Rising demand for self storage in Newark as property delays continue

As Newark’s housing market remains gridlocked by ongoing construction delays and slower-than-expected chain completions, residents and estate agents are reporting a sharp rise in demand for self storage units across the town.

Local providers say that what was once a niche service for house movers has become an essential stopgap for dozens of families trapped between selling their old home and moving into a new one. Rising demand for self storage in Newark as property delays continue 

‘We’ve been living out of a locker for four months’

One resident, who asked to remain anonymous, told the Newark Advertiser that her family sold their three-bedroom house on Boundary Road in March, expecting a June move-in date for a new-build property off London Road. That date has now been pushed back three times, and she estimates the family has spent over £1,200 on storage fees.

“We’re paying rent on a temporary flat, storage for 90% of our belongings, and the mortgage on the new place isn’t even active yet,” she said. “If not for the self storage unit on Brunel Drive, we’d have had to sell our furniture for pennies just to keep moving.”

Builders’ delays ripple through the rental and sales chain

Industry insiders say problems are two-fold. On one hand, larger national housebuilders with sites around Newark are struggling with labour shortages and material supply issues, pushing completion dates back by six months or more. On the other, homeowners in older terraces and semis are also facing long waits on surveys, searches, and probate — leaving completion dates in limbo.

“We’ve seen a 35% increase in medium-term storage hires since January,” said Daniel Mayhew, manager of Newark Secure Store on North Gate. “The typical length has jumped from four weeks to nearly 16 weeks. People aren’t just storing Christmas decorations — they’re storing whole kitchens, wardrobes, even garden sheds’ worth of tools.”

Estate agents ‘actively recommending’ storage

Local estate agents have begun actively advising sellers to clear their properties early to keep listings competitive — even without a confirmed moving date.

“A decluttered home sells faster and for more money,” said Hannah Brewster of Brewster & Co on Castle Gate. “But that advice used to mean renting storage for a fortnight. Now we’re telling people to budget for three to six months of unit rental, because the legal and construction delays have become the norm, not the exception.”

Pressure grows on out-of-town retail sites

With traditional town centre storage units filling up, operators are looking at converting former retail and light industrial spaces on the edge of Newark. One provider told this newspaper they are in talks to bring an empty unit near the A1 into use by autumn.

“The major bottleneck isn’t demand — it’s availability of clean, dry, secure space that’s accessible with a van,” the provider said.

What’s being stored? Not just furniture

According to local operators, the most unexpected rise has been in business storage. Small tradespeople — builders, electricians, decorators — are booking lockers for tools and materials after their own housing moves stalled, forcing them to downsize rental accommodation but not work capacity.

One self-employed kitchen fitter said: “I sold my house, moved into a room in my mum’s bungalow, and put all my tools and stock into storage. I’m still working full time, but I can’t start a new mortgage until my new place is built. Storage has become my unofficial workshop.”

What can Newark residents do?

Consumer advice groups recommend:

  • Checking if contents insurance covers goods in storage (many standard policies do not).

  • Asking for “price lock” agreements on long-term rental units.

  • Avoiding automatic rollover contracts without reviewing rates after three months.

Looking ahead

Local councillors have acknowledged the growing strain, though no specific support for storage costs has been proposed. However, planning documents seen by the Advertiser suggest at least one major new self storage facility is under consideration near the town’s northern bypass — a sign that operators expect demand to remain high well into 2026.

For now, Newark’s self storage units have become an unofficial extension of the housing market: full, expensive, and essential.

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