No API of any kind: no developer portal, documentation, webhooks, or partner program. The only surface is the consumer web UI, so programmatic access would mean scraping. With support closed and the business listed for sale, a sanctioned API is not coming.
StoreAtMyHouse scores F on the API Report Card. No API of any kind: no developer portal, documentation, webhooks, or partner program. The only surface is the consumer web UI, so programmatic access would mean scraping. With support closed and the business listed for sale, a sanctioned API is not coming.
Without a usable official API, teams fall back on manual exports, file drops, or one-off vendor integrations. The other option is an unofficial API layer like Supergood that automates the authenticated web app directly.
StoreAtMyHouse (storeatmyhouse.com) is a peer-to-peer self-storage marketplace launched in 2007 and headquartered in Mesa, Arizona, that pitches itself as 'the original airbnb of self-storage.' Hosts list unused space in their home, garage, basement, attic, shed, business, or driveway; renters search by ZIP/city, message hosts, agree on terms, and use a StoreAtMyHouse-provided rental contract.
Consumer-to-consumer (C2C) sharing-economy marketplace in the self-storage / sharing-economy vertical. A renter visits storeatmyhouse.com, searches by location, browses host listings (photos, description, square footage, monthly price, access rules), messages a host through the on-site form, negotiates terms, and signs a StoreAtMyHouse-provided rental contract before dropping off items.
Very low. StoreAtMyHouse is a long-tail, sub-scale competitor in P2P storage, a category that is itself dominated by Neighbor.com (raised $53M+, Andreessen Horowitz, Series B 2021) and includes Stashii (Canada), Spacer (Australia/US), Cubby, and PeerStorage.
StoreAtMyHouse holds a modest pool of host listings (location, square footage, price, photos, access rules), renter accounts, on-platform messages between hosts and renters, and the rental contracts the platform helps generate.
Founded in 2007, predating the broader sharing-economy wave (Airbnb launched 2008).
No public API, no developer documentation, and no integration partners are advertised anywhere on the site, hosts and renters have no programmatic access to their own listing, message, or rental data. No exposed mechanism for hosts to pull listing performance, inquiry funnel, or payout data into a personal accounting/tax tool (e.g., for Schedule E rental-income reporting). Full sourced list under Sources below.
Common alternatives include Neighbor, Stashii, Spacer, Cubby, PeerStorage, STOW IT. Graded alternatives appear under "More from the report card" below.
Grades measure one thing: can a customer's engineering team get their own data out programmatically? We check six things (whether a real API exists, how access is gated, data coverage, auth quality, docs and developer experience, and stability) and roll them into a letter grade. Grades get re-verified, and they only move on evidence.