5 Storage Units in Milan Where Travelers Can Stash Gear Between Trips

Milan's self-storage scene has quietly become essential infrastructure for digital nomads and long-term travelers. The city now hosts over 20 dedicated storage facilities, a 40% increase since 2020 according to 2024 industry reports. Unlike hotel luggage rooms or train station lockers designed for 24-hour stays, these facilities cater to travelers spending weeks or months bouncing between European cities while keeping a Milan base.

Boxdepo (Buccinasco)
Located 10 minutes from Porta Genova in Milan's southern suburbs, Boxdepo operates from a facility near Naviglio Grande that feels more warehouse than boutique. You access your unit via personal PIN code 24/7, with each box individually alarmed and monitored by security services. The smallest 1 square meter locker starts at €32 monthly, suitable for a backpack and winter coat. A 5 square meter unit (enough for several suitcases, sporting equipment, and off-season clothing) runs €99 monthly. Their 6 square meter option costs €110 per month.
Contracts renew monthly with no long-term commitment—cancel via WhatsApp or email by the 15th of the preceding month. The facility provides free moving carts, and staff speaks English fluently, addressing a common pain point for international travelers. Bus 553 from Ponte delle Milizie gets you there in 10 minutes, or bike the Naviglio cycle path. Insurance covers up to €3,000 per unit.

Casaforte (Five Milan Locations)
Casaforte operates Italy's largest self-storage network with five Milan facilities: Certosa (near Autostrada dei Laghi), Pasteur (150 meters from M1 metro), Zara (adjacent to Metro Zara), Cologno Nord (one minute from Tangenziale Est exit), and Corsico (covering Milan's southern suburbs). This geographic spread matters when you're hauling luggage across the city.
Their "Small" category starts at €2.50 daily (roughly €75 monthly), handling a couple of suitcases. "Regular" spaces cost €6 daily (€180 monthly) for medium furniture loads. "Large" units run €9 daily (€270 monthly), while "ExtraLarge" begins at €12.50 daily (€375 monthly). Daily pricing structure provides flexibility for travelers with unpredictable schedules, though monthly commitments offer better rates through promotional discounts.
Access hours vary by location—most operate 7:00-22:00 daily with personal keypad codes, while some branches offer 24/7 entry. Mandatory insurance based on self-declared item values adds to base costs. Founded 25 years ago, Casaforte has served over 30,000 customers, suggesting operational stability that matters when storing belongings for months.

Easy Box (Six Milan Locations)
Easy Box runs six Milan facilities including Central (near Milano Lancetti station), East, West, North, Vimodrone, and additional suburban locations. The Central location sits 300 meters from Milano Lancetti station, served by suburban lines S1, S2, S5, S6, S12, and S13—critical for travelers catching early flights via Malpensa Express from nearby Porta Garibaldi.
The company doesn't publish standard pricing online, instead operating on quote requests tailored to unit size and rental duration. Their website shows unit categories from smallest (handling small electronics and personal items) through "average garden shed size" up to warehouse-scale spaces for extended storage. This custom-quote approach can benefit travelers negotiating multi-month contracts but lacks the pricing transparency of competitors.
Easy Box provides moving supplies on-site (padlocks, boxes, bubble wrap, dust covers, vacuum bags) and offers transport services for those without vehicles. The facilities maintain modern, clean conditions with state-of-the-art security systems.

Self Storage Milano Est (Segrate)
Operating from Via Cassanese near Tangenziale Est exits (Lambrate, Segrate, Rubattino), Self Storage Milano Est serves the city's eastern quadrant in Segrate. The facility follows the American self-storage model with video surveillance and individual access codes. Units range from 1 to 50 square meters with flexible contracts requiring "not one day, not one meter more than necessary."
The owners Giovanni and Flavia provide consistent on-site assistance, addressing the isolation some travelers feel with fully automated facilities. Pricing is described as "competitive" without specific public rates—you'll need to request quotes. The location works well for travelers staying in eastern suburbs or frequenting Linate Airport, though it requires more effort to reach from central Milan compared to metro-adjacent alternatives.

When Hotels Beat Storage Units
Before committing to monthly storage, calculate the actual math. Milano Centrale's KiPoint lockers cost €2.49 daily for standard size, capping around €75 monthly if you could secure the same locker continuously (typically impractical beyond a week). Hotel luggage rooms sometimes hold bags for returning guests at €5-10 daily—€150-300 monthly.
For stays under two weeks, station lockers or hotel arrangements often win on convenience. Storage units make financial sense at the one-month threshold, particularly when pricing includes insurance, 24/7 access, and no requirement to collect belongings during business hours. The breakeven typically hits around 15-20 days depending on item volume.







