The Evolving Landscape of Self-Storage Real Estate: Institutional Investor Strategies in 2025
Market Stabilization and Valuation Trends
According to a report by Cushman & Wakefield, the U.S. self-storage market has normalized in 2025, with transaction volumes aligning with pre-pandemic levels. Total self-storage transaction volume reached $2.8 billion in the first half of 2025, reflecting a slight increase compared to the same period in 2023 but signaling a return to equilibrium. Valuations have moderated significantly, dropping from a peak of $174 per square foot (PSF) in Q1 2023 to $159 PSF in Q2 2025-a 12% decline according to the report. This correction has been accompanied by stable cap rates, which have averaged 5.8% over the past six quarters, with class-A assets commanding 5% to 5.5% and class-B assets ranging between 5.5% to 6.5% as data shows.
Despite these adjustments, demand fundamentals remain robust. National occupancy has held steady at approximately 90% since 2023, with regional variations between 89% and 92%. Rental rates have stabilized between $124 and $132 PSF, averaging $127, while the Northeast and Pacific regions continue to command premium rates at $193 and $154 PSF, respectively according to market data. These metrics underscore the sector's resilience, even as macroeconomic headwinds persist.
Institutional Investment Strategies: Secondary Markets and Value-Add Opportunities
Institutional investors are increasingly prioritizing secondary markets and value-add opportunities as they seek to balance risk and return. With primary markets in major metropolitan areas becoming increasingly competitive and overvalued, capital is flowing toward underpenetrated regions where self-storage supply lags demand. This shift aligns with broader industrial real estate trends, where secondary markets offer better risk-adjusted returns.
Value-add strategies are also gaining traction. Investors are acquiring older assets with below-market occupancy and deploying capital to reposition them through renovations, operational improvements, and marketing. These initiatives aim to accelerate occupancy growth and capture rental rate upside, leveraging the sector's long-term demand drivers such as urbanization, e-commerce, and housing affordability challenges according to industry analysis.
U-Haul's Strategic Expansion: A Case Study in Long-Term Investment
A notable player in the self-storage sector is U-Haul (UHAL), which has continued to reinvest its cash flow into expanding its self-storage business despite short-term performance detriments. As highlighted in the AMG Yacktman Fund's Q3 2025 report, U-Haul's strategy exemplifies the long-term investment thesis of self-storage real estate: initial capital expenditures are front-loaded, with occupancy and revenue growth materializing over time.
U-Haul's business model distinguishes it from traditional self-storage REITs due to its truck rental business, which complicates sector classification and analyst coverage. However, its dual revenue streams-self-storage and truck rentals-offer diversification benefits and operational synergies. For institutional investors, U-Haul represents a unique opportunity to access the self-storage sector through a hybrid operator with a proven ability to scale according to fund analysis.
Future Outlook: Navigating Challenges and Opportunities
Looking ahead, the self-storage sector faces headwinds such as elevated construction costs, potential material tariffs, and tight debt liquidity, which have slowed development activity. However, 56% of industry leaders anticipate little to no change in cap rates over the next 12 months, according to industry data, suggesting confidence in the sector's stability.
Long-term fundamentals remain intact, with steady occupancy and rental rate growth expected to persist into 2026. Institutional investors are likely to maintain their focus on secondary markets and value-add opportunities, while operators like U-Haul will continue to shape the sector through strategic expansion.
Conclusion
The self-storage sector's transition to a post-pandemic equilibrium has not diminished its appeal for institutional investors. Instead, it has prompted a refinement of strategies, with a focus on disciplined capital allocation, geographic diversification, and long-term value creation. As the market navigates macroeconomic uncertainties, the sector's defensive characteristics and recurring revenue model position it as a compelling asset class for those willing to adopt a patient, strategic approach.

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