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Packed down the craft-fair stall with three weeks till the next one?
Sunday afternoon. The last box goes in the boot. The trestle table is strapped to the roof. You drive away from the village hall car park and the weekend is done. The next fair is three weeks out, and somewhere between now and then, all of this has to live.
For a lot of independent traders and makers, that somewhere is the spare room. Or the hallway. Or whatever floor space the garage still has. It works, after a fashion, right up until it doesn’t. The morning you spend half an hour hunting for the banner poles before you can load the car is the morning you start wondering whether there is a better way.
There is. And it is simpler than most people expect.
Trading happens in dates, not around the clock

A weekend trader is not running a 24-hour warehouse. The real rhythm is load on Friday, sell across Saturday and Sunday, pack down Sunday afternoon, then wait until the next date comes around. That is the pattern, and a self storage unit works with it rather than against it.
You do not need access at 3am. You need stock that is safe when the stall is packed away. You need a unit that is ready at 6am on Saturday morning when you want an early start, and still open at 9pm on a Sunday when you are finishing the pack-down later than planned. That is the actual job. Everything else is secondary.
The weekend-market and craft-fair rhythm
Most of the industry talks about “round-the-clock access” and “drive-up convenience” because those are easy things to say. The reality for a maker or market trader is more straightforward. You work to a calendar of dates, not a continuous operating cycle. Between those dates, the stock needs to be somewhere that is not your living room.
The loading run might be Friday evening. Saturday it is all set up and on the stall. Sunday it comes back down, gets packed, and the van or car gets loaded. Then the unit door closes, the alarm kicks in, and you go home. Three weeks later you open it again and do the same thing in reverse. The unit earns its keep not in the hours the stall is up, but in the quiet gaps between.
Why “between dates” is the part that actually matters
This is the half of a trader’s operation that tends to get overlooked, both by the trader and by every website that writes about storage for businesses. The event itself gets the attention. The gap between events is where a lot of the real work sits.
Unsold stock, packaging, banners, branded bags, display stands, spare price tags and the general accumulation of a season of trading all needs a home. At home it creates friction with the rest of your life. In a secure, clean, dry unit it simply waits. The difference is not dramatic on any given day, but across a season, having one reliable place where everything lives makes the loading runs faster, the pack-downs less stressful and the whole operation feel more like a proper business.
How traders use a unit between dates

The practical reality of using a unit for event stock is fairly consistent across different types of trading. You build a system once and it repeats. A regular here is a good description of how that looks in practice.
Stock, banners, trestle covers, packaging and display kit in one place
Everything that goes with the stall lives in the unit. Boxed stock, of course. But also the things that surround it: the banners and signs you reuse at every fair, the trestle covers and table skirts, the bags and tissue paper, the card reader and its charger, the branded bags and the float tin. Display stands that would take up half the spare room. Hanging rails. Sample cases.
All of it, in one place, stacked and labelled the way you want it. The unit is clean, dry and secure. Individually alarmed. So when you come to load on Friday evening, you are not assembling the fair from three different rooms of the house; you are loading from one room that was built for exactly this.
A quick note on what the space is: clean, dry and secure covers a wide range of goods, but it is not climate-controlled. There is no temperature or humidity regulation. For most stock, that is fine. For goods that are sensitive to temperature swings or damp, such as certain candles, some textiles or anything where the packaging matters as much as the product, it is worth thinking carefully about whether the storage conditions are right. Be honest with yourself about what your stock needs.
Loading and collecting around the 6am to 10pm smart-entry window
Smart entry runs from 6am to 10pm, seven days a week. That window covers every realistic loading and pack-down moment in a trading week without any drama.
Friday evening load-up, six o’clock: fine. Saturday morning early start, six-thirty: fine. Sunday evening pack-down running later than expected, half past nine: fine. The window is designed for people who live and trade in the real world, not people who need to restock at 2am. Access is by smart entry, not staffed; you use the system to get in and out under your own steam.
Sites are unmanned, and what that means for you
Every Wigwam site is unmanned. You access your own goods; there is no one on site to help you in or out. That is straightforward once you know it, and it changes nothing about how you use the unit day to day.
Where it matters is deliveries. If a supplier is dropping stock at the unit, or a courier is collecting an order, someone from your business needs to be present. Wigwam does not sign for deliveries and does not accept goods on your behalf. Plan your delivery and collection runs around that: be there yourself, or have someone from your team there. It is a simple constraint and it is easy to work around once you have built it into your routine.
Ready to see what a unit near you would cost for your stall stock? Get a quote at quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk
What you can (and cannot) store here

Being straight about what works and what does not is more useful than a list of features. Here is the honest version.
What fits well: boxed stock, display materials, dry goods, event equipment
The unit suits everything that a typical market trader or craft-fair seller carries. Boxed or bagged stock. Display stands, frames, easels and rails. Banners, signs and printed material. Packaging supplies: tissue paper, ribbon, bags, boxes, bubble wrap. Seasonal inventory that is not in active rotation. Trestle tables and covers. Hanging rails. Sample cases and presentation boxes.
All of it is in an individually alarmed unit, in a clean, dry, secure building. The stock is yours and only you can access it.
For wedding fair exhibitors and events-circuit suppliers, the unit handles larger kit too: fabric drapes, display boards, hanging garments, prop boxes and the kind of bulky equipment that does not fit comfortably in anyone’s spare bedroom.
What does not belong here, and why being straight about it matters
Some things are not suitable, and it is better to say so clearly than to have you discover it after you have moved stock in.
No perishables. If you sell food, fresh flowers or anything with a shelf life, self storage is not the right home for it.
No goods that need climate control. The unit is clean, dry and secure, but there is no temperature or humidity regulation. If your stock is sensitive to heat, cold or moisture, assess your product range honestly before you commit.
No vehicles, vans, trailers or gazebo trailers. Units are for goods and equipment, not for parking.
The short test: if your stock is non-perishable, does not require specific temperature conditions, and fits through a unit door, it is almost certainly fine. If any of those conditions is in doubt, get in touch before you book.
Stockroom yes, shop no: what a unit is for

The answer to “can I run my business from the unit” is: it depends what you mean. Store, load and collect, yes. Use the unit as a retail space, meeting room or workshop, no.
Storing, loading and collecting: what the unit is designed for
The unit is a stockroom. It is the place where the business lives between events. You can come in and out of it as often as you like within the access hours, load your car or van, drop off unsold stock, reorganise your shelving, repack boxes and generally run your stock operation in a way that makes sense. That is exactly what it is for.
What it is not for is serving customers from. No retail sales from the unit. No card readers taking payments at the door. No conducting client meetings in the space. The unit is a storage room in a storage facility, and it works brilliantly for everything that falls within that definition.
Contents protection and insuring your stock
This matters more for a trader than for someone storing household furniture, because your stock has commercial value and it is the raw material of your livelihood.
Contents cover is mandatory at Wigwam. You either take Wigwam’s policy, which is the RSA “Self Storage Customers’ Goods” product, or you provide evidence of your own equivalent cover. There is no third option.
If you take Wigwam’s policy, declare the full replacement value of what you are storing. Under-insurance is settled in proportion, meaning if you insure for half the value and make a claim for the full amount, you receive half. Declare accurately. The cover is New-for-Old. There is a £50 excess. Theft cover applies after forcible entry. Atmospheric and climatic damage is excluded.
This is a signpost, not advice. For guidance on whether the policy meets your business’s specific needs, speak to your own broker or insurer. Full details are on the contents protection page.
A brief note on jurisdiction: Wigwam’s terms and insurance product apply in England and Wales. If you are storing from Scotland or Northern Ireland, conditions and legal treatment may differ in certain respects. Speak to your own solicitor or broker if you have specific questions.
Picking a size for stock and display kit

Sizing is something people tend to overcomplicate. The straightforward version is: start smaller than you think you need, because the unit will get organised quickly once you have a system, and you can always move up if the season demands it.
From a few boxes of stock to a full season of kit
A small unit handles a few dozen boxes of stock, some packaging supplies and a couple of folding tables. A mid-size unit takes a full set of display materials, banners, a hanging rail, multiple product lines and the kind of deep stock you carry across a busy quarter. A larger unit covers everything above plus the bulkier items: display boards, fabric drapes, multiple units of shelving, a full season of event equipment.
The way to think about it is not square footage in the abstract, but kit list in practice. Write down everything that would go in the unit. That list tells you more than any floor-plan diagram. There is a size guide on the website that maps kit lists to unit types; use that as your starting point rather than guessing.
Signpost the size guide in your research before you book, but do not let sizing anxiety delay you. The team can advise, and the terms are flexible enough that you are not locked in if you get it slightly wrong.
Seasonal scaling: taking a larger unit for peak season
The flexibility here is genuinely useful for traders who have a clear peak. Christmas market season, summer festival circuit, spring wedding fairs: if your stock volume doubles between October and December, you can take a larger unit for that period and scale back when the season ends.
The two-week minimum and the 14-day notice period mean you are not signing anything that commits you beyond the season. Full detail on the terms is at wigwamstorage.co.uk/terms-conditions/.
What it costs and how the terms work

Start with the terms, because they are the thing that makes the cost calculation work for a seasonal trader. The price is only useful in the context of what you are getting and what you are committing to.
Two-week minimum stay and refund of unused days
The minimum stay is two weeks. That is short. Genuinely short. If you need storage for a six-week run of markets in October and November, you take the unit for that period and you are not paying for January.
If you finish early, the unused days come back to you. You give notice, you vacate, and the days you did not use are refunded. That is the kind of term that makes sense for a seasonal business operating in short bursts.
The deposit and the notice period, in plain terms
There is a refundable deposit. It is held while the unit is active and returned once you have given 14 days’ notice, vacated the unit and settled the account, less anything owed. It is not lost; it comes back.
The notice period is 14 days. Give your notice, clear the unit, settle the account: the deposit returns. That is the full sequence. Read the terms and conditions for the complete detail before you sign, as you would with any contract.
Where to find current prices
Prices vary by size, location and season, so quoting a figure here would not serve you well. The current rates for all unit sizes are at wigwamstorage.co.uk/how-much-is-self-storage-in-the-uk. Use that page to run the numbers against your season before you get a quote.
Find your nearest market-town location

The closer the unit is to where you live and trade, the more useful it becomes. A unit across town is a unit you use less often. A unit two minutes from the van is a unit you load and unload without thinking about it.
Storing near where you live and trade
Wigwam’s UK market-town locations are designed for exactly this: traders and makers who want a stockroom in their own town, not on a distant industrial estate with a long drive each way.
Wigwam Self Storage Bath covers the Bath, Somerset area, which includes a strong craft-fair and artisan market circuit. Bath is well placed for traders who work the south-west event calendar. Wigwam Self Storage Lincoln serves Lincoln, Lincolnshire and the surrounding area, including traders who work the city’s market and the wider East Midlands fair circuit.
For all other towns, the locations hub shows the full list. Find the one nearest to your home or your regular trading patch and check what is available.
What to look for when choosing your site
Proximity to home or your main fair circuit is the first test. After that: can you get in and out easily with a loaded car or van? Is there parking close to the unit for a quick load? The access window is 6am to 10pm at every site, which covers every realistic loading and pack-down moment, so that part is consistent.
A practical tip: plan your first loading visit as if you were doing a real market run. Drive there at the time you would actually load on a Friday evening. See how long it takes. If it works on a tired Friday, it works every time.
Is a small seasonal unit worth it for a trader
This is the honest question, and it deserves an honest answer rather than a promotional one.
The hidden cost of storing at home
The spare room costs nothing in rent, which is the obvious point. The less obvious costs add up quietly. Thirty minutes hunting for the tablecloth before every market. The constant reorganisation of a house that was not designed to hold a stock room. The weekend you had to leave stock in the car because there was nowhere to put it. The friction it creates with everyone else who lives in the house.
Then there is the opportunity cost of disorganised stock. The order you could not fulfil because you did not know how much you had. The display pieces that got damaged because they were stacked badly in the hallway.
A unit trades the zero-cash-cost of the spare room for a small monthly outlay and a significant reduction in all of those hidden costs. Whether the trade is worth it depends on how much those hidden costs are weighing on you. For many traders, the tipping point comes sooner than expected. Full pricing is at wigwamstorage.co.uk/how-much-is-self-storage-in-the-uk if you want to run the numbers.
When it makes sense to start, and when to stop
The terms make the risk low. Two-week minimum. Fourteen days’ notice on exit, then you are out and the deposit returns. A trader can take a unit a week before the season’s first fair and give notice after the last one. The financial commitment is bounded by the season.
“When to start” is often a simpler question than it looks. The moment the spare room is not working, the moment you lose half an hour before every event to loading chaos, the moment your partner says something, start. “When to stop” is when the season ends and you have given notice. It is not a permanent commitment; it is a seasonal tool. Use it when the season needs it, end it when the season does.
If you are ready to see what a unit would cost for your stall stock or fair kit, get a quote at your nearest market-town location: quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk
The stock is there. The next date is coming. Between now and then, it deserves somewhere proper to wait.
Frequently Asked Questions
I sell candles and scented products. Are those allowed?
Finished candles and most scented products sold ready for retail are generally fine to store, because they are not the kind of flammable or reactive substance the rules exclude. What is not allowed is anything flammable in the raw sense: solvents, fuels, gas, aerosols containing flammables, or any liquid that can ignite or give off fumes. So a boxed stock of poured, set candles is one thing; drums of fragrance oil, wax-melting solvents or anything with a flammable safety data sheet is another, and those cannot go in. The sites are unmanned, so a fire or chemical risk in one unit affects every unit in the block, which is why the line is firm.
There is a second point for candles specifically, and it is about quality rather than safety. The unit is clean, dry and secure, but it is not climate-controlled. There is no temperature or humidity regulation. Wax and some scented products can soften, sweat or lose fragrance throw if they sit through a hot spell, so think honestly about whether the conditions suit your particular stock before you commit. For most boxed candle inventory between fairs, clean and dry is fine. If your range is heat-sensitive, factor that in. If you are unsure whether a particular product is permitted, get in touch before you book rather than after you have moved it in.
Can another trader or a friend collect my stock if I can’t make it to the unit?
Not on your behalf while you are absent. Only the account holder holds the smart entry credentials, and only they can access the unit. The sites are unmanned, so there is no one here to let a friend in, hand stock over, or release anything to a third party on request. If a fellow trader is helping you cover a fair, the practical route is for you to meet them at the unit and load together within the 6am to 10pm window, or to load the car yourself in advance.
The same rule covers deliveries and collections. If a supplier is dropping stock or a courier is collecting an order, someone from your business has to be present, because we do not sign for or accept goods on anyone’s behalf. None of this gets in the way once you know it; it just means access runs through you. Plan the loading and collection runs around when you, or someone you arrange to be there in person, can actually be at the site. For a weekend trader working to a calendar of dates, that planning is second nature, and the window is wide enough to make it easy.
Can I take a bigger unit for my peak season and scale back afterwards?
Yes, and it is one of the genuinely useful things about the flexible terms for a seasonal trader. If your stock volume doubles for the Christmas market run or the summer festival circuit, you can take a larger unit for that period and move back down when the season ends. The two-week minimum and the 14-day notice mean you are never signing anything that commits you beyond the season itself. You take the space when the season needs it and give notice when it is over.
The mechanics are simple. Moving up or down a size is a matter of availability at your site, so talk to our support team about what is free when you want to scale, rather than assuming the next size up is always there on demand at peak. Plan the change a little ahead of the busy run. When you scale back, you give 14 days’ notice on the larger unit, clear it, and any unused days beyond the minimum are refunded, with the deposit returned once the account is settled. The full detail is in the terms and conditions. Our team can advise on sizing and availability, though questions about your own trading forecasts and growth plans are for you, not for us.
How does invoicing work, and can I claim the unit as a business cost?
We can talk you through invoicing for the unit itself: how the billing works, what is included, and getting an invoice for your records. That is squarely within what our support team handles, alongside sizing, availability, access and pricing. What we cannot do is advise on whether the cost is deductible against your trading income, how to treat it for VAT, or how it fits your tax position, because that is accountancy, not storage, and it depends on how your business is set up.
For most traders running stock storage as part of a genuine trading operation, a storage cost is the kind of business expense an accountant will recognise, but the right person to confirm that for your specific circumstances is your accountant or a qualified adviser, not us. Keep your invoices filed as you go, so the record is there when you need it. If you need anything from us for your bookkeeping, ask the support team and we will sort the paperwork on the storage side. The tax treatment of that paperwork is then a conversation for your accountant. We keep our advice to storage; we do not stray into financial guidance.
I have a trailer and a gazebo for fairs. Can both go in the unit?
The gazebo, once it is broken down into its frame and canvas and packed, is goods and equipment, so that stores fine alongside your banners, trestles and display kit. The trailer does not. Units are for goods and equipment, not for parking, and we do not store vehicles, vans, trailers or gazebo trailers of any kind. There is no exception to that, so a trailer needs a different home, whether that is your own drive, a yard, or specialist vehicle storage elsewhere.
It is a distinction worth getting straight before you book, because traders sometimes hope to keep the whole rig in one place. The honest split is: anything that packs down into boxes, bags, frames and flat kit is welcome, and the unit is built for exactly that load, the drapes, the display boards, the prop boxes, the folding tables and the packed gazebo. Anything on wheels that you tow or park is not. If you are unsure whether a particular item counts as equipment or as a vehicle, the simple test is whether it fits through the unit door as packed goods. If it does, it is fine. If it rolls in on its own wheels to be parked, it is not. Get in touch if you want to check a specific item before moving it.
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