Can space mean money? | Ask The easyStorage Experts

February 20, 2026

Can space mean money? | Ask The easyStorage Experts

Dear easyStorage
We’ve been retired for two years now, living on just pensions, and with the ‘cost of living crisis’ and fuel price rises, we’re, like everyone else, worried. We’ve heard that ‘space can mean money’. We’ve seen you offering decluttering tips and moving tips. Is this what they’re talking about? Or something else completely?
Gerald and Dorothy, Bournemouth

Space can indeed mean money. However, whilst some decluttering/reorganising techniques like Feng Shui are believed to encourage prosperity, more generally ‘space can mean money’ refers to creating spaces that others can rent.

A big factor, of course, is the size of your home. The bigger it is, the more space you’ll have to rent out. But even a small space with just one room or a garage can be enough to bring you in some useful extra cash. In the UK, at present (August 2022), the Rent a Room Scheme lets you earn up to a threshold of £7,500 per year tax-free from letting out furnished accommodation in your home. That’s a great boost to a pension income.

What that looks like will often depend on where you live. If you live near a large industrial firm, there may be people who are looking for somewhere to stay during the week and return home at weekends. If you live near a university, students may be looking for board and lodgings. Do a bit of research on what price rooms achieve your area. Spareroom.co.uk, Gumtree, OpenRent are all useful places to research what you could earn from a spare room.

In Bournemouth, with a student population at Bournemouth University and people who move there for the lifestyle and work, there’s relatively high demand. But as a holiday town, if you make your home appealing, you may be able to command high prices for high season on a site like AirBnB. It may even be worth moving out for a while, meaning you never have to share your space with someone.

Maybe you are lucky enough to have outhouses, fields, stables, a ‘granny annex’ or holiday rental space on your property. These can all be potential ‘breadwinners’ if you rent them out.

For the more ambitious, it may be worth building or reforming something.  Within your home it might be a converted cellar/basement or attic. It could be an attached extension/addition to the house. Or it might be a separate structure like a garage or shed a pool changing room, a garden office – these spaces may be convertible and appeal as they are away from your own living spaces.

If you live in a town where parking is at a premium, you could let your garage or drive out during the day. Sites like Gumtree and JustPark will help you work out what you might get for where you live.

Meanwhile garages and those outhouse spaces may be ideal for people to store things that can’t easily be put into self storage like cars or machinery.

A few tips to make letting any space, from a field to a mansion, work well for you:

·         When it comes to actually renting out, ask friends and family first if they know anyone looking. (A personal connection is often more reliable, but renting to family and friends may cause problems later if things don’t work out. One step removed is sometimes better, but that’s a judgement call.)

·         Even if you know them really well, make sure you have a contract, or at very least an agreement, with your tenant. (Lots of websites offer help with this). Never assume you are both expecting the same thing.

·         Ensure that the property you’re letting out meets any appropriate safety standards.

·         Think carefully about bills and costs for having someone there. For example, if you live alone, having someone move in might affect your council tax. Will you trust the tenant to do their cleaning or include the price of a cleaner in the rent? What about utilities?

·         Think about the emotional side of having someone share your home. Talk to any potential tenant about how they want to live (friends, eating, working hours, etc).

·         Agencies may be able to help find tenants for a fee, and will help you with finding a tenant and sorting deposits and contracts.

·         Clean and uncluttered, even freshly painted spaces will earn you higher rental prices. (At easyStorage we’re here to help you store things, and even collect and return things for you.)

A no obligation quote is always available online at: https://book.easystorage.com/


If you have a storage question that you’d like answered, send your questions to
Alex Fulcher who’ll pick questions for the team to answer each month: Alex.Fulcher@easystorage.com or use #AskeasyStorage and tag us on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram

Latest popular posts
Discover the articles our readers are engaging with the most right now.

easyStorage: How to Use Self-Storage during Retirement

Retirement must be the pot of gold waiting at the end of the rainbow for every hardworking person who spent almost all their life working to earn a living. All of us will come to a point where we need to end our career phase and enjoy the golden years of retirement. People have different approaches when it comes to retirement. Some are spending it on organising and planning to downsize their home to make up for the years that they weren’t able to do it and some are into leisure where they buy boats or RV to enjoy a relaxing vacation they much deserve.
Learn more →

5 Tips in Creating a Workspace in Your Small Apartment

Dedicating a workspace or a home office should be equally valuable as any part of your apartment whether this is for a remote job or line of work is something that can be done at the comfort of your own home. More often than not, we tend to put this last on our list as sometimes we resort to our bedroom or living room as our go-to workspace. But hey, who doesn’t want working at the comfort of your bed with your PJs on while reviewing your business report? Think again. According to Harvard Business Review’s Guide to Being More Productive, “Unless you are careful to maintain boundaries, you may start to feel like you’re always at work and losing a place to come home to.” Working and sleeping in the same area is not a good idea as you tend to lose your work-life balance, which eventually will lead you to stress and being burnt out from work and feels like you don’t have a life anymore.
Learn more →

5 Tips in Creating a Workspace in Your Small Apartment

Dedicating a workspace or a home office should be equally valuable as any part of your apartment whether this is for a remote job or line of work is something that can be done at the comfort of your own home. More often than not, we tend to put this last on our list as sometimes we resort to our bedroom or living room as our go-to workspace. But hey, who doesn’t want working at the comfort of your bed with your PJs on while reviewing your business report? Think again. According to Harvard Business Review’s Guide to Being More Productive, “Unless you are careful to maintain boundaries, you may start to feel like you’re always at work and losing a place to come home to.” Working and sleeping in the same area is not a good idea as you tend to lose your work-life balance, which eventually will lead you to stress and being burnt out from work and feels like you don’t have a life anymore.
Learn more →