Last updated Jul 2, 2026
The holiday season brings lights, wreaths, artificial trees, yard inflatables, ornaments, and front-door displays into Riverview homes. Then January arrives, and the decorating joy turns into a practical question: where does everything go?
For many households, seasonal décor competes with cars, bikes, tools, sports gear, and everyday garage storage. The best place to store holiday decorations depends on what you own, how often you need it, and whether your current storage spot is easy to access, clean, and practical year-round.
This guide looks at common storage options for Riverview homeowners, how to pack holiday decorations, what to consider with HOA rules, and when off-site storage may make sense.
Most holiday decorations end up in one of four places: closets, garages, attics, or off-site storage. Each option can work, but each has trade-offs.
Closets are convenient for smaller seasonal items like wreaths, tabletop décor, candles, stockings, or a few ornament bins. The downside is space. Once the collection grows, holiday bins can crowd everyday storage and become difficult to rotate.
Garages are useful for larger items like artificial trees, outdoor lights, yard inflatables, and storage bins. But garage storage can quickly interfere with parking, tools, bikes, lawn equipment, and household overflow.
Attics may seem like a natural place for seasonal storage, but they can be difficult to access and are not ideal for every item. Fragile décor, fabric pieces, electronics, and sentimental items may need a more controlled setup.
Off-site storage may be useful when seasonal items are taking over the garage or closets. It can give holiday decorations a dedicated place, especially for households with larger collections or multiple seasons of décor.
In much of Florida, Florida homes are built on slab-on-grade foundations, which means basements are uncommon. In Riverview, that often leaves homeowners choosing between garage space, attic space, closets, or a storage unit.
Holiday storage is not only about convenience. In HOA-governed communities, exterior decorations often need to come down within a defined time period after the holiday.
According to guidelines published by communities like Triple Creek, holiday decorations must be fully removed from exterior property within 15 days after the holiday ends.
Rules vary by community, so homeowners should always check their own HOA documents. The main point is timing: once decorations come down, they need a clear place to go. If the garage is already full, bins and tree bags can quickly block parking, tools, or household storage areas.
Off-site storage may help when seasonal items need a dedicated place away from the garage, especially for households with larger holiday collections.
Seasonal decorations often include mixed materials: plastic, fabric, wire, cardboard, glass, paint, glitter, adhesives, and small electronic components. Those materials do not all respond the same way to storage conditions.
Items that may need extra care include:
Artificial trees and wreaths
Outdoor light strings
Inflatable yard decorations
Painted ornaments
Fabric tree skirts and stockings
Holiday linens
Vintage or sentimental décor
Battery-powered displays
Decorative signs and garlands
The goal is not just to put decorations away. It is to pack them so they can be found, moved, and reused next season without extra work.
Holiday decorations often sit untouched for most of the year, which makes packing materials important. Cardboard boxes can crush, soften, tear, and attract pests more easily than sealed plastic bins.
Florida supports year-round populations of cockroaches, silverfish, spiders, and rodents-and pest control professionals across the state consistently warn against storing holiday items in standard corrugated cardboard boxes.
A better approach is to use sealed, heavy-duty plastic bins with secure lids. Clear bins can make it easier to identify contents, while color-coded bins can help separate Christmas, Halloween, Thanksgiving, spring, and other seasonal items.
Before storing decorations, remove anything organic or food-related, including real wreaths, dried floral pieces, gingerbread decorations, candy, pine cones with residue, or anything that may attract pests.
Good packing makes next year's setup easier. It also helps prevent small items from getting crushed or lost inside large bins.
Choose sturdy bins with locking lids when possible. Avoid overfilling them, especially with fragile ornaments or light strands. Stack heavier bins on the bottom and lighter bins on top.
Glass ornaments, keepsakes, and delicate decorations should be wrapped separately. Use tissue paper, bubble wrap, ornament dividers, or small containers inside a larger bin. Avoid packing fragile items loosely where they can shift during transport.
Wrap light strings around cord reels, cardboard cutouts, or dedicated organizers before packing them. Label each strand by location, such as "front porch," "tree," "roofline," or "back patio," so setup is easier next season.
Artificial trees, wreaths, and garlands can lose shape if they are compressed under heavy boxes. A tree bag or wreath container can help keep branches, hinges, and decorative pieces contained during transport and storage.
Outdoor decorations should be clean and dry before packing. Inflatable decorations, fabric pieces, and outdoor cords should not be sealed away while damp. Let them dry fully before placing them in bins or bags.
Instead of labeling every bin "holiday," use specific labels such as:
Tree ornaments
Outdoor lights
Inflatables
Front porch décor
Gift wrap
Halloween
Thanksgiving
Spring décor
Place the items you use first near the front of the unit. That might include lights, extension cords, hooks, timers, and entryway decorations.
The right unit size depends on how many bins you have, how large your tree or yard displays are, and whether you want room to rotate decorations by season.
A 5x5 unit may work well for a smaller holiday collection, including several plastic bins, wreath containers, light organizers, and a disassembled artificial tree. It is a practical option when the goal is to move seasonal décor out of closets or garage corners.
Before choosing this size, measure large tree bags, oversized bins, and yard decorations. Leave enough room to reach what you need without unloading the entire unit.
A 5x10 unit may be a better fit for households with multiple seasons of décor or larger outdoor displays. The extra depth can make it easier to separate Christmas, Halloween, Thanksgiving, and spring items instead of stacking everything in one tight group.
This size can also work for families who want storage for holiday items plus a few household overflow items.
A 10x10 unit may make sense for larger collections, multiple artificial trees, oversized yard displays, bulky décor, or mixed storage during a move or renovation. It gives more room for shelving, seasonal rotation, and larger household items.
For any size, plan the layout before move-in. Keep frequently used seasonal items close to the entrance and place less-used bins toward the back.
When choosing storage for holiday decorations, focus on the details that actually affect how the items will be stored and retrieved.
Climate-controlled storage may be useful for decorations that benefit from a more stable indoor environment, such as fabric items, electronics, photos, keepsakes, and delicate décor. Drive-up units may be more practical for bulky outdoor displays, heavy bins, or frequent loading.
Carts and dollies can also help when moving multiple bins or larger tree bags. If you are bringing oversized decorations, measure them first and make sure the unit type, doorway, and access route work for what you are storing.
Security features are worth reviewing, but they should not replace basic storage habits. Use a quality lock, keep an inventory of stored items, avoid storing irreplaceable valuables if they are not covered, and review coverage requirements before move-in.
SecureSpace Self Storage Riverview is located at 10105 Gibsonton Drive in Riverview, FL. The facility offers climate-controlled storage, drive-up units, carts and dollies, and daily gate access from 6:00 AM to 10:00 PM.
For holiday decorations, think about how often you will visit and what you will need first when the season returns. A small, well-labeled collection may only need a compact unit, while larger seasonal collections may benefit from extra room for bins, tree bags, wreath containers, and outdoor displays.
Before renting, review current unit availability, access details, rental terms, and facility rules.
It depends on what you are storing. Climate-controlled storage may be useful for decorations that benefit from a more stable indoor environment, such as fabric items, electronics, photographs, keepsakes, and delicate décor.
A 5x5 unit may work for a smaller seasonal collection, while a 5x10 can help if you have multiple seasons of décor or larger outdoor displays. A 10x10 may be better for oversized collections or mixed household storage.
Measure the tree bag first. Store the tree clean and dry, avoid crushing it under heavy bins, and place it where it can be removed without unpacking the entire unit.
Rules vary by community. Some HOA documents set specific post-holiday removal windows, so check your own HOA guidelines before leaving exterior decorations up or storing seasonal items outside.
Usually, yes. Plastic bins with secure lids are sturdier, stack more cleanly, and are better suited for long-term seasonal organization than standard cardboard boxes.
Holiday storage works best when items are clean, dry, labeled, and grouped by season. Use sealed bins for small décor, dedicated bags for trees and wreaths, and a clear layout that lets you reach the next season's items without digging through every box.
When garage, closet, or attic space is limited, review current options for holiday decoration storage in Riverview, FL.
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