How to Choose the Right Storage Method: Racking, Containers, Floor Space, or Staging?
Introduction
Are you paying for more warehouse space than you actually need because your storage method doesn't match your inventory? Have you ever struggled to find specific items in a sea of identical containers, wasting hours and labor costs on what should be a simple retrieval?
I'm Brandon Newton, Director of Logistics at Interstate, and I've been working in moving and warehousing since 1991. I've spent over three decades watching companies wrestle with a decision they didn't even know they had to make: how to store their goods, not just where. The storage method you choose, whether its racking, containers, floor space, or staging, directly impacts your costs, accessibility, and operational efficiency.
In this article, I'll walk you through each storage method in plain terms, explain when each one makes sense, and show you how the right choice can reduce your footprint and save you money. By the end, you'll know exactly which approach fits your situation and why it matters.
Container Storage: Security and Simplicity
Container storage is exactly what it sounds like: your items go into individual, enclosed containers, each one sealed and separate.
This is the traditional method for household goods and long-term storage where items won't be accessed frequently. Everything gets loaded into containers during your move or intake, those containers get labeled and stored in our facility, and they sit untouched until you're ready to retrieve everything.
When container storage works best:
- Household moves where furniture and belongings are stored between homes
- Long-term archival storage that won't be accessed for months or years
- Items that need maximum protection from dust, light, and warehouse activity
- Situations where you're storing everything as a complete unit and won't need individual item access
- Medical equipment that needs to be accessed regularly for different projects
- IT hardware and data center components moving in and out frequently
- Office furniture staged for phased rollouts
- Any inventory where you need to see what you have and grab specific items quickly
- Situations where you're using our asset management system with barcode tracking
- Oversized items that don't fit standard racking (large machinery, custom furniture, bulky equipment)
- Projects requiring unit-by-unit or phase-by-phase organization
- Inventory that needs visual sorting for staging and sequencing
- Situations where accessibility and organization matter more than maximizing vertical space
- Hospitality projects where FF&E (furniture, fixtures, and equipment) arrives months before the hotel opens, but needs to be delivered floor-by-floor as construction completes
- Office relocations where furniture and equipment go to multiple floors or buildings in coordinated waves
- Data center buildouts where racks and hardware deploy in precise sequences
- Any project where timing and coordination are as important as storage itself
- How often will you access this inventory? If the answer is "never until move-out," containers work fine. If the answer is "weekly or monthly," you need racking. If the answer is "constantly, with sequenced deliveries," you probably need staging.
- How important is item-level visibility? If you need to know exactly what you have and where it is at all times, racking with barcode tracking is the only viable option. If you're storing a complete household and won't touch it for six months, containers are perfectly adequate.
- What's the size and shape of your inventory? Standard office furniture and equipment? Racking works great. Oversized custom items or project-specific loads? Floor space gives you the flexibility you need. Small household goods or archival materials? Containers provide security and efficiency.
Excellent team. The move went smoothly with no hiccups!