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11 Jun 2025

How to Keep Your Storage Facility from Becoming a Campground

author

Megan Graham

District Manager at Atomic Storage Group

Let’s be real—if your storage facility isn’t locked down properly, it can quickly turn into a hotspot for unauthorized guests. And once the word spreads in the homeless community that your place is an easy target, it snowballs fast. I’ve seen it all—units turned into apartments, U-Hauls used as temporary homes, RVs broken into, and even storage units being used for exotic animal breeding (yeah, really). I’ve cleaned up more human waste than I care to admit while managing properties across the U.S over the last decade.

Beyond the obvious headaches, this kind of activity can wreck your Google reviews, hurt your reputation in the community, drive up your utility bills, and create serious fire hazards. So, how do you stop it? Here’s what works:

Cut Off Easy Access to Power & Water

People look for places where they can live comfortably. Don’t make it easy for them.

Lock It Down: Security & Access Control

A weak security setup is an open invitation. Tighten it up:

Surveillance & Lighting: Eyes Everywhere

People don’t like being watched. Make sure they are.

Be Proactive: Spot Problems Before They Start

If you wait for an issue to arise, you’re already too late.

Lease Protections: Make It Clear They Can’t Stay

Your lease should make squatting impossible:

Final Thoughts

If you don’t take security seriously, your facility can go from a business to a shelter in no time. The key is staying ahead of the problem—lock things down, monitor constantly, and make sure your lease is airtight. Your business, reputation, and sanity depend on it.


Megan Graham is a District Manager at Atomic Storage Group, where she oversees multiple portfolios of self-storage facilities across the United States. With over a decade of hands-on operational experience—from the front lines to senior management—Megan brings a grounded, realistic approach to third-party management, revenue strategy, and storage consulting. She works closely with property owners to align operations with their long-term goals, whether that means maximizing value for a future sale or building lasting community connections for sustained income. Megan doesn’t promote storage as “passive income”—she delivers honest insights and measurable results.

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