Finding space is the easy part. The real question is whether you can afford it, and whether it’ll pay for itself.
For a small business, a warehouse space budget is not just another rent line. It’s a test of whether a dedicated space lets you take on more paid work than your current setup allows. So instead of asking only whether you can afford the rent, ask whether you’ll see a return on investing in the space.
Two tests tell you that: the revenue percentage test and the return calculation.
Why Workspace Is a Different Kind of Overhead
Workspace is different from most overhead because it can become part of how the business earns revenue.
Most overhead just sits on the books. Workspace is different, because it can become part of how the business actually earns.
Your phone bill, your insurance, your accounting software: all necessary, and none of them let you take on more work by themselves. A space can. For a carpenter, a bay can mean fewer trips between the garage, the jobsite, and a storage unit. For a baker or a small food business, it can mean room to prep and bake without taking over the house.
None of that makes the rent any less of a commitment. A small business warehouse cost is real and fixed, due in a slow month the same as a good one. What sets it apart is that it affects capacity directly: more jobs you can stage, more orders out the door, less time bled into workarounds.
The Revenue Percentage Test
The revenue percentage test asks what share of current monthly revenue the workspace would take. Use this formula:
That result gives you a first pass warehouse rent budget. It won’t tell you the space is right or wrong, but it tells you whether the commitment is in proportion to how your business earns.
How much of your revenue a space should take depends on how central it is to the work, which is why the ranges below vary by business type.
Home services and trades like contractors run the business out of the space. It’s the office, the place to store inventory and load up, and somewhere to build with the power their tools need, which a home garage usually can’t supply. Clients don’t have to visit for the space to do real work. It earns its keep through saved time, real workspace, and room to take on more jobs.
For a production shop, the space is where the work actually happens, so it’s central to everything the business earns. Same goes for product businesses like ecommerce, packaged goods, or food, where storage, packing, and shipping all run out of the space. When the space is where the money gets made, it makes sense to put more of your revenue toward it.
| Business type | Typical range | Why this range |
|---|---|---|
| Active production, such as fabrication, repair, or making | 8 to 15%Industry benchmark | Space is where revenue is made, so the business may tolerate a higher workspace percentage when the bay increases output. |
| Service businesses staging tools and parts | 3 to 8%Industry benchmark | Space is justified when it reduces jobsite delays, supports more crew activity, or helps the owner take on larger jobs. |
| Product businesses, such as ecommerce, food, or packaged goods | 5 to 12%Industry benchmark | Storage, packing, and order staging are part of the revenue path, so the right percentage depends on order volume and SKU count. |
| Early stage businesses under two years | Under 8%Industry benchmark | A smaller revenue base can make the percentage look high; the real test is whether the space creates near term paid work. |
| Established businesses three years or more | 5 to 12%Industry benchmark | A larger revenue base can make the workspace percentage lower even when the space itself is a bigger commitment. |
The ROI Calculation: What the Space Needs to Pay Back
The percentage test tells you whether the space fits your revenue. The ROI calculation tells you what it has to change to be worth it.
Start with the cost, then translate it into jobs, orders, units, or hours. That makes the decision concrete. A contractor should not only ask whether the space feels affordable. He should ask how many extra jobs, recovered hours, or avoided delays it would take for the space to pay for itself. A baker should ask how many additional orders, wholesale runs, or reduced spoilage events would cover the commitment.
| ROI factor | How to measure it | How to use the number |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity unlocked | How many additional jobs, orders, or units per month could the space support? | Multiply by average revenue per unit. This is the revenue upside. |
| Time recovered | How many hours per week are lost to moving materials, driving to storage, or searching for tools? | Hours multiplied by your rough hourly rate shows the soft cost of the current setup. |
| Work turned down | How much work did you decline recently because the home setup could not handle the volume? | Project that missed work over a longer period. It may be larger than the space commitment. |
| Damage or loss avoided | What is the recurring cost of damaged inventory, lost tools, or spoiled product from the current setup? | Count this as avoided loss, especially when the current setup makes damage more likely. |
| Breakeven threshold | How many additional units or jobs per month would cover the space? | Divide space cost by average revenue per job or order. If the number is small, the case is stronger. |
Here is a simple way to think about it. Suppose a tradesperson handles ten jobs in a typical month and the new space would need two more comparable jobs like those to pay for itself. If better staging means you can run twelve jobs instead of ten, the space has a clear case. If it just makes the same ten jobs easier, you have to decide whether the recovered time and avoided damage are worth it on their own.
For a product business, the same idea applies to orders. If a bay makes room for larger order batches, cleaner packing flow, and fewer supply runs, the payback may come through order capacity instead of job count.
Run the Numbers for Your Own Business
Both tests take a little math, so we built a calculator that runs them for you.
Pick your business type, then enter your monthly revenue, the quoted rent, and a few details about your work. The tool shows you what share of revenue the space would take, whether that lands inside the typical range for your kind of business, and how many extra jobs or orders it would take to break even. It also totals the full first-year cost, not just the rent, so the number in front of you is the real one.
The more honest you are with the inputs, especially the work you turn down now and what your current setup costs you, the more useful the answer.
WorkBay Budget Calculator
See whether a warehouse space earns its place in your business
This calculator is an estimate to help you think it through, not financial advice. The ranges are general guidance, so use the result as a starting point for the conversation.
What Is Actually Included in the Total Cost
The real warehouse budget includes every cost the move creates, not only the lease payment.
Build your budget with line items. Start with the recurring space commitment. Then add move in expenses, shelving or work surfaces, any approved buildout, utilities if they are separate, insurance for tools or inventory, and changes to transportation. Also account for the time it takes to move, organize, and get back to normal work.
Every location is a little different, so don’t assume one includes the same things as another. Review WorkBay’s amenities, then ask the local team what actually applies to the specific park and bay you’re looking at. That keeps your budget tied to the real space instead of a guess.
For some businesses, the hidden cost is not a bill. It is distance. If the new space adds too much drive time between home, suppliers, and jobsites, the space may create a different kind of waste. If it shortens the route or keeps materials closer to where work happens, the location can improve the math.
When the Math Works
The math works when the space removes a constraint that is already costing the business work, time, or reliability. Three signals matter most.
You’re turning work away
If your setup is the reason you can’t take on more jobs, the cost of waiting is probably higher than the cost of the space. Not sure yet? WorkBay’s Garage to Bay calculator walks through seven signs to check.
The setup is costing you
Lost tools, spoiled product, the supply run you make twice. None of it shows up as one clean line on the books, but it all comes straight out of what the business keeps.
The percentage fits
Your revenue test fits the typical range for your business type. Use the range that matches how you actually earn, not a one-size figure.
The framework tells you whether the numbers work in theory. A tour of the space tells you whether it works for your actual setup.
When the Alternative Wins
Sometimes the better decision is to wait, use a simpler setup, or choose a different kind of space.
Stay with a home setup when revenue is still too inconsistent to take on a fixed monthly cost. A dedicated space can add pressure before the business has enough repeat work to support it. If most months are still unpredictable, a lower commitment setup may be safer.
If you only need space for a few months when business is busy and don’t want a long term lease running through the slow season, a month-to-month option makes sense. That’s why WorkBay offers month-to-month rentals. You can take a space for the busy stretch and end the lease when things slow down
If all you need is storage, warehouse space is probably more than you need. If you just need somewhere to keep boxes, equipment, or overflow inventory, and you don’t need a work area, a customer-facing setup, or regular staging, self storage is usually cheaper and simpler.
Shared space can also make sense when you do not need your own bay every day. Still weighing the two? Read WorkBay’s shared warehouse vs private warehouse guide before you build the budget.
A space that helps you take on more work than you can handle now is worth it. If it doesn’t do that yet, wait until it does.
Ready to See a Space?
Run your numbers in the calculator above, then book a tour to see a space and get pricing.
Book a TourWarehouse Rent Budget FAQ
Most small businesses spend somewhere between 3 and 12 percent of monthly revenue on workspace. Where your business falls depends on how central the space is to the work. Home services and trades that run the business out of the space but earn a lot in the field often sit lower, while production and product businesses tend to spend more, since the space is where the work and the revenue happen. These are general guides, not hard rules, so use the calculator above to see what fits your business.
The clearest sign is lost revenue: work you’re turning down because your current setup can’t handle the volume, or orders you can’t fill because there’s nowhere to stage them. When space is the thing in your way, it usually costs less than the constraint it removes.
Beyond the monthly lease, budget for move-in costs, any buildout or shelving you will add, utilities if not included, insurance for your inventory and tools, and any transportation changes the new location creates.
Stay home when the volume isn’t there yet, when your work genuinely fits the space you already have, or when the kind of space you need isn’t available in your market. A rough line: if the space would eat more than 12 percent of your current monthly revenue, it may be early for a young business.
That depends on your business type and how boxed in you were to begin with. Businesses that were turning work away tend to see payback fast, since the space lets them take on revenue they’d been declining. Storage-driven moves pay back slower. For a concrete target, divide the space cost by your average revenue per job or order. That’s how many extra units a month it takes to cover it.


