Here’s what happens to your belongings in an uncontrolled storage unit in Tulsa: they don’t get destroyed by a single dramatic event. Instead, they get slowly wrecked by invisible damage over months.

Climate controlled storage unit interior — Click Storage
Item TypeWhy It MattersClimate Control
Electronics & computersYES — heat damages circuits and causes corrosionRequired
Photographs & documentsYES — fading, mold, ink bleeding without CCRequired
Leather & suede itemsYES — cracks in heat, molds in humidityRequired
Wood furniture (heirloom)YES — temperature swings warp joints and finishesRecommended
Musical instrumentsYES — wood sensitive to humidity changesRecommended
Tools & power equipmentNO — built tough, some rust is acceptableStandard OK
Plastic items & binsNO — stable material, unaffected by temp swingsStandard OK
Seasonal outdoor itemsNO — already outdoor-ratedStandard OK
Tips

What Climate Control Actually Does

Climate controlled storage is not just an air conditioner. It’s temperature and humidity regulation working together.

A standard unit in Tulsa might swing from 35 degrees in January during an ice storm to 115 degrees in July, with humidity jumping from bone dry to 95 percent within days. That’s a recipe for damage.

Climate controlled storage maintains a steady temperature (usually 55 to 85 degrees) and keeps humidity between 30 and 50 percent year-round. No wild swings. No mysterious mold. No wood warping or metal rusting from condensation.

The reality: Oklahoma’s climate is legitimately harsh on stuff. We’re not like Arizona, where it’s hot but bone dry. We’re not like the Northwest, where it’s cool but consistent. Tulsa gets extreme heat, extreme cold, and extreme humidity all in the same year. That combination is exactly what destroys belongings slowly but relentlessly.

Guide

What Actually Needs Climate Control

Items that need climate controlled storage — Click Storage
Click Storage — what actually needs climate control

Let’s be direct about what should live in a climate controlled unit and what’s totally fine without it.

YES — Use Climate Control For:

Electronics: computers, tablets, cameras, printers, TV components. Heat damages circuits. Humidity causes corrosion. After six months in a standard unit, that $500 laptop might not power on anymore.

Photographs and documents: original prints, irreplaceable photos, important paperwork, yearbooks. Heat fades color. Moisture causes mold and ink bleeding. Once a photo is damaged, it’s gone.

Leather and suede: jackets, handbags, furniture, shoes. Oklahoma heat dries leather out and makes it crack. Humidity causes mold and discoloration.

Wood furniture: antiques, heirloom pieces, nice bedroom sets. The temperature and humidity swings literally make wood swell and shrink. Joints separate. Finishes crack.

Musical instruments: guitars, pianos, violins. Wood is sensitive to humidity. An out-of-tune guitar can have structural issues from moisture swings.

Probably Fine Without Climate Control:

Tools and power equipment: hammers, saws, drill sets. These are built tough. A little rust on a hammer doesn’t matter.

Sporting equipment: bicycles, skis, golf clubs. These are durable. Rust happens slowly.

Seasonal outdoor items: patio furniture, grills, garden tools. These live outside anyway. Storage is an upgrade.

Plastic storage bins and furniture: IKEA bookcases, plastic shelving. Plastic is stable. Heat won’t destroy it.

Tips

The Price Question

Climate controlled storage typically costs $20 to $40 more per month than standard storage, depending on unit size. A 10×10 standard unit might be $79 per month. Climate controlled might be $99 to $115. That’s about $240 to $480 extra per year.

Here’s how to think about it: if you’re storing items worth more than $1,000 that are sensitive to heat or moisture, climate control pays for itself in protection. If you’re storing $200 worth of old tools and lawn equipment, climate control is expensive insurance for something that doesn’t need it.

For most people storing electronics, photos, documents, or furniture they actually care about, climate control in Tulsa is money well spent. The invisible damage that happens in summer heat is real and irreversible.

Important

Why Oklahoma Makes This Case Stronger

A lot of storage companies talk about climate control as an optional upgrade. In Oklahoma, it’s closer to a necessity for anything that matters.

We have the hottest summers in the country. Tulsa regularly hits 105 to 107 degrees in July and August. That’s not theoretical. That’s five months where your standard storage unit is literally baking your belongings.

We also have ice storms that drop temperatures to single digits with humidity shifts that cause condensation and mold. The freeze-thaw cycle expands and contracts materials in ways that damage them permanently.

Most states don’t have this combination. California doesn’t have humidity. Minnesota doesn’t have 115-degree summers. Arizona doesn’t have ice storms. Oklahoma gets everything, and everything works together to destroy things slowly.

If you’re storing in Arizona or Colorado, climate control is a nice option. In Oklahoma, it’s practically essential for anything valuable or sensitive.

Note

Making the Decision

Ask yourself three questions:

Would I be upset if this was damaged? If yes, climate control belongs in your plan.

Does it contain electronics, photos, or documents? If yes, climate control is worth it.

Am I storing this longer than six months? If yes, the longer timeline increases damage risk. Climate control becomes smarter.

If you answer yes to any of those, climate controlled storage at Click Storage is the right choice. You’re not paying extra for comfort. You’re paying to keep your stuff in the condition it was in when you put it in the unit.

Local

The Real Cost of Not Using Climate Control

People don’t usually notice the damage until months later. You pull your winter coat out and it smells musty and feels stiff. The electronics don’t power on. The photos are discolored. By then, the damage is done.

Climate control isn’t flashy or exciting. It’s invisible and quiet. But it’s one of the few storage decisions that has zero downside and enormous upside for anything you actually care about.

In Oklahoma, if you’re asking the question, the answer is almost always yes.

Sources: U.S. Self-Storage Association · Oklahoma Climatological Survey · Click Storage facility data, April 2026

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Frequently Asked Questions

Question 01How much does climate controlled storage cost compared to regular storage?
Climate controlled units typically cost $20–40 more per month than standard storage, depending on unit size and location. For a 10×10, expect to pay about $30–40 extra monthly — roughly $360–480 per year for protection.
Question 02What temperature does climate controlled storage maintain?
Most units maintain 55–85°F year-round, with humidity controlled between 30 and 50 percent. This prevents the extreme swings that damage belongings in Oklahoma’s heat and ice storms.
Question 03Will my electronics survive in a standard storage unit in Oklahoma?
Not well for storage longer than a few months. Oklahoma heat and humidity damage circuits and cause corrosion. If you’re storing computers, cameras, printers, or TVs, climate control is strongly recommended.
Question 04Can photographs and documents be stored without climate control?
Not safely for long-term storage. Heat fades color photos and causes ink to bleed. Humidity creates mold and deterioration. Irreplaceable photos and documents need climate control.
Question 05Is climate controlled storage necessary for furniture in Oklahoma?
For nice wood furniture, yes. Temperature and humidity swings cause wood to expand and contract, warping joints and finishes. For basic furniture you’re willing to replace, standard storage is acceptable.
Question 06What does humidity do to stored items?
High humidity promotes mold growth, warps wood, deteriorates fabric, and causes metals to corrode. Oklahoma’s summers regularly see 70%+ humidity. Climate control keeps humidity between 30–50%, which is safe for most materials.
Question 07Is Oklahoma’s climate harder on stored items than other states?
Yes. Tulsa gets both extreme heat (107°F+ summers) and ice storms with sub-zero wind chills. Most states have one extreme — Oklahoma has both, making climate control more important here than in states with milder climates.
Question 08What happens to leather in a non-climate-controlled storage unit?
Oklahoma heat dries leather out and makes it crack. High humidity causes mold and discoloration. Leather jackets, handbags, and furniture should always be stored in climate-controlled units.
Question 09Can musical instruments be stored without climate control?
Not safely. Wood instruments like guitars, violins, and pianos are extremely sensitive to humidity. Structural damage and tuning problems develop in non-climate storage. Always use climate control for musical instruments.
Question 10Is there a minimum storage period where climate control matters?
Even one Oklahoma summer is enough to damage sensitive items. If you’re storing from June through September, climate control is essential for anything that can be damaged by heat or humidity.
Question 11Are upholstered sofas and chairs safe without climate control?
Upholstered furniture won’t be ruined but will get musty in a standard Oklahoma storage unit. A grandmother’s Victorian sofa warrants climate control. A basic college couch can handle standard storage.
Question 12Does the protection plan at the storage facility cover climate damage?
Most protection plans are named peril and may not cover temperature or humidity damage. Verify your coverage specifically addresses the items you’re storing. Don’t assume climate-related damage is automatically covered.