
Trailer Storage in Canada
Secure yards for flatbeds, refrigerated trailers and car carriers across Australia.

Built for Fleets
Why Store Your Trailer With Us?
Trailers spend more time on the ground than on the road. For fleet operators running B-doubles, semi-trailers or refrigerated units, finding a yard that handles the length, surface requirements and access hours of working transport equipment has always been the hard part. FindTruckStorage was built to solve that.
We connect owner-drivers and fleet managers with verified yards across every Australian state and territory. Every listing shows real dimensions, surface type, gate height, power hookups for reefer units and whether 24-hour access is available. No surprises when you roll in at 4am for a pickup.
Hosts range from farmers with unused hardstand to operators with registered depots. All are identity-verified before their first listing goes live, and bookings and payments go through the platform so there is a clear record if anything needs to be resolved.
- Verified yard hosts
- Secure online payments
- Close to freight routes
- No lock-in contracts
We’re launching in Canada soon.
Be the first to list your space or get notified when trailer storage listings go live in Canada.
Browse Trailer Storage by Region
Ontario
4 cities
Ontario is Canada's most populous province and home to the country's largest urban agglomeration. Toronto, Ottawa, and the surrounding cities generate enormous demand for off-site RV, boat, and vehicle storage, particularly during the long winter months when recreational vehicles sit unused for six months or more. Ontario's cottage country lakes and Georgian Bay also create a strong seasonal market for trailerboat and jet ski storage.
British Columbia
3 cities
British Columbia combines some of Canada's most expensive real estate with one of its most active outdoor lifestyles. Vancouver's densification has removed garages from the equation for most urban households. Yet the Pacific coast, the Gulf Islands, and Okanagan wine country drive high rates of boat, RV, and recreational vehicle ownership. The storage gap between what people own and what they can keep at home is significant, and growing.
Alberta
2 cities
Alberta's oil-driven economy has historically supported high levels of recreational vehicle ownership. Albertans are among Canada's most enthusiastic RV users, with the Rocky Mountains and tens of thousands of lakes within easy driving distance. Calgary and Edmonton are modern cities with suburban layouts, but even here, winter storage of RVs, boats, and trailers is a genuine logistical challenge that peer-to-peer solutions address well.
Quebec
2 cities
Quebec's distinct cultural identity extends to its outdoor lifestyle. Lac-des-Deux-Montagnes, the Laurentians, and the St. Lawrence waterway ensure that Quebecers maintain strong boat and watercraft ownership. Montreal's dense island geography and Quebec City's fortress-like heritage make residential storage an ongoing challenge. Winter storage of recreational vehicles, typically October through April, is a major seasonal driver.
Nova Scotia
1 city
Nova Scotia is a maritime province in every sense. Surrounded by the Atlantic on three sides, its population has one of the highest rates of boat and watercraft ownership in Canada. Halifax is a growing, confident city where residential space is at an increasing premium. The province's fishing heritage and weekend boating culture combine to make marine storage one of the most consistent demand categories.
Manitoba
1 city
Manitoba's flat landscape and freshwater lake network, including Lake Winnipeg (one of the world's largest), make it a natural home for fishing boat and watercraft owners. Winnipeg is a mid-sized prairie city where RV and boat storage is a seasonal necessity. The short summer season intensifies storage demand at both ends. Spring preparation and autumn lay-up create predictable peaks.
Saskatchewan
2 cities
Saskatchewan's big-sky landscape hosts thousands of fishing lakes and a strong culture of self-reliance. RV travel across the prairies and into the Rockies is popular, and seasonal vehicle storage is a consistent need. Saskatoon and Regina are modern, spread-out cities where landowners often have surplus yard or garage space that could serve neighbouring households.
New Brunswick
2 cities
New Brunswick has a strong Atlantic and river-based boating culture, with the Bay of Fundy's dramatic tides a constant backdrop. Fredericton and Moncton are practical, affordable cities where peer-to-peer storage fits naturally into a community-minded culture. Winter storage is a serious seasonal need, and rural properties across the province have the space to help.
Purpose-Built for Trailer Operators
We understand the specific needs of trailer storage, from refrigerated units to car carriers.
Space for Every Trailer Type
Flatbeds, reefer units, curtainsiders, car carriers. Find yards with the length and width your trailer needs.
Verified & Secure
Every host is ID verified. Listings show security features including CCTV, fencing and locked access.
Upfront Pricing
Compare daily, weekly and monthly rates across yards. No hidden charges. What you see is what you pay.
Power Hookups Available
Need to keep your reefer running? Filter for yards that offer power connections for refrigerated trailers.
The Handover
Document the condition of your trailer at drop-off and pickup. A clear record that protects both sides.
Short or Long Term
Park between jobs or store for the season. Flexible booking terms that work around your schedule.
Tips for Storing Your Trailer
- 1
Disconnect, chock and lower the landing legs
Disconnect from the prime mover, wind the landing legs down to take the nose weight, engage the park brake and chock front and rear on each axle group. For B-double combinations, chock the lead and dog trailer independently. A trailer that moves overnight is a yard liability and a safety issue for everyone else on site.
- 2
Check for power access
If you are storing a refrigerated trailer, confirm the yard has a suitable power hookup before you book. Not all yards have 3-phase power, and running a reefer off a domestic single-phase circuit is not always practical. Ask the host to confirm the power spec, the outlet location and whether there is a sub-board or hard-wired connection available. Reefer hire companies and logistics operators should also ask whether multiple units can run simultaneously without tripping the circuit.
- 3
Remove or lash everything on an open deck
Open flatbeds accumulate debris and take wind loads in storage. Strip any loose chains, straps or dunnage from the deck, and lash down anything you are leaving on the trailer. Australian summer storms can shift unsecured equipment, and you are responsible for anything that damages the yard or nearby gear.
- 4
Check tyres, glad hands and landing gear
Australian summer heat flat-spots tyres quickly. Check pressures before parking and again on collection. Grease the landing gear threads, verify brake chambers are holding pressure, and cap the glad hands to keep moisture out of the air lines. Two minutes of prep before parking prevents a breakdown callout later.

Launching Soon
Be first to list your space in Canada