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Your spare room in Dublin is earning EUR0 today. A comparable one makes EUR95/month — that's EUR1,140/year it is NOT collecting.

EUR1,140/year on the table

EUR95/month ≈ EUR1,140/year

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Your Spare room in Dublin Is Earning €0. The Laziest Money You're Not Making Is €95 a Month.

Retiree. Pension's fixed, inflation isn't, and you stopped driving — so the garage holds a car you sold and tins of paint from 2009. You want dependable extra income without a boss, an app shift, or any risk to your savings. Here's the uncomfortable maths: a comparable spare room a few streets away in Dublin is quietly making €95 every single month€1140 a year — for doing absolutely nothing. A spare room storing emotional inertia earns nothing. A spare room storing a stranger's boxes pays your mortgage. That spare room is space you already own and aren't collecting on — let purely for storage it clears around €95 a month at the local benchmark, for doing nothing once it's listed.

The claim, plainly: list your spare room in Dublin as storage and the going rate is €95/month (€1140/year), rising to €147/month for a well-placed or optimised space. No upfront cost. Casual / non-PAYE income. Cancel any time.

This is the laziest money you already own and aren't collecting. Not a second job, not a punt on a coin chart — just square metres you're already paying for, finally paying you back.

Why this beats High-Yield Savings Account / Cash ISA (honestly)

You could chase High-Yield Savings Account / Cash ISA instead. Here's the straight comparison, not a sales line:

  • High-Yield Savings Account / Cash ISA typically returns ~£25–£100/mo on a £5,000–£20,000 balance at 4–6% AER (UK, 2024–25 rates).
  • It costs you Near-zero after setup — check rate every few months to switch if needed of active work, and on a 1-(active)–5-(passive) scale it rates 5/5 for passivity.
  • Storage rates 5/5 — list once, a renter's boxes sit for months, you lift no finger.

High-yield savings is arguably more passive than storage (no listing, no renter interaction at all) and FSCS-protected up to £85,000, so it has no price swings and doesn't lose value overnight (though inflation can still erode it). Storage wins on return per pound of asset used: a £200/yr savings yield requires £4,000–5,000 in cash tied up, whereas a spare room earning £100–150/mo uses capital you already own and would otherwise leave idle. If you have significant liquid savings, stack both — they are complementary, not competing. In one line: Savings accounts pay you to do nothing — as long as you have £10,000 doing nothing.

What this actually solves for you

The average wedding in the UK and Ireland costs more than most people save in a year, and venues, catering, and photography all demand substantial deposits well in advance of the date. Storage income earned in the run-up to a wedding can cover meaningful line items — photographer deposit, flowers, honeymoon costs — without requiring a personal loan. For someone in your position, the appeal isn't getting rich — it's a dependable €95 landing in the same account the bills leave from, with no shift rota, no commute, and no skill to learn.

Real numbers for Dublin

Tier Typical monthly Annual Tax position
Entry (small / no power) €66 €792 first £1,000 tax-free, balance declared
Standard €95 €1140 first £1,000 tax-free, balance declared
Optimised (secure, accessible) €147 €1764 first £1,000 tax-free, balance declared (declare above thresholds)

Why Dublin specifically? Storage demand here is driven by concrete local factors — 3rd-level student migration (UCD, Trinity, DCU), Tech-sector relocation churn and Housing shortage forces dense living. In areas like Rathmines, Ranelagh and Dundrum, spare rooms already let through Packhood, and the average spare room storage rate across Dublin runs about €95/month. The national storage average sits around €145/month, and Dublin tracks around that. Who rents the space? People needing room for temporary household items, wardrobe overflow, documents and books, personal archives.

The tax position, in plain numbers

Casual / non-PAYE income — €5,000 net (or €30,000 gross) is the line between a simple Form 12 and full self-assessment (Form 11). Worked example: You let your garage for €3,000/year. After €600 of allowable expenses, net profit is €2,400. As this is under €5,000 net, you stay a non-chargeable person and just declare the €2,400 on Form 12 under non-PAYE income, paying income tax/USC/PRSI at your marginal rate. If net profit had topped €5,000 (or gross from all non-PAYE sources hit €30,000), you'd have to register for Income Tax and file the fuller Form 11. One thing to watch: This is NOT a tax-free band — unlike a garage in the UK (£1,000 property allowance), Ireland gives no automatic tax-free allowance for garage/driveway income. Summary, not tax advice — confirm with the Revenue Commissioners (revenue.ie).

The seasonal angle: Garden Furniture Turnover (Late Summer / Early Autumn)

As the outdoor season winds down, households without adequate outbuildings need somewhere dry and secure to store garden furniture, barbecues, and outdoor play equipment to protect them over winter. The window is relatively short and demand is price-sensitive. Demand for garages and sheds tends to pick up in late summer and early autumn because homeowners without covered outdoor storage need somewhere weatherproof to keep garden furniture and equipment during the colder months; hosts in suburban areas with driveways and gardens often find this a steady low-effort revenue period. If you list before this window, you're in the market when the search volume arrives rather than scrambling after it.

How it works — list in 60 seconds. get paid every month.

No renovation. No employees. No upfront cost. Just income from space you already own.

  1. Describe your space — Add photos, dimensions, access type (key, smart-lock, code), and any rules about what can be stored. The listing form takes 9–15 minutes. Your listing goes live immediately — no review queue, no photographer required.
  2. Set your price — The dashboard shows what comparable spaces in your postcode are earning. Set your monthly rate above, at, or below the local median — entirely your choice. You can adjust it at any time.
  3. Approve your renter — Booking requests come to you with the renter's verified ID, review history, and a description of what they plan to store. Accept or decline. Nothing is automatic. If a request does not suit you, decline it and wait for the next one.
  4. Complete check-in — When the renter's items arrive, both parties complete a photo check-in through the app. This timestamps the condition of your space and creates the evidence baseline for the host guarantee. Most check-ins take under five minutes.

Why hosts trust Packhood with their property

  • ID-verified renters — Every renter completes government-ID verification via Stripe Identity before their first booking request is processed. You are never dealing with an anonymous stranger. The renter's verified name is visible on every booking request.
  • Payment held in escrow — The renter's monthly payment is collected by Packhood and held in escrow before the booking period begins. Your payout is released once the period is confirmed. You never handle cash, chase invoices, or deal with bounced transfers.
  • Host guarantee: €300 IE/NL — £260 GB — Packhood's host guarantee covers verified damage to your property caused by a renter's stored items during a live booking. Cover is €300 in Ireland and the Netherlands, £260 in Great Britain. The check-in photo record is the evidence baseline. Full terms at packhood.com/trust.
  • You approve every booking — No booking is confirmed without your explicit acceptance. Review the renter's profile, their review history, and what they plan to store. Decline any request without explanation. You are never assigned a renter automatically.

Your questions, answered

Is it safe letting strangers store their things at my property? Every renter on Packhood must pass ID verification via Stripe Identity before their first booking request is sent. You see their verified name, a review history from previous hosts, and a photo of the stored items at check-in. You approve every booking individually — nothing is automatic. The renter's payment is held in escrow by Packhood and only released to you after the booking period begins, so you are never dealing with an unvetted stranger turning up with cash. If at any point you are uncomfortable, you can decline a booking or end a live booking with notice. Most hosts who raised this concern before listing report that after their first successful booking they never think about it again. Bottom line: ID-verified renters only. You approve every booking. Payment in escrow before anything starts. Is it actually worth the effort? How much will I realistically earn? The effort ceiling is low — the average Packhood host spends under 15 minutes per month managing their listing. What you earn depends on your market, space size, and price. As a benchmark: a half-garage (approximately 9m²) in a major Irish or Dutch city earns €60–€120/month at current rates; a full garage (18m²) earns €120–€250/month. In Great Britain, equivalent spaces earn £50–£180/month. At the lower end of those ranges, that is €720–€1,440/year from a space you are already insuring and maintaining. At the upper end, it exceeds many people's monthly utility bills. Earnings are visible in your dashboard in real time, and the platform shows you what comparable listings in your postcode are earning so you can price competitively from day one. Bottom line: Under 15 min/month to manage. Half-garage: €60–€120/month. Full garage: €120–€250/month. GB: £50–£180/month. What if I need the space back before the booking ends? All bookings on Packhood are monthly rolling — there is no minimum term on either side. To reclaim your space, stop accepting renewals and the renter receives a billing-cycle notice to clear their items. No lease to break, no solicitor required, no deposit dispute. If you need the space back urgently for a genuine emergency, contact Packhood support and we will facilitate an accelerated exit with the renter. The booking calendar is yours to close at any time. Many hosts list seasonally — open in summer, closed in winter — and the listing holds its reviews and position through the pause. Bottom line: Monthly rolling. Stop renewals and the renter clears on the next billing cycle. No fixed-term obligation.

Start collecting the €1140 you're currently leaving behind

Every month an unlisted spare room sits empty, that's €95 gone for good — storage income doesn't backdate. Listing is free, you approve every renter, and you can stop whenever you like.

How hosting on Packhood works

Packhood is peer-to-peer storage and parking: people near you who need somewhere to keep their things rent the space you already have. You stay in control of who books, what they store and when they can access it. There is no shop to staff, no stock to buy and no long commitment — your spare room in Dublin simply starts earning from space that is sitting empty today.

Here is the whole process, start to finish:

  1. List your space (about 10 minutes). Add a few photos, choose the space type, give a rough size and describe access. You set the monthly price, your availability and your house rules.
  2. Get booking requests. Renters in Dublin find your listing and send a request. Every renter is ID-verified, and you can message them first to ask what they want to store and agree access.
  3. Accept the ones you like. You are never auto-booked. Decline anything that does not suit you — wrong items, wrong dates, or just a gut feeling — with no penalty.
  4. They move in; you get paid. Payment is handled securely through Packhood and paid out to you weekly. You keep 95% of every booking — Packhood's only charge to hosts is a 5% commission.

There are no listing fees, no signup fees and no monthly charges to be a host. You can pause or unlist your space at any time, and there are no long contracts tying you in.

What you can rent out

You are listing a spare room, and it is one of the most in-demand types of space on Packhood. A typical spare room is around 9 m² (roughly 22 m³ of usable space) — enough for furniture, wardrobe overflow, boxes, documents and seasonal items. You do not need to clear the whole thing — many hosts rent out a defined corner, half a garage or a single shelf and keep the rest for themselves.

Packhood hosts also rent out plenty of other space. Almost anything dry, secure and accessible can earn:

  • Garage or lock-up — one of the most sought-after spaces; great for cars, bikes, tools and long-term boxes.
  • Driveway or off-street parking — high demand near city centres, stations, stadiums and airports.
  • Spare room or box room — clean, dry household storage for boxes, furniture and seasonal items.
  • Attic or loft — perfect for light, long-term items people rarely need to reach.
  • Basement or cellar — ground-level access for boxes, furniture and bulkier items.
  • Shed or outbuilding — ideal for tools, garden kit, bikes and weatherproof boxes.
  • Commercial unit or warehouse space — for hosts with room to take pallets, stock or business overflow.

If it is weatherproof, can be kept secure and a renter can reach it by arrangement, it is worth listing. You decide exactly how much of it you offer.

You stay in control — and you are protected

Renting out space only works if it feels safe, so Packhood is built around host control and verified renters rather than blind, automatic bookings.

  • You set the terms. Your price, your availability, your access hours and your house rules — all chosen by you, and changeable whenever you like.
  • You approve every booking. Requests come to you first. You can message the renter, ask what they plan to store, and accept or decline. Nothing is booked without your say-so.
  • Renters are verified. Every renter is ID-verified through Stripe Identity before they can book, so you always know who you are dealing with.
  • Host Guarantee on every booking. Each accepted booking includes up to €300 of Host Guarantee protection per booking, giving you peace of mind on top of your own home or contents cover.
  • Secure, weekly payouts. Money is handled through Packhood and paid out to you weekly. You keep 95% of every booking; the only deduction is Packhood's 5% commission.
  • No long contracts. Hosting is month-to-month. Pause, unlist or change your spare room's availability whenever your circumstances change.

Safety and insurance basics

Most hosting on Packhood is straightforward storage, but a few sensible basics keep it that way:

  • Check your own cover. Tell your home or contents insurer that you plan to store a neighbour's items for a fee — it is usually fine, but it is worth a quick confirmation. The €300 Host Guarantee sits on top of, not instead of, your own policy.
  • Agree what is stored. Use the messaging thread to confirm what the renter wants to keep with you before you accept, so there are no surprises.
  • Keep prohibited items out. No perishable food, plants or animals, no flammable, explosive or hazardous materials, no illegal or stolen goods, and nothing that needs power or climate control unless you have agreed to provide it.
  • Make access clear and safe. Agree how and when the renter reaches the space, keep walkways clear, and make sure locks and doors are sound.
  • Keep it dry and secure. Renters value space that stays dry and can be locked. A little weatherproofing and a decent lock protect their belongings and your rating.

What makes a good listing

Listings that book fastest are the ones renters can trust at a glance. Spend a few extra minutes here and your spare room will stand out:

  • Clear, honest photos. Show the actual space in daylight — the entrance, the inside, and how someone gets to it. Real photos beat a perfect-looking stock image every time.
  • An accurate size. Give a realistic size (a typical spare room is about 9 m²), or describe it in plain terms — "fits a car and a few boxes", "about three wardrobes' worth". It sets the right expectations and avoids cancellations.
  • Access details. Say how the renter gets in, whether there are steps, how wide the door is, and the hours access is available. This is the question renters ask most.
  • A fair, specific price. Price it for your space, size and location. You keep 95%, so a competitive price still pays well — and well-priced listings book first.
  • A quick, friendly description. A sentence or two on what the space suits and what it is near (a station, the city centre, good parking) helps the right renter pick you.
  • Fast replies. Responding to booking requests quickly is the single biggest thing you can do to win bookings.

Host FAQ

Is hosting on Packhood safe?

Yes — it is built around your control. Every renter is ID-verified, you approve each booking yourself, and every booking includes up to €300 of Host Guarantee protection. You can message a renter before accepting and decline anyone who does not suit you.

What can and can't be stored in my spare room?

Most everyday belongings are fine — boxes, furniture, equipment, vehicles and seasonal items. Not allowed: perishable food, plants or animals, anything flammable, explosive or hazardous, and anything illegal. If you ever have a doubt, ask the renter in the message thread before you accept.

How and when do I get paid?

Payment is handled securely through Packhood and paid out to you weekly. You keep 95% of every booking — Packhood's only charge to hosts is a 5% commission. There are no listing fees, signup fees or monthly charges.

Can I decline a booking?

Always. Nothing is booked automatically. Requests come to you first, and you can accept or decline any of them with no penalty — wrong items, wrong dates, or simply not right for you.

Do I need to empty the whole space?

No. Plenty of hosts rent out just part of a spare room — a corner, a few shelves or half a garage — and keep the rest. You decide exactly how much you offer and set the price to match.

Am I tied into a contract?

No. Hosting is month-to-month with no long contracts. You can change your price, pause new bookings or unlist your spare room in Dublin whenever your circumstances change.

How long does it take to list?

About 10 minutes. Add a few photos, pick the space type, give a rough size and access details, set your price and rules, and publish. You can edit any of it later.

Start earning from your spare room in Dublin

Listing is free and takes about 10 minutes — and you keep 95% of every booking. List your space → and turn space you already have into weekly income, on your terms.

What your spare room could earn

A spare room in Dublin typically earns roughly €105–€190 a month, which works out at about €1,260–€2,280 a year. These are typical figures and earnings vary — they are not guaranteed. What you actually earn depends on the size and condition of the space, how easy it is to access, how you price it, and local demand in Dublin.

Peer-to-peer storage tends to be priced well below commercial self-storage — usually around half the cost — so renters get a better deal while you still earn a steady monthly income from space that would otherwise sit empty. For comparison, a commercial unit of a broadly similar size in Dublin would often advertise from about €230 a month.

Packhood hosts keep 95% of every booking — the platform fee is just 5% — and payouts are made weekly, so the income above is what reaches you after that fee, not a headline rate you have to discount later.

At a glance — spare room in Dublin (typical, not guaranteed):

  • Monthly: ~€105–€190
  • Yearly: ~€1,260–€2,280
  • You keep: 95% (5% platform fee), paid out weekly

Tax on storage income in Ireland

Money you earn from renting out space in Ireland is taxable. It is generally assessed as rental or other income (Schedule D, Case IV/V) rather than being exempt, so it should be declared.

Importantly, Rent-a-Room Relief does NOT cover storage — that relief is for letting a room as residential accommodation to a tenant, not for storing goods. There is no storage-specific tax-free allowance, so keep a record of every payout.

You declare the income through your annual return — usually Form 11 (self-assessed) or Form 12 (PAYE taxpayers with additional income), depending on your circumstances.

This is general information, not tax advice. Your circumstances may change the position — check the current rules on Revenue.ie or speak to a qualified accountant before you file.

How to earn more from your spare room

A few small things make the difference between a listing that sits quietly and one that books out. Most cost nothing:

  • Add clear, well-lit photos. Show the actual space, how much fits, and the access route. Bright, honest photos win far more enquiries than a single dark snapshot.
  • Be accurate about the size. Give real measurements or a sensible "fits roughly X boxes / a small car's worth". Renters book faster when they can picture their things fitting, and accurate sizing avoids cancellations.
  • Offer flexible access. Even a couple of agreed collection windows a week makes a spare room far more attractive than "by appointment only". The easier it is to get to, the more it earns.
  • Price fairly against local self-storage. Pitch a little under the nearest commercial unit in Dublin — around the €105–€190 range above is a sensible start — so you are the obvious-value choice while still earning well.
  • Keep it clean, dry and secure. A tidy, weather-tight space that feels safe earns better reviews, and good reviews bring repeat bookings and longer stays.

Spare Room storage guide

A spare room is the gold standard for climate-protected storage on Packhood. Located inside the host's home, these spaces maintain stable temperatures year-round, stay dry, and are shielded from UV light — conditions that commercial climate-controlled units charge a premium for. On Packhood, spare room listings are typically 30-50% cheaper than their commercial equivalent.

Most spare rooms listed for storage are genuinely unused bedrooms — the children have moved out, a home office is no longer needed, or the household has downsized within the same property. The room retains its carpet, painted walls, and central heating connection, which means your belongings sit in the same conditions as the host's own furniture. This is a meaningful upgrade over any uninsulated outbuilding.

Access dynamics differ from other space types because the room is inside someone's home. You will typically need to coordinate visits with the host, enter through the front or side door, and walk through shared areas like a hallway. This makes spare rooms less suitable for items you need frequently, but ideal for items you can deposit once and collect weeks or months later.

In shared houses or multi-occupant properties, spare room storage works well when clear boundaries are established. The room should have its own lock — many Packhood hosts fit a simple key lock or padlock hasp on the door. Establish with the host whether other household members are aware of the arrangement, and agree on quiet hours for access if the property has shift workers or young children.

How much fits in a spare room?

A typical spare room measures 2.7m x 3.3m (roughly 9 m²), which is enough to hold the contents of a studio flat or a generous overflow from a larger home. Expect to fit: 15-25 moving boxes, a single wardrobe or chest of drawers, a desk, two chairs, and several bags of clothing. A larger spare room (3.5m x 4.0m, 14 m²) holds a double bed frame, mattress (stood on its side), sofa, dining table, and 25-35 boxes.

Ceiling height in most UK and Irish homes is 2.3-2.4m, which allows stacking boxes four or five high. Dutch homes tend to have slightly higher ceilings (2.6m+). The key constraint is the doorway — standard internal doors are 76cm wide and 198cm tall. Any item that fits through the front door and hallway will fit through the spare room door, but measure wardrobes, desks, and mattresses against this opening before moving day.

Weight is rarely an issue on upper floors if loads are distributed. A floor designed for bedroom furniture handles storage boxes without concern. Avoid concentrating heavy items (like a full filing cabinet or stacked book boxes) in a single square metre on a timber-joist upper floor — spread the load across the room.

Best items to store in a spare room

  • Clothing and textiles — Stable temperature and low humidity prevent mould, musty odours, and moth damage. Vacuum bags compress duvets and winter coats to half their volume.
  • Books and documents — Paper is highly sensitive to moisture and temperature swings. A heated indoor room is the safest environment short of professional archive storage.
  • Electronics and IT equipment — Laptops, monitors, printers, and servers need a dry, temperature-stable environment. Condensation — the enemy of circuit boards — does not form in a heated room.
  • Artwork and framed photographs — No UV exposure, stable humidity, and no risk of rain ingress. Stand framed pieces vertically with cardboard between each frame.
  • Musical instruments — Guitars, violins, and pianos are damaged by humidity swings and temperature extremes. A spare room maintains the 40-60% relative humidity that instruments need.
  • Baby and children's items — Cots, highchairs, prams, and bags of outgrown clothes store safely indoors. No exposure to garden pests, damp, or dust.
  • Archive boxes and business records — Accountants, solicitors, and small businesses required to retain records for 6-7 years benefit from a dry, secure indoor environment.

Items to avoid

  • Petrol-powered equipment — Fuel vapour in an enclosed indoor room is a fire hazard and violates Packhood's terms. Lawnmowers and generators belong in a garage or shed.
  • Strong-smelling items — Paint tins, solvents, and chemicals will permeate the room and potentially the host's home. Use an outbuilding for anything with a noticeable odour.
  • Dirty or unwashed items — Muddy garden tools, greasy bike parts, or soil-covered plant pots can stain carpets and attract insects. Clean everything before bringing it indoors.
  • Oversized furniture that blocks the door — If you cannot open the room door fully once items are inside, you lose access. Plan your layout so the door swings freely and you can reach items at the back.
  • Heavy gym equipment in concentrated loads — A squat rack plus loaded barbell concentrating 200+ kg on four small feet can damage carpet and stress timber floor joists on upper storeys. Distribute weight or use a ground-floor space.

Security

Spare rooms benefit from the security of the host's home: locked front door, potentially an alarm system, and occupied premises. Many hosts add a key lock or padlock hasp to the spare room door itself, giving renters exclusive access. The presence of other people in the house acts as a deterrent — break-ins targeting a single room inside an occupied home are extremely rare. Confirm the door lock type on the listing page before booking.

How to prepare your items for spare room storage

  1. Measure the room doorway (width and height) and hallway width to confirm your largest items will fit through.
  2. Agree access arrangements with the host before move-in: how many visits per month, preferred times, how to book access.
  3. Lay a protective sheet or old carpet offcut on the floor if storing items with hard edges that could mark the carpet.
  4. Use vacuum-seal bags for clothing and soft furnishings to reduce volume by 50-70%.
  5. Stand mattresses on their side in a mattress bag to free floor space. Lean them against the longest wall.
  6. Keep a contents list taped to the inside of the door — you will not always remember what is at the back.
  7. Wrap fragile items individually and place them on top of stacks, never at the bottom.
  8. Leave a 30cm gap between stored items and external walls to allow air circulation and prevent condensation on cold walls in winter.

Host story: Siobhan O'Brien in Dublin

Siobhan lives alone near the Dart in Blackrock and does not own a car. Her driveway fits two vehicles and was completely wasted. She listed both spots on Packhood. One is booked by a commuter who catches the Dart into town; the other by a neighbour's adult son who needed somewhere to park his work van overnight. "Between the two bookings I earn more than my gas bill every month. I literally do nothing — they park and leave. My only interaction is a friendly wave when I see them. I wish I had done this three years ago when I first heard about peer-to-peer parking."
Siobhan O'Brien earns €110/month from their driveway on Packhood.

Storage demand in June

June carries May's momentum but swaps the cast. The graduation caps go up, the academic year formally ends, and a fresh cohort of graduates walks straight into the "what next" question — many storing their belongings while they travel, start an internship, or hunt for that first professional flat. Latecomers who left storage until now find themselves scrapping over what is left, often accepting a longer drive to a space that is further out than they would like. The lesson every June teaches is the same one the early bookers already learned in March.

The Irish Leaving Certificate and UK A-levels and GCSEs begin in June, creating a secondary education-linked storage pattern. Families converting a teenager's bedroom into a study or guest room during the exam period store childhood furniture and accumulated items. In the Netherlands, the eindexamens (final exams) in early June trigger similar household reshuffles.

June is prime wedding season in all three markets. Couples, venues, and wedding planners rely on storage for everything from chair covers to centrepieces. Venue-adjacent garage and warehouse bookings spike on Thursday-to-Monday cycles as weekend weddings turn over.

The summer property market remains robust, and with schools about to break up, families with children target June for completing house moves before the holiday disruption. Removals companies report their busiest weeks of the year in mid-to-late June.

What people store and retrieve in June

  • Graduate transition storage — Newly graduated students store university belongings while job-hunting, travelling, or moving between cities. Typical booking: 3-6 months, 3-5 m².
  • Last-minute student move-out — Students who missed the May window pay premium rates for whatever space remains near campus. Off-peak alternatives 15-20 minutes away offer savings.
  • Wedding season peak storage — Full-service wedding storage: dresses, suits, decorations, gifts, photographer equipment, and catering supplies. Short-term bookings with weekend access required.
  • Summer holiday preparation — Families store bicycles, garden equipment, and non-travel items to secure their home while on extended holiday. Security-conscious renters prefer indoor, lockable spaces.
  • School year-end clear-out — End-of-year school projects, art supplies, sports equipment, and textbooks come home and often go straight to storage while families decide what to keep.
  • Summer camp equipment — Youth organisations and summer camp operators retrieve bulk equipment — tents, sports gear, craft supplies — from winter storage.
  • Home renovation peak — With reliable weather and long days, major renovation projects (extensions, loft conversions, kitchen refits) hit their stride. Contents of entire rooms shift to temporary storage.

Storage tips for June

  • Graduates: if you are taking a gap year or travelling, book your storage now for the full duration. Pre-paying 6 months upfront often earns a 15-20% discount compared to month-to-month.
  • Wedding couples: confirm your storage space has ground-floor, drive-up access. Carrying 50 chair covers up three flights of stairs on a Saturday morning is not how you want to start your wedding day.
  • If you are going on an extended summer holiday, remove all perishable items from your storage space. Even sealed containers can attract pests in warm weather.
  • Families moving before school breaks up: pack children's rooms last and unpack them first. A familiar bedroom setup in the new house makes the transition smoother for everyone.
  • Hosts: this is your highest-earning quarter. If you have unused space that you have been thinking about listing, June demand guarantees fast bookings.

Key dates driving storage demand

  • June bank holiday (first Monday) — moving weekend and home project completion
  • Leaving Certificate exams begin (early June) — household reorganisation around exam schedules
  • University graduation ceremonies — Trinity, UCD, UCC, NUIG graduations trigger move-outs
  • Bloomsday (16 June) — cultural events in Dublin require temporary event storage

Home Staging Storage: Declutter to Sell Faster

Estate agents across Ireland, the UK, and the Netherlands consistently report that decluttered, staged homes sell faster and for higher prices than cluttered equivalents. The data supports this: staged homes in the UK sell 8-12% faster and often achieve 3-5% above asking price. The cost of staging storage — typically €50-100/month or £45-90/month for a 5-10 m² Packhood space for 6-10 weeks — is one of the highest-return investments a seller can make. The staging process is methodical. Start with the hallway: remove coats, shoes, and bags to create a spacious first impression. Move to the kitchen: clear worktops of everything except a kettle and perhaps a fruit bowl. Bedrooms: remove personal photos, excess pillows, and bedside clutter. Living room: reduce furniture to the minimum and remove any items that personalise the space. The displaced items go to your Packhood space, ideally a garage or spare room with easy access, because you will still need to retrieve items occasionally. The goal is not an empty house — it is a house that looks larger, lighter, and allows the buyer to project their own life onto the space. A small Packhood booking achieves this transformation in a single weekend.

Summer Heat and Storage: Protecting Sensitive Items

Summer heatwaves are becoming more common across Ireland, the UK, and the Netherlands. In July and August, temperatures inside a south-facing, unventilated garage can exceed 40 degrees C — hot enough to warp vinyl records, melt candles, degrade adhesives, and damage electronics. Chocolate, cosmetics, and medication can be ruined in a single afternoon of extreme heat. If your Packhood space is a garage or shed, understanding its thermal behaviour in summer is essential. Ask your host about the space's orientation (south-facing is warmest), ventilation (windows, vents, or airflow gaps), and insulation. A garage with a window that opens and a vent in the eaves stays significantly cooler than a sealed concrete box. For truly temperature-sensitive items, choose an indoor space: spare rooms, basements, and heated garages with insulation all maintain temperatures below 25 degrees C in typical summer conditions. If you are already committed to a warmer space, take precautions. Move heat-sensitive items to the coolest area (usually the floor, against a north-facing wall). Use reflective foil behind items near exterior walls. Never store anything with a low melting point (candles, crayons, certain plastics) in an uninsulated space from June to August. Remove batteries from all electronics — heat accelerates battery degradation and can cause leakage.

How Packhood pricing works for hosts

What a space earns in Dublin depends on its type, size, access and location. You set your own monthly price; verified neighbour storage in Dublin typically lists at €35–€200/month, and demand is strongest for dry, easy-access space close to where people live.

What you keep: The price you set is the all-in monthly price the renter pays. Hosts keep 95% — Packhood's 5% host commission is the only deduction. No listing fees, no admin charges, no insurance upsells.

Host Guarantee: Every booking includes up to €300 of Host Guarantee protection per booking. Every renter is ID-verified through Stripe Identity, and you can message them before accepting a booking to ask questions and agree access.


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