/7 PIN-code access let you visit your unit at any hour without coordinating with anyone. Staffed receptions can accept deliveries and provide on-site support. For these use cases, a commercial operator may be the right choice.
For most personal and small-business storage needs, however, Packhood delivers better value. The 30-50% cost saving adds up quickly over a 3-6 month booking — that is €120-600 back in your pocket. Neighbourhood proximity means you can walk to your storage rather than loading a car. Month-to-month billing with 14 days' notice means no lock-in contracts. And every booking includes the Packhood Host Guarantee, with €300 per-booking protection, €25k items cover and €100k host liability cover.
Storage demand in July
In July the storage market finally exhales. The frantic May-June moving peak fades and a calmer, holiday-shaped rhythm takes its place. Families heading abroad want somewhere secure to leave the valuables they would rather not lock in an empty house; international workers going home for the summer do the maths and store an entire flat's contents rather than keep paying rent on rooms nobody is sleeping in. It is a quieter month, but a practical one — storage in July is less about crisis and more about good planning.
Ireland and the UK see school summer holidays begin in early-to-mid July. The subsequent six weeks are characterised by family activity: camping trips require gear retrieval, loft conversions take advantage of children being away, and garden storage sees heavy rotation as barbecue season hits its peak. The Netherlands enters the bouwvak period — the traditional construction industry holiday in late July and August — which paradoxically increases DIY renovation storage as homeowners tackle projects their builders left unfinished.
Festival season is in full swing. Electric Picnic (IE), Glastonbury (GB), and a packed Dutch festival calendar (Lowlands, North Sea Jazz, Mysteryland) all require equipment staging, vendor stock rotation, and post-festival clean-up storage. Festival-goers themselves retrieve and return camping gear throughout the month.
The rental market in Dublin and Amsterdam remains extremely tight, and some tenants use Packhood storage as a bridge while between leases. Storing belongings for 2-4 weeks at €40-60/month is vastly cheaper than an extra month of rent on an apartment they are leaving.
What people store and retrieve in July
- Holiday departure storage — Families store bicycles, electronics, and small valuables in secure indoor spaces while away for 2-4 weeks. Peace-of-mind storage rather than space-saving.
- Expat summer return storage — International workers heading home for extended visits store flat contents — furniture, kitchenware, clothing — rather than subletting or paying idle rent.
- Festival gear rotation — Tents, sleeping bags, wellies, and camping chairs come out for weekends and go back into storage mid-week. Festival-goers may access storage 3-4 times in July.
- Summer camp and childcare equipment — Childcare providers and summer camps retrieve bulk equipment: sports gear, art supplies, outdoor play structures.
- Barbecue and outdoor entertaining peak — Larger barbecues, outdoor heaters, and entertaining equipment come out of sheds. Items replaced by newer models head to storage or donation.
- Loft and attic conversion clearance — Summer is prime time for loft conversions. Everything stored "in the attic" needs an alternative home for 6-12 weeks.
- Summer wardrobe at full capacity — Winter clothing storage is complete. Attics and spare rooms hold maximum seasonal wardrobe volume from July through September.
Storage tips for July
- If you are storing items while on holiday, choose a space with 24-hour access or at least flexible hours. Delayed flights and changed plans mean you might need to retrieve items outside business hours.
- Expats storing flat contents: photograph every room before packing. If your lease ends while you are abroad, you need a visual record for your deposit return.
- Festival-goers: keep your camping gear in a single, easy-to-grab kit bag inside your storage space. Repacking a tent and sleeping bag from loose storage on a Friday evening is nobody's idea of fun.
- If your loft conversion starts in July, expect to need your temporary storage for 3 months minimum. Builders' timelines slip — budget for storage through October to be safe.
- Hosts: consider offering a "summer holiday watch" service — checking on stored items weekly. This premium add-on attracts security-conscious travellers.
Key dates driving storage demand
- School summer holidays begin (late June/early July) — family storage rotation
- Start of festival season — Longitude, Forbidden Fruit, and other Dublin festivals
- Galway International Arts Festival (mid-July) — event and vendor storage
- Peak tourist season — Airbnb hosts clearing personal items from rental properties
Bridging the Summer Gap: Student Storage Between Leases
The gap between academic-year leases is one of the most stressful periods for students in Dublin, London, and Amsterdam. Your current lease ends in June, your new house-share does not start until September, and you have three months of belongings that need to go somewhere. Traditional self-storage companies target this desperation with minimum-term contracts and hidden fees. Packhood offers a more honest alternative. A standard student storage need — 3-5 m² for books, clothes, bedding, kitchenware, and a few pieces of furniture — costs €40-70/month in Dublin, £35-65/month in London, or €35-60/month in Amsterdam, with no admin fees, no padlock charges, and no forced insurance upsells. The ideal approach is to agree your September accommodation first, then book storage close to your new address rather than your old one. That way, move-in day involves a short trip from your Packhood space to your new front door, not a cross-city logistics exercise. Ask your host about holding deliveries — some will accept packages on your behalf over summer, so you can order that new desk or kitchen kit in August and collect everything in one go.
Wedding Season: Storage for Decorations, Gifts, and Supplies
Wedding season across Ireland, the UK, and the Netherlands runs from May through September, with June and July as the absolute peak. Modern weddings involve a staggering volume of physical items: centrepieces, table runners, chair sashes, signage, photo booth props, favours, card boxes, guest books, ceremony arches, flower arrangements (often partially DIY), and the gifts themselves. Many couples begin accumulating these items months before the wedding, and the family home quickly runs out of hiding space. A Packhood space near the wedding venue serves as a staging area. In the weeks before the wedding, deliveries arrive and are stored. On the morning of the ceremony, everything loads into a single vehicle for transport to the venue. After the celebration, unused items, gifts, and decorations return to storage while the couple is on their honeymoon. A 5-8 m² space at €45-80/month or £40-75/month covers the typical wedding's storage needs for a 2-3 month booking. Choose a space with drive-up access and ground-floor entry — loading a vehicle with 30+ boxes of fragile decorations requires easy access, not a narrow staircase.
Frequently asked questions about storage in Rent A Room Ireland Basement
These answers apply to storage with Packhood in and around Rent A Room Ireland Basement.
Do I need to tell my home insurance I have items in storage?
Yes — most home contents policies require you to notify the insurer when items are stored at a different address. Some policies automatically cover belongings stored away from home up to a limit (often 10-15% of total cover). Check your policy wording and ask for a written extension if needed.
How do pop-up shop owners use Packhood between events?
Pop-up retailers store display units, signage, stock and POS equipment between markets and events. A 5-10 m² space is usually enough, costing €55-110/month. The flexibility of month-to-month booking matches the unpredictable pop-up calendar. Filter for spaces with easy loading access so setup and teardown days aren't slowed down.
What types of space can I list on Packhood?
Garages, spare rooms, driveways, sheds, attics, basements, lock-ups, storage containers, warehouse bays, commercial units, parking spaces, workshops — any unused space that's secure and accessible. Most hosts earn €80-220/month from a single space.
What do I need for packing fragile items before storage?
Bubble wrap for glasses and ceramics, acid-free tissue for picture frames, and double-walled boxes for heavy fragile items. Fill gaps with packing paper, never newspaper (ink transfers). Mark boxes "FRAGILE" and stack them last. A 10-box fragile kit costs around €20-30 from packing suppliers.
What is the cheapest way for students to store belongings between terms?
Packhood peer-to-peer storage is typically 40-60% cheaper than university storage schemes or commercial pods. A spare room or attic near campus costs €50-90/month — enough for 10-15 boxes, a desk chair and a suitcase. Split a larger garage with a housemate to halve the cost further. No contracts, no minimum term.
How should I store leather furniture or jackets?
Leather needs breathing space — never wrap in plastic or cling film. Cover with breathable cotton dust sheets. Apply leather conditioner before storing to prevent cracking. Choose an indoor Packhood space with stable temperature. Leather cracks in cold, dry conditions and grows mould in warm, humid ones. Ideal range: 15-22°C, 40-55% humidity.
How do I clear a deceased relative's home?
Don't rush. Book a Packhood space near the property and move items in batches over 2-4 weeks. Prioritise valuables and sentimental items first. Arrange house clearance or charity collection for unwanted furniture. Keep legal documents, financial records and personal papers in a separate, clearly labelled box. Indoor spaces protect fragile heirlooms best.
Understanding storage costs
Storage prices in Rent A Room Ireland Basement depend on space type, size, access frequency and location. On Packhood, Rent A Room Ireland Basement renters pay €35–€200/month for verified neighbour storage — that's typically 35–60% less than commercial self-storage chains in the same area.
What's included in the price: The listing price on Packhood is the all-in monthly price. Packhood's 20% service fee is already included — nothing extra at checkout. Hosts pay 5% commission. No signup fees, no admin charges, no insurance upsells.
Host Guarantee: Every booking includes up to €300 of Host Guarantee protection per booking. Hosts are ID-verified through Stripe Connect. Renters can message hosts before booking to ask questions and arrange viewings.
Ready to find affordable storage in Rent A Room Ireland Basement?
Renters: Browse available spaces → — verified hosts, month-to-month, save 35-60% vs self-storage.
Hosts: List your unused space → — free to list, keep 95% of every booking.
Own a garage in Rent A Room Ireland Basement? Turn it into income.
A garage in Rent A Room Ireland Basement earns hosts about €244/month (€2,920/yr) on Packhood — taxable as Case IV miscellaneous income — there is no storage-specific tax-free allowance, so check Revenue.ie for your situation. See what your garage could earn → · Become a host — list your garage free →
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