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Extra Space Storage

Engaged Employer

Extra Space Storage reviews

4.2

83% would recommend to a friend

(3,404 total reviews)
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Joe Margolis

88% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

Extra Space Storage has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 3,404 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Extra Space Storage employee rating is 21% above average for employers within the Real Estate industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
3.0
May 3, 2024

They could do better.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Generous PTO from the start. Pay is decent for starting out as a young person if you choose this career path. Medical has several family plans that are decent. Bonus paid monthly. There is career advancement. You get an allowance for work shoes and shirts are provided.

Cons

Very few holidays. We work Labor Day, Memorial Day, and MLK Day. Most of the time it's not worth even being open because most customers think you are closed. The bonus is not great. You get a dollar amount per rental which you share with assistants. Sometimes they randomly change the amount with no warning. It will add $1 to $2 an hour to your check. Assistants get about half that. Work life balance is not great because someone else writes your schedule. It's rare to get two days off in a row. You will get micromanaged by most District Managers. DM's act like schoolteachers punishing the whole class because of the few bad employees. You cannot wear jeans.

1.0
Jan 1, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work life balance. Sundays are guaranteed off, holiday pay and consistent with your chosen weekday off.

Cons

Be warned! If you become an Assistant Manager here, I have a few lessons for you I had to learn the hard way. These warnings are specifically for the Morganton/Hickory NC area although the company as a whole has a high turnover! 1. Make sure to ask to meet the staff that you’ll actually be working with, it’ll make all the difference on your first impression of what the workplace culture will actually be like! I only interviewed with the district manager and trainer. Once I met the actual staff I had to work with, the entire mood changed! I experienced a lot of racial micro-aggressions, unprofessionalism, hypocrisy and laziness from my Store Managers and one of my trainers. 2. Although you have the title “Assistant Manager”, it is just you and a Store Manager in the store. I was led on to believe I was in a leadership position working alongside a Store Manager over staff, but that is not the case! So make sure you’re working with a great store manager with actual professional management skills, otherwise you might end up being treated like the Store Manager’s personal assistant doing the dirty work and their scapegoat when something goes wrong like I was. 3. This particular district, if they don’t like you, for whatever reason, they will attempt to manage you out. Which means making your job more difficult and having you document your progress as a legal justification for terminating you. Luckily I’m a hard and professional worker because this little trick of theirs did not work. I ended up being with the company for almost a year before I finally found something else and quit! 4. The company looks and sounds professional on paper, but on the actual district and store level, they are not! They are not preparing the Store Managers (who you will be working under) for actual leadership positions. A huge evidence of this is that the managers don’t even train you, you’ll have a trainer travel to you for that and leave once your training is over. Unless you get lucky and you work in the same store as your trainer. This creates an environment of entitled Store Managers who are protected by favoritism and having longevity with the company. There’s only “slap on the wrists” if they do wrong in this particular district. 5. Know your worth. If you’re interviewing and you know the pay is low and they try to entice you with annual or performance based pay raises, don’t settle! I was “meeting expectations” at the end of the year and I received a thirty cent raise. Even “exceeding expectations” will be less than a $1 raise. 6. This is a dirty, outside and at times dangerous and sketchy job. They don’t disclose or elaborate on this too much during the interview process, so allow me to. Don’t let the temperature controlled office setting fool you. Especially if you’re the Assistant Manager. You’ll spend majority of days outside cleaning out every storage unit on these gigantic properties the second someone moves in or out, rain or nighttime, which can be full of pests. Homeless people sleeping on the property or inside the units is a huge thing, which can be a dangerous, dirty or awkward situation to run into. Creepy/sketchy things do happen. There are most days where you’ll cover the store alone, so keep that in mind. This particular district, I was consistently working by myself not even a full week out of my training when I was told it would be at least a month before that happened. You are this company’s pest control, landscaper, handyman and plumber because they’ll do anything to save a quick buck. If you like your personal space, too bad, because you are required to drive customers in the front seat beside you in a golf cart to their storage unit. You also have to do bill collecting calls for customers who haven’t paid their bills, so be prepared for some seriously angry customers because they can’t get in their units or their items are being auctioned off! But again if you have a great Store Manager that views you as an equal, then you won’t have to worry about all the dirty work being put on just you. 7. As an Assistant Manager, know that majority of your days will be spent covering other stores. I was told maybe a day or two I will be covering my neighboring stores, which are each thirty minutes away from my home store. In reality I spent three out of 5 days every week at these other stores and I had no control over my schedule or where I would be. You’re basically a pawn piece for these managers, you go where they want you to with little concern for how you feel about it.

3.0
Aug 5, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

In my experience, there has been no micromanagement and I LOVE that independence. (This backfires if you get a lazy coworker who operates like a cat on their phone that needs to be instructed to do even the daily tasks) If you get a cool DTL, you'll feel like they help get you the time off you request. (Anyone too corporate will tell you that you work based on the companies needs). I like the half office/half outdoor role, having a reason to get up and stretch your legs feels great. The company will stand beside your decisions when you need to kick an unruly customer off your property. They give a lot of trust to their employees. My cons list is sizeable and there's definitely room for improvement as an employer, but I overall have a positive outlook

Cons

Well, you'll help run a site that brings in like $1 million/year and you'll get paid as little as possible. A small stipend for new rentals is shared between you and your coworkers, so there's 0 reason to not give everyone first month free and rent short term. The benefits are honestly kind of trash and the company doesn't fully pay them. They help, but you'll still be footing a couple hundred a month, at least. Embarrassing for a S&P 500 company. You're a call center, a collections agent, a janitor, a front office desk worker, the escalation department, the maintenance guy, and so on. But your compensation will show otherwise. It begins to feel like a joke when you have to explain to a renter why their rates go up $50-$100 at a time with no extra services being provided to them while your wages are stagnant. The company is monopolizing the market, so their extremely high "street rate" is some arbitrary big wig algorithm created to make it look like its the markets fault. $5/sq ft of non climate controlled space? Are they renting a flat in San Francisco? Why are they paying this much?

Viewing 76 - 78 of 3,404 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,454 Extra Space Storage reviews submitted anonymously by Extra Space Storage employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Extra Space Storage is right for you.