Compare rv & motorhome storage in Brooklyn and New York City, NY. Pricing, facility density, climate factors, and which city better fits your storage needs. The cities are 3.3 miles apart in New York.
| Dimension | Brooklyn | New York City |
|---|---|---|
| Population | 2.7M | 8.3M |
| Distance apart | 3.3 miles | 3.3 miles |
| State | New York | New York |
| Typical price range | $126-$672/mo | $126-$672/mo |
| Climate notes | freeze + hurricane season prep matters | freeze + hurricane season prep matters |
| Storage type bias | indoor heated dominant | indoor heated dominant |
| Booking lead time | 60-90 days ahead of October | 60-90 days ahead of October |
Pick New York City if you want maximum facility selection and competitive pricing. New York City has roughly 3x the population of Brooklyn, which means more facilities competing for your business and a wider range of price points and storage types.
Pick Brooklyn if you want a quieter facility experience, easier access without metro-area traffic, and lower median pricing. Brooklyn typically runs 10-25% cheaper than New York City for the same rv & motorhome storage.
Winter storage note: New York freezes hard November-April. Either city requires heated indoor storage for any vehicle with fluids or sensitive electronics.
Click either city to see specific rv & motorhome storage facilities, pricing, security features, and reviews.
Pricing scales with population density and metro premium. New York City typically runs 10-25% higher than Brooklyn for the same vehicle size and storage type. For exact pricing, click either city to compare specific facilities.
3.3 miles separates the cities. In light traffic, that's typically 8-20 minutes by car. In peak commute traffic in larger New York metros, allow 25-45 minutes. If you'll be visiting the storage facility weekly, factor commute time into your decision.
Most storage facilities are single-location only - you store and pick up at the same facility. Some multi-location operators (Public Storage, Extra Space, U-Haul) offer cross-location transfers but typically charge per-mile fees and 5-7 days lead time.
New York City has a larger metro population (8.3M) which typically supports 2-4x more storage facilities than Brooklyn. Larger inventory means more price competition and more storage-type options.
No - the cities are only 3.3 miles apart in the same state, so climate and seasonal storage timing are essentially identical. NYC storage is dominated by indoor heated only - outdoor is impractical due to parking restrictions and theft. Upstate has more outdoor capacity.
Use the StowHelp comparison tool to add specific facilities and decide.
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