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Student Side Hustles in DN25: Real Ways to Earn (2026)

Student side hustles in DN25 usually mean shift work that clashes with your timetable. The options that fit around lectures are the ones that don't trade hours for money — and if you (or your shared house) have a spare garage, storage pays about £55/month (£660/year) with no shifts at all. Here's the honest ranking for students. This guide is specific to the DN25 area (Doncaster). The logistics sector generates business and trade storage demand. Affordable property means many homes have garages and driveways suitable for hosting. Hosts across DN postcodes offer some of the most affordable peer-to-peer storage in England.

The real options in DN25, ranked honestly

No single option is best for everyone — it depends on whether you have spare time, spare capital, or spare space. Here's the honest table for DN25:

Option Typical return Effort Passivity (1–5)
High-Yield Savings Account / Cash ISA ~£25–£100/mo on a £5,000–£20,000 balance at 4–6% AER (UK, 2024–25 rates) Near-zero after setup — check rate every few months to switch if needed 5
Stocks / Index Funds (S&P 500, Global ETFs) ~7–10% annualised long-run real return; ~£58–83/mo on £10,000 invested (long-run average, not guaranteed) Near-zero with a passive index strategy (set up ISA/SIPP, buy, rebalance annually) 5
Taking in a Lodger (Rent-a-Room) ~£500–900/mo (UK spare room, varies hugely by region; first £7,500/yr tax-free via Rent-a-Room Relief) Ongoing: shared living (cooking around each other, bathroom scheduling, social friction) — not measurable in hours but significant lifestyle cost 3
Airbnb / Short-Let ~£600–£900/mo net (UK average host, ~3–4 nights/wk occupancy) 5–15 hrs (cleaning turnovers, guest comms, check-in/out, restocking) 2
Crypto / Bitcoin Wildly variable: Bitcoin averaged +~150% in bull years, -60% to -80% in bear years 0–20+ hrs depending on strategy (holding = near-zero; active trading = part-time job) 3
Side Hustle (Dropshipping / Reselling / Print-on-Demand) Median new side hustle earns <£200/mo in year one; top 10% reach £500–2,000+/mo 10–30 hrs during setup and growth phase; potentially lower once established 2
Part-Time / Second Job ~£480–£560/mo (UK, ~10 hrs/wk at minimum wage £12.21/hr, after tax/NI approx) 10–20 hrs (the income figure above assumes 10 hrs; scale linearly) 1
Gig Economy (Uber, Deliveroo, DPD) ~£8–£11/hr take-home after costs (UK delivery/ride-hail, variable) As many as you work — income is directly proportional 1

A second job and gig work pay reliably but only while you're working. Savings and index funds are genuinely passive but need capital you may not have spare. Airbnb and a lodger pay more from your home but cost you privacy, effort, and regulatory risk.

The option most lists miss: rent the space you already own

You're already paying for every square metre of your home in mortgage or rent, council tax and insurance — whether it earns anything or not. In DN25, that idle space is worth real money as storage:

Rent the space you already own Typical monthly Annual Effort
Rent your garage £55/mo £660/yr List once, near-zero effort
Rent your spare room £30/mo £360/yr List once, near-zero effort
Rent your driveway £25/mo £300/yr List once, near-zero effort

It's the most passive earner on this page that needs no upfront capital — just space you already have. You set the price, you approve every renter, payment is held in escrow and paid out monthly, and you can stop any time.

Keep more of it: the tax position

Property Allowance — first £1,000/year of property income (garage, driveway, parking, storage) tax-free, with no reporting needed if you stay under it. At £660/year you're inside the £1,000 Property Allowance — no tax and no reporting duty to HMRC at all. Summary, not tax advice — confirm with HMRC (gov.uk).

How it works

  1. List your space in about 60 seconds — photos, location, monthly price. No upfront cost.
  2. Approve a renter — every booking is ID-verified with payment authorised before move-in.
  3. Get paid monthly — funds are held in escrow and paid to your bank each month.

Start earning in DN25

Every month your spare space sits empty is income you don't get back. Listing is free and takes a minute.

Where to next

Student Storage

Every summer, hundreds of thousands of students face the same problem: their lease ends in June but the new one doesn't start until September. Dragging furniture home to a different city — or worse, a different country — costs more than storing it locally. Peer-to-peer storage through Packhood lets you keep everything in a verified neighbour's garage or spare room, often within walking distance of campus, at 30-50% less than commercial self-storage pods.

Term breaks and study-abroad semesters create similar headaches. A single room's worth of belongings — bed frame, desk, boxes of books, kitchen bits — typically fits into 3-5 m² of floor space. That's exactly the kind of unused corner a Packhood host has sitting empty. You book month-to-month, so you only pay for the weeks you actually need, and you avoid the 3-month minimum lock-ins that commercial operators love to bury in their contracts.

Shared bookings are increasingly popular among housemates. Three or four of you can split a single garage and divide the cost, bringing per-person storage down to as little as £30/€35 per month. Coordinate a single drop-off day at the end of term, label everything clearly, and you'll thank yourselves come September when move-in is a 20-minute job instead of an all-day ordeal.

How to organise student storage

Step 1: Inventory your belongings Walk through your room and list everything you want to store. Photograph each item for your own records. Most single student rooms fit into 3-5 m² of storage.

Step 2: Search for spaces near campus Use the Packhood map to find verified hosts within a short drive or bus ride of your university. Filter by size and price.

Step 3: Coordinate with housemates If splitting a space, agree on a shared drop-off day and how costs will be divided. Packhood supports split payments on shared bookings.

Step 4: Book month-to-month Select your move-in date and book with no long-term lock-in. You can extend or end the booking with 30 days notice.

Step 5: Pack smart Use uniform-sized boxes (book boxes from a supermarket work well). Wrap fragile items in clothing to save on bubble wrap. Label every box on two sides.

Step 6: Drop off and document Take photos of your items in the space on move-in day. This protects both you and the host. Packhood's host guarantee covers up to €300 for peace of mind.

Step 7: Collect before your new lease starts Schedule pickup a day or two before your new lease begins so you have time to unpack without pressure.

Real-world scenarios

Summer break in Dublin Aoife and two housemates stored a full house of furniture in a garage in Drumcondra for 3 months at €45 each per month. They dropped everything off the day after exams ended and picked it up the weekend before Freshers' Week.

Semester abroad from Manchester James was heading to Barcelona for a semester exchange. He packed his room into 12 boxes and a disassembled bed frame, stored it in a spare room 10 minutes from campus for £55/month, and flew out stress-free.

Graduating and gap before a job Priya finished her degree in Leeds but her London flat didn't start until October. She booked a Packhood shed for 6 weeks at £40/month — far cheaper than paying an extra month's rent on her student house.

Amsterdam exchange student Lars stored his bike, desk, and 8 boxes in a host's basement in Amsterdam-Oost for €50/month while spending summer in Sweden. The host lived upstairs, so the space was accessible within an hour's notice.

Best space types for student storage

  • Garage — Ground-level access makes loading and unloading furniture easy. Most garages fit 2-3 students' worth of belongings comfortably.
  • Spare Room — Climate-controlled and secure inside someone's home. Ideal for books, electronics, and clothing that you want kept dry.
  • Shed — Budget-friendly option for hardy items like bed frames, desks, and plastic-boxed kitchenware. Less suitable for electronics or textiles.
  • Basement — Common in NL. Offers good security and constant temperature. Check for damp before storing paper or fabric.

Pro tips

  • Vacuum-pack duvets and winter coats — they shrink by 75% and stay fresh. A vacuum bag set costs about £8/€10.
  • Put silica gel packets in every box with books or electronics. A bulk pack of 50 sachets is under £5 on Amazon.
  • Take a photo of the contents label on each box and save it in a shared album — you'll forget what's where by September.
  • If you're cycling to drop off boxes, a cargo bike rental (common in Amsterdam and Dublin) can handle 4-5 boxes per trip for about €15/day.
  • Ask your host if you can do a test visit a week before move-out so you can plan how to arrange everything efficiently.

How much can you earn renting out your garage?

A standard single garage is one of the most sought-after storage spaces on the peer-to-peer market. Whether attached to a house or standalone, garages offer the combination renters value most: dry conditions, a lockable door, and ground-level access. If your garage is currently sitting empty or holding boxes you never open, it could be generating a meaningful side income every month.

Earnings depend on location, size, and condition. A clean, weather-tight garage in a city suburb will consistently outperform a rural unit with a leaking roof. Urban demand is driven by renters who lack storage in their own apartments, small business owners who need overflow stock space, and hobbyists storing seasonal equipment like bikes, kayaks, or ski gear.

On Packhood, hosts keep 95% of every booking. There is no lock-in: you can pause or close your listing at any time. Most garage hosts report that the actual time commitment is minimal — a few minutes to respond to enquiries and the occasional key handover.

The figures below are indicative monthly averages drawn from our live marketplace data. Your actual earnings will depend on your specific location, the condition of the space, and how competitively you price it.

Typical monthly earnings: €80–€150/month (midpoint €115). Hosts keep 95% of every booking.

Tips to maximise your earnings

  • Clear the space completely before photographing. Even a broom leaning against the wall makes a garage feel smaller than it is. Renters book based on perceived usable floor area.
  • Install a battery-powered LED light if your garage has no electrical supply. A bright, well-lit space photographs better and reassures renters about access at dusk.
  • Price 10-15% below the nearest self-storage unit of equivalent size. Renters choose peer-to-peer storage primarily on value; make the comparison obvious in your listing description.
  • Offer flexible access hours. Hosts who allow weekend and evening access earn on average 20% more than those who restrict to business hours only.
  • Respond to enquiries within two hours. Our data shows that the first host to reply secures the booking in over 70% of cases.
  • Add a padlock hasp if there is not one already. The cost is under €20 and it lets renters use their own lock, which is the single most-requested feature in garage listings.
  • Mention nearby transport links and parking in your listing description. Many renters choose storage close to their commute so they can drop off or collect items on the way to work.

Common host questions

What if a renter damages my garage? Packhood provides a host guarantee that covers accidental damage to the structure and fittings of your listed space. You should document the condition of your garage with dated photos before the first renter moves in. In the unlikely event of damage, you file a claim through the platform with supporting photos, and the resolution team reviews it within 48 hours. In practice, damage claims on garage listings are rare — fewer than 1 in 200 bookings.

I am worried about strangers knowing where I live. Your exact address is only shared with a renter after they have completed booking and passed Packhood's ID verification through Stripe Connect. Your listing shows an approximate location (to the nearest 500 metres) until that point. You can also communicate with renters entirely through the platform's messaging system without sharing personal contact details.

Will this affect my home insurance? Most standard home insurance policies do not explicitly cover renting out a garage for third-party storage. We recommend informing your insurer that you are listing space on a peer-to-peer platform. Many insurers will note it on your policy at no extra cost; some may charge a small premium. Packhood's host guarantee is supplementary and does not replace your own buildings insurance.

Can I cancel if I need the space back? Yes. Packhood allows hosts to give 30 days' notice on monthly bookings. There is no penalty for ending a listing, though we encourage giving renters reasonable time to find alternative storage. If you anticipate needing the space for a specific period (e.g. over Christmas), you can block out dates in your availability calendar in advance.

Host story: Joris van der Berg in Amsterdam

Joris lives in a canal-side apartment in de Pijp but owns a garage box in Amsterdam-West that came with the apartment purchase. He has never owned a car. For years the garage held nothing but an old bicycle and some paint cans. He cleared it out and listed on Packhood. A young couple expecting their first child booked it to store furniture they needed to clear from their apartment to make space for the nursery. "They stayed eight months, then a musician took over to store amplifiers and a drum kit. Amsterdam apartments have no storage. The demand is constant. I have not had a single vacant week in fourteen months."
Joris van der Berg earns €155/month from their garage 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

End-of-Year Student Storage Solutions

The end of the academic year creates the single largest concentrated storage demand event in the calendar. Across Ireland, the UK, and the Netherlands, hundreds of thousands of students vacate accommodation within a 2-3 week window in May and June. International students who cannot ship belongings home face the starkest choice: pay for a flight and excess baggage, or store everything locally for €40-60/month and retrieve it in September. Domestic students moving between houses or heading home for summer encounter the same equation — transporting a room's worth of belongings across the country costs more than three months of Packhood storage. The practical approach is to start packing non-essential items from April, moving them to your Packhood space gradually rather than cramming everything into a single panicked day. Book your space by early April for the best rates and closest proximity to campus. Label every box clearly (photographs help) and create a simple inventory list shared with your Packhood host. When September arrives, you will know exactly what you have and where it is — a significant advantage over the students who stuffed unlabelled bin bags into their parents' attic.

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.

Frequently asked questions about storage in Doncaster

These answers apply to storage with Packhood in and around Doncaster.

Can students use Packhood for summer storage?

Absolutely — student storage is one of Packhood's most popular use cases. Book a spare room, garage or attic near your university for 8-12 weeks over summer. Average cost is €60-120/month, saving 40-60% versus campus storage schemes or commercial units. Many hosts near universities are experienced with student bookings.

Is there storage available near universities?

Packhood has listings within 2 km of most major universities across Ireland, the UK and the Netherlands. Search by your university's postcode and sort by distance. Student-heavy areas like Dublin 2/4, Manchester M13, Leeds LS6, Amsterdam Zuidoost and Cork's Victorian Quarter typically have the highest density of available spaces.

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.

Can students share a Packhood booking to split costs?

Yes. Two or three students can book a single garage (15-18 m²) and split it — that's €30-40 each per month instead of €90-120 solo. Label your sections clearly and agree a collection date. One person books as the primary renter and handles access with the host.

What should students store over summer and what to take home?

Store: desk, chair, printer, kitchen equipment, winter clothes, duvet sets, books and sports gear. Take home: laptop, valuables, documents, medication. A typical student summer load is 8-12 boxes plus a desk chair — this fits in a 3-5 m² space on Packhood for around €50-75/month.

When should students book summer storage?

Book by mid-April to secure a well-located space. University city listings fill fast from late April to mid-May — in Dublin and Manchester, 70-80% of nearby spaces are booked by the first week of May. Packhood confirms most bookings within 24 hours, so don't leave it to exam week.

Is Packhood storage safer than leaving items in student housing over summer?

Most university landlords don't guarantee the security of items left in empty houses over summer, and insurance rarely covers unoccupied properties. A Packhood host provides a locked space, often with CCTV and verified identity. Your belongings are in someone's actively occupied home, not an empty student house.

How Packhood pricing works for hosts

What a space earns in Doncaster depends on its type, size, access and location. You set your own monthly price; verified neighbour storage in Doncaster 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.


Ready to earn from your space in Doncaster?

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