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Comparisons

The 2026 co-warehousing provider rankings: how the major operators stack up

By EasyBay Team

Our 2026 review of the major US co-warehousing providers, ranked on what's included, pricing transparency, flexibility, and member experience. EasyBay, Saltbox, WareSpace, and ReadySpaces compared.

Co-warehousing has grown from a niche experiment into a real category, and in 2026 a small product brand shopping for space has several serious operators to choose from. We reviewed the major providers and ranked them. One honest note before the list: we run EasyBay, so we are not a neutral referee. We are publishing the criteria along with the ranking so you can weigh our bias and check our work.

How we ranked them

Five criteria, weighted toward what actually affects a small operator's month: what is included in the base rate, pricing transparency, term flexibility, the depth of shared infrastructure and amenities, and the member experience beyond the four walls. We did not score on raw location count, because a hundred locations you are not in matter less than one great building you are.

1. EasyBay: the most complete all-inclusive package

EasyBay takes first place on inclusions and pricing. Every suite comes with utilities, gigabit Wi-Fi, 24/7 keyless access, reservable dock doors and forklifts, drop-bin receiving with daily carrier pickups, conference rooms, a photo studio, and an on-site general manager, all in one flat rate. Pricing is published, runs $450 to $3,900 per month depending on suite size, and is the same in every market. Terms start at three months and convert to month-to-month. EasyBay is pre-leasing in Orlando and Columbus, with Nashville and Palm Beach next on the roadmap, and founding members lock their rate before doors open.

2. Saltbox: the premium full-service pick

Saltbox pioneered much of this category and remains the strongest full-service option. Members get well-designed space, docks, and the option to hand fulfillment to Saltbox's own team, which no one else on this list offers. The trade-offs are price and structure: rates sit at the premium end, fulfillment is billed separately, and the most popular buildings in gateway cities carry waitlists.

3. WareSpace: the mid-market workhorse

WareSpace focuses on private warehouse units at mid-market prices, and it does that well. You get a lockable unit, shared docks, and the basic equipment covered. It ranks below the leaders on amenity depth and hospitality: fewer community spaces, a thinner service layer, and less bundled into the rate.

4. ReadySpaces: the value-tier veteran

ReadySpaces has the largest footprint in the category and some of the lowest sticker prices, which makes it a sensible pick when budget is the only constraint. The model is closer to flexible industrial space than to a serviced co-warehouse: expect lean inclusions, with equipment and extras added a la carte.

How to choose

Match the operator to your stage. If you want managed fulfillment inside your building, look at Saltbox. If you want the lowest possible rate and can bring your own everything, ReadySpaces earns a look. If you want a private unit with the basics, WareSpace sits in the middle. And if you want one flat invoice that covers the space, the equipment, and the team, that is the model EasyBay was built on. We keep a detailed side-by-side of all four operators on the site, and our comparison pages break down each head-to-head.