Smaller load Studio or partial storage A single module can often suit a studio apartment, granny flat, or partial household storage where you’re not storing absolutely everything. Typical fit: sofa, mattress, small dining set, boxes, appliances and a few extra loose items.
Common apartment move 1–2 bedroom apartment Many 1–2 bedroom apartments need around 1–2 modules, depending on how much furniture, how many boxes and whether bulky items are included. What can push it up: a larger sofa, extra storage furniture, outdoor items or packed-up spare rooms.
Family home 3-bedroom family home A typical family home often needs multiple modules, especially where there are full bedroom sets, larger living room furniture, whitegoods and plenty of packed boxes. Best next step: get a proper estimate, because storage needs can vary a lot from one home to another.
Larger move Larger 4–5 bedroom moves Bigger homes usually need several modules, particularly when storing full contents from multiple bedrooms, living areas, dining furniture, appliances and garage items. Why estimates matter more here: larger homes tend to have more variation, so guessing can easily understate the space needed.
Partial-home storage Garage overflow or renovation storage Sometimes you’re not storing the whole home — just garage items, spare furniture, bikes, shelving, boxes or the contents of a few rooms during renovations. Typical range: one or two modules can often be enough, depending on what’s going in.
Timing gap Between homes or settlement gaps If you’re between properties, waiting on settlement, or moving into temporary accommodation first, your storage needs may be full-home or only part of the move. Keep in mind: it helps to look at both home size and your real situation — not just bedroom count alone.