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What Students Regret About DIY Storage Options

Sam Chason

April 21, 2026

3 minutes

Move-out week has a way of making bad decisions look practical. You’re pressed for time, trying to save money, and a borrowed truck or a friend’s garage seems like a perfectly reasonable plan. It rarely stays that way. Let’s have a look at specific mistakes that students end up regretting about DIY storage.

Trusting a Friend’s Basement

Leaving your stuff at a friend’s house or a family member’s storage unit is the most common DIY move. It’s also the one students most frequently describe as a mistake they’d take back.

Most times, the friends do remain trustworthy but the situation often changes.. A friend moves out of their apartment. A family member needs the space back. Someone’s basement floods. The storage arrangement that was supposed to last three months turns into a scramble when circumstances shift.

Misjudging How Much Stuff you Actually Have

Most students plan to store a few bins, a bag, and maybe a lamp. Then move-out day arrives and somehow there are five large totes, a mini fridge, a fan, two duvet sets, and a printer.

DIY storage options rarely account for volume accurately. A 5x5 public storage unit sounds like plenty until you’re trying to fit a semester’s worth of dorm supplies into it and realize you’ve rented the wrong size.

Believing the Truck Rental Price Tag

The math on a DIY truck rental looks appealing on the surface. The sticker price for a one-way U-Haul from campus to a storage facility might be $50. But the final bill rarely looks like that.

Mileage charges add up really fast, typically $0.89–$1.09 per mile depending on the vehicle and market. Add fuel (those trucks average 8–12 miles per gallon), a moving blanket rental, insurance, and the cost to return the truck, and a $50 rental easily becomes $150–$200.

Picking a Unit that wasn’t Made for Dorm Stuff

Standard self-storage units are designed for furniture, boxes, and household goods. They’re often not climate-controlled. They’re not near campus. And they operate on schedules that don’t align with college move-out timelines.

A non-climate-controlled unit in a humid climate can cause real damage to electronics, clothes, and paper materials over a summer.

Losing Track of What Went Where

DIY storage often means splitting your belongings across multiple locations. Some at a friend’s house, some in a unit, some shipped home. The problem is that inventory management doesn’t happen in the middle of a stressful move-out, and by the time fall semester starts, you genuinely can’t remember what went where.

This leads to buying replacements for things you already own. Across a few years of college, that adds up.

What to Do Instead

Move-out week is already stressful enough without adding a rented truck, a self-storage unit you have to drive across town to access, or an awkward conversation with a friend whose basement you’ve officially overstayed.

Services like Storage Scholars skip all of that. We are built around campus move-out schedules. Pickup comes to you, storage is handled, and delivery is scheduled for when you’re back on campus. Get started today with Storage Scholars, and make your dorm move seamless.

Is it really cheaper to do college storage yourself?

Often, no. A rented truck runs $150–$200 after mileage, fuel, and insurance. A self-storage unit starts around $60–$80/month for a 5x5, and most students need at least a 5x10, which runs $100–$130/month. That's $300+ over a 3-month summer before you've factored in your time, transportation, or any items that get damaged.

How do I avoid losing track of what I stored?

Take photos before every box gets closed. Write a two-line inventory on each label: category and a few specific items. Keep one master list with each location mapped to what's there. Do this during packing, not after.

Can a non-climate-controlled storage unit damage my belongings?

Yes, and it happens more than students expect. If you're using self-storage over the summer or in any region with high humidity, pay the extra $10–$20/month for climate control. It's significantly cheaper than replacing what gets damaged.

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