Self Storage Facilities Across Tasmania
Browse SSAA-member storage facilities across Tasmania’s four main centres, or use the search tool to find storage in any Tasmanian location.
Tasmania’s Storage Market Reflects a Decade of Housing Change
Tasmania experienced the most rapid housing price growth of any Australian state between 2015 and 2023, with Hobart repeatedly ranking among the least affordable capital cities relative to local incomes. That shift — from an affordable, slow-moving market to a competitive, high-value one — has direct consequences for storage demand.
- Housing affordability pressure has pushed more Tasmanians into smaller dwellings than they’d otherwise choose — the same structural driver that creates storage demand in Melbourne’s apartment belt, applied to a smaller market.
- Interstate migration into Tasmania — particularly into Hobart and the Huon Valley — continues to generate transitional storage demand as arriving households navigate a competitive rental and purchase market.
- 9.2% of Australian adults use self storage, and Tasmania’s rising housing costs and changing demographics are steadily moving the state toward the national average.
- Tasmania’s cool, humid climate means climate control and humidity management are practical considerations for stored items — particularly paper archives, timber furniture, musical instruments, and clothing stored long-term.
Self Storage in Tasmania: The Market in Context
Tasmania is a small state with a concentrated storage market and some genuine demand characteristics that set it apart from the mainland capitals. The bulk of Tasmania’s population — and its SSAA-member storage facilities — sits across three corridors: the greater Hobart area including Glenorchy and Kingston, the Launceston and Tamar Valley region in the north, and the north-west coast between Devonport and Burnie. A smaller secondary market exists in the Huon Valley and Channel communities south of Hobart, where sea-change migration and agricultural demand combine.
What changed Tasmania’s storage market most dramatically was a decade of housing price growth that pushed Hobart — historically among the cheapest Australian capital cities to live in — into the top tier for housing costs relative to local incomes. That compression forced more households into smaller properties, created a sustained pool of mainland arrivals navigating a new and competitive market, and drove downsizing activity among longer-term Hobartians trading their family homes for smaller, more manageable properties. All of it translates directly into storage demand.
Tasmania’s housing and storage context: Hobart has undergone the most dramatic housing affordability transformation of any Australian capital over the past decade. Median property values have risen substantially relative to local incomes, compressing household purchasing power and driving structural storage demand as households adjust to smaller dwellings. Interstate migration continues, adding transitional storage demand.
Launceston and the Tamar Valley
Launceston is Tasmania’s second-largest city and its northern commercial and educational hub. The University of Tasmania’s presence creates student storage demand — a consistent, volume-driven segment that differs from the household and trade storage that dominates most regional markets. Launceston’s health sector, light manufacturing base, and growing professional services economy produce diversified business storage needs across Invermay, Newstead, and the industrial precincts along the South Esk. Further north, the Tamar Valley’s wine industry generates seasonal agricultural storage demand from vineyards between Exeter and Pipers Brook.
Devonport — the transit city
Devonport’s storage market has a character you won’t find anywhere else in Tasmania. As the home port for the Spirit of Tasmania — the overnight ferry that remains the primary vehicle link between the island and the mainland — Devonport handles a continuous throughput of households and businesses moving goods across Bass Strait. Moves from Victoria to Tasmania, and vice versa, frequently involve storage on both ends. Households arriving or departing often need short-term bridging storage while accommodation situations settle. This creates a consistently active, high-turnover segment in the Devonport market.
Agricultural and creative sector storage
Tasmania’s economy includes several sectors with distinct storage needs. The Huon Valley’s apple and stone fruit industry, the state’s salmon aquaculture operations, the Derwent Valley’s hop farms, and the dairy industry across the north-west all generate equipment, seasonal inventory, and export documentation storage requirements. Tasmania’s growing cultural economy — anchored by MONA and an expanding events and creative sector in Hobart — has also generated demand for art handling, event production, and hospitality storage that SSAA-member facilities around Hobart are increasingly serving.
Frequently asked questions about self storage in Tasmania
The Self Storage Association of Australasia has represented the self storage industry across Australia and New Zealand since 1991. Members abide by a code of ethics and use industry-standard storage agreements that outline the rights and responsibilities of both the storer and the operator.
In Tasmania, SSAA-member facilities operate across Hobart and its suburbs, Launceston and the Tamar Valley, and the north-west coast communities of Devonport and Burnie — covering Tasmania’s main centres and serving the state’s agricultural, cultural, and lifestyle sectors as well as its residential market.