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How severe is the shortage of affordable housing opportunities? Well, a new survey has found one in five Americans have slept in a storage unit.

The survey of 2,000 adults commissioned by StorageUnits.com found 24% of respondents saying they only spent one night in a unit, while nearly half (49%) stayed for a few nights, and others reported spending a week (13%), multiple weeks (10%), several months (2%), a year (1%), and more than a year (1%). Men were twice as likely as women to report sleeping in a storage unit (28% vs. 13%).

What inspired this unlikely housing solution? The survey found 26% of respondents admitting they were experiencing homelessness, while others were in between places (30%), renovating their home (16%), or had a conflict with a roommate or partner (15%). In most cases (79%), the unit belonged to the person who stayed there.

The survey also found that 84% of Americans would consider sleeping in a storage unit if they became homeless. And while it is illegal to live in a storage unit, 55% of respondents said it should be legal if someone pays to rent it. Only 17% said it should remain illegal, while 29% were unsure.

“People often turn to storage units during major life transitions that may result in a move, such as divorce, job loss, or needing to downsize,” says Reagan Phillips, home organization and storage expert at StorageUnits.com. “As a result, the unit becomes more than just a storage space. Because so much of what matters to them is there, it can feel like the one place that’s truly theirs when everything else feels uncertain. I can see why someone, particularly if they don’t have a safe, affordable place to go, might spend hours there, or maybe even sleep there.”