My HOA Won’t Let Me Store My Boat or RV at Home — What Do Naples Homeowners Do?

 

70%
Of Collier homes have HOAs
$100/day
Typical HOA fine
$175+
Monthly storage starts at
10–15 min
From most Naples homes

You moved to Naples for the boating. Maybe the RV trips up to the Panhandle. Maybe both. And then the HOA letter arrived — the polite one, with the citation number on it — informing you that your 24-foot center console or your 36-foot Class A motorhome is no longer welcome on your own driveway. If you’re searching for HOA boat and RV storage Naples options right now, you’re in the same position as roughly 70% of Collier County homeowners who live inside a deed-restricted community.

The good news: you have more legal, secure, and affordable options than you think. This guide walks you through exactly what Naples homeowners do when their HOA says no — what the rules actually say, why they exist, how Florida courts handle them, what off-site storage really costs, what the climate does to a stored vehicle in Southwest Florida, and how to choose a facility that protects a six-figure asset the way it deserves. By the end, you’ll have a clear framework for picking the right storage solution and avoiding the most expensive mistakes Naples owners make.

A

Quick Answer

Most Naples HOAs prohibit boats, RVs, and trailers from being stored on driveways or in front of homes. Florida HOAs are legally allowed to enforce these covenants under Chapter 720 of the Florida Statutes, and Florida courts have consistently upheld enforcement — including liens and, in extreme cases, foreclosure for unpaid fines. The standard solution is off-site storage at a secured facility — typically $175 to $230 per month for covered or outdoor space — within a 10 to 15 minute drive of most Naples communities. The right facility actually protects your boat or RV better than a residential driveway would.

Section 01

Why Naples HOAs Restrict Boats and RVs

Naples HOAs restrict boats, RVs, trailers, and oversized vehicles for three connected reasons: property values, visual conformity, and insurance liability. To understand why your board won’t budge — and why fighting it almost never works — it helps to see the mechanics behind the rule.

Property values come first

In a market where the median single-family home in Collier County trades for well over a million dollars, the visual consistency of a community is treated as a financial asset by the board — and by every owner who voted those covenants into existence. Real estate appraisers in Naples routinely cite “neighborhood appearance” as a comp-adjustment factor. A boat-and-trailer parked across a driveway, a fifth-wheel beside a garage, or a Class A motorhome filling a side yard reads to appraisers and buyers as a community that doesn’t enforce its standards. Boards know this. They enforce because the financial cost of not enforcing — sliding comps, longer days on market, lower sale prices — falls on every owner in the community.

Visual conformity is the easy explanation

The aesthetics argument is real, but it’s downstream of the property-values argument. Naples communities like Pelican Bay, Park Shore, and Olde Naples were designed and marketed around a specific visual standard. Buyers paid a premium for that standard. The covenants exist to preserve what they paid for. When a board lets one boat slide, they have to let the next one slide too — and the slope from there to “unenforceable covenant” is short and well-documented in Florida case law.

Insurance and liability are the hidden third reason

Most homeowners never hear this one, but it’s why boards rarely grant exceptions. HOA master insurance policies often carry exclusions or surcharges for properties where members regularly store recreational vehicles or boats on common-area-adjacent driveways. A boat tipping off a trailer, a fuel leak, a battery fire, an RV blocking emergency vehicle access — these are documented insurance claims. Boards that selectively allow storage expose themselves to coverage gaps. Easier to ban it across the board.

The typical restrictions you’ll see in Naples HOA covenants include:

No boats, RVs, or trailers visible from the street for more than 24 to 72 hours (often defined as a “loading/unloading window only”)
No commercial vehicles or vehicles over a certain length (often 20 feet) or height (often 7 feet)
No on-street parking of recreational vehicles, even temporarily — many Naples HOAs coordinate with private security patrols
No storage in side yards unless fully screened from view by approved fencing or landscaping (which itself requires architectural review approval)
No storage in garages if the garage door must remain partially open to accommodate the vehicle
Fines that escalate — typically $100 first offense, then $100 per day until cured, with aggregate fines capped by Florida statute at $1,000 per violation unless higher amounts are authorized by the governing documents

Communities like Pelican Bay, Olde Naples, Park Shore, the Vineyards, and most gated developments in Lely and Verona Walk enforce these covenants actively. Some employ private security patrols that document violations weekly via timestamped photographs. Others rely on neighbor complaints, which in many Naples communities arrive within hours of a violation appearing.

Section 02

Yes — and the law is clearly on the HOA’s side. Under Chapter 720 of the Florida Statutes, homeowners’ associations are granted broad authority to enforce recorded covenants, including parking and vehicle storage rules. When you bought your home in a deed-restricted community, you signed an acknowledgment of the covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs). Florida courts have consistently held that these are real contracts, enforceable in court.

How the enforcement process actually unfolds

The escalation pattern is predictable. Most Naples HOAs follow a four-stage process, and each stage compounds the cost of inaction.

Stage 1 — Friendly notice (week 1).
A letter, often hand-delivered or taped to your door, identifying the violation and giving you 7 to 14 days to cure. No fines yet.
Stage 2 — Formal fine notice (week 2–4).
A certified letter from the property manager citing the specific covenant violated, the fine schedule, and a 14-day right to request a hearing before a committee of fellow owners. Fines begin accruing.
Stage 3 — Lien recording (month 2–4).
If fines remain unpaid for 45+ days, the association records a claim of lien against your property in Collier County public records. This shows on title and complicates any sale or refinance.
Stage 4 — Foreclosure action (month 6+).
Florida law permits HOAs to foreclose on the lien. This is rare but real, particularly when fines compound past $5,000 and other collection efforts have failed.
!

What This Means In Practice

  • The HOA can fine you, place a lien on your property, sue for collection, and in extreme cases initiate foreclosure proceedings — even on a fully paid-off home
  • “I didn’t know” is not a legal defense — you’re presumed to have read your CC&Rs at closing
  • Selective-enforcement defenses (other owners violating with no consequence) require documented evidence and rarely prevail without months of litigation
  • Your mortgage lender may also be notified once a lien is recorded, which can trigger covenant-of-title clauses in your loan agreement

Why fighting almost never works

Florida appellate courts have repeatedly upheld HOA parking and storage enforcement, even in cases where homeowners argued vehicles weren’t visible, weren’t permanent, or weren’t covered by the literal text of the covenant. The legal doctrine is that recorded covenants run with the land — they bind every subsequent owner, regardless of when the rule was written or whether it feels reasonable today. Boards routinely retain counsel for these disputes at the association’s expense, while homeowners pay their own. Average legal fees for a contested HOA enforcement case in Collier County run $5,000 to $20,000 — usually for a result that confirms what the covenant already said.

The shortest path to peace of mind isn’t fighting the board. It’s finding a storage facility that protects your boat or RV better than your driveway ever could.

Section 03

Your Real Options as a Naples Homeowner

When the HOA letter arrives, Naples homeowners typically consider four options. Three of them have serious drawbacks. One is the standard solution for a reason — and the math explains why.

1

Not Recommended

Fight the HOA

Legal fees start at $5,000 and routinely exceed $15,000 if it goes to mediation or arbitration. Florida courts side with HOAs on parking enforcement in roughly 9 out of 10 published cases.

Realistic cost: $5,000–$20,000 + ongoing fines

2

Last Resort

Sell the Boat or RV

An option, but it defeats the purpose of moving to Naples. Resale also typically returns 60–75% of recent purchase price, meaning a meaningful capital loss.

Realistic cost: 25–40% depreciation hit

3

Limited Options

Move to a Non-HOA Home

Possible, but non-HOA homes in Naples represent under 30% of the market and are concentrated in older or more rural areas — often outside preferred school zones.

Realistic cost: $30K+ moving + lifestyle trade-offs

Recommended
4

Standard Solution

Off-Site Storage

Secure, affordable, and often better protection than home storage offers. The choice most Naples homeowners make.

Realistic cost: $175–$230/month, month-to-month

For nearly every homeowner we work with, the math points the same direction. Off-site storage at a secured facility costs less per month than a single HOA fine cycle, eliminates the daily friction with the board, removes a documented liability from your homeowner’s policy, and — done right — actually preserves the boat or RV better than a residential driveway exposed to sun, salt air, and afternoon storms. The decision is rarely whether to use off-site storage; it’s which facility.

Section 04

What Off-Site Storage Actually Costs in Naples

Pricing for boat and RV storage in Naples varies based on three things: whether the space is covered or outdoor, the length of the vessel or vehicle, and the security level of the facility. Here is the realistic 2026 range for the Naples market.

Storage Type Typical Size Monthly Range Best For
Outdoor uncovered Up to 40 ft $175–$200 Trailered boats, work trailers, short-term
Covered storage Up to 45 ft $200–$230 Premium boats, RVs, Class A motorhomes
Enclosed unit 10×20 to 12×40 $250–$450 Collector cars, small RVs, gear-heavy setups
Elite storage condo 25×55 ft Ownership Multi-vehicle owners, collectors, investors

What drives the price variance

Within each tier, prices in Naples vary by roughly $30–$60 per month based on five factors: (1) location — facilities closer to US 41 charge a premium; (2) security infrastructure — full perimeter walls and AI cameras add cost over chain-link and standard CCTV; (3) access hours — 24/7 personal codes cost more than standard gate hours; (4) electric availability — 30 amp hookups in covered spaces typically add $15–$25/month; (5) facility reputation and waitlist demand — facilities that came through Hurricane Irma intact command higher pricing.

Hidden fees to ask about before signing

Move-in fees: Often $25–$100 administrative; family-owned facilities often waive these.
Required insurance riders: Some facilities require a $10–$20/month insurance product; others accept proof of your existing policy.
Gate-code fees: Watch for $10–$25 per additional driver code beyond the primary.
Auto-rate-increase clauses: Many corporate facilities raise rates 6–12% annually with 30 days’ notice. Read the clause.
Lien provisions for late payment: Under Florida self-storage law, facilities can auction your contents for nonpayment after as little as 60 days — confirm the cure period.

Pricing Comparison

Naples Boat & RV Storage — Monthly Cost vs. HOA Fines

Outdoor uncovered
$185
Covered storage
$215
Enclosed unit
$350
Single HOA fine cycle (30 days)
$3,000

A single 30-day HOA fine cycle exceeds 14 months of covered storage at The Hideout.

The HOA fine comparison matters. A single 30-day fine cycle at $100/day eclipses the cost of premium covered storage for over a year — and the boat still isn’t legal in your driveway. By month two of unresolved violations, you’re effectively funding the legal budget of the very board you’re trying to satisfy.

Section 05

What Climate Does to a Stored Vehicle in Naples

This is the conversation most facilities won’t have with you, and it’s the one that matters most for protecting a six-figure asset. Naples sits at 26° north latitude with a subtropical climate that punishes outdoor-stored vehicles year-round. The damage isn’t theoretical — it shows up on your hull, your gel coat, your seals, your batteries, and your resale value.

UV exposure

Naples averages 266 sunny days per year, and the UV index regularly exceeds 11 from April through September. UV degrades gel coat, fades graphics, dries out rubber seals, cracks vinyl, and embrittles plastic. A boat stored uncovered for 18 months in Southwest Florida sun typically shows visible gel coat oxidation, decal lift, and seal hardening. Restoration on a mid-size boat runs $2,000–$8,000. Covered storage essentially eliminates this damage path.

Salt air and humidity

Even four miles inland from Naples Bay, salt-laden coastal air corrodes exposed metal — railings, cleats, hinges, electrical connectors, battery terminals, brake components on trailers. Humidity averages 75% year-round, which keeps moisture in upholstery, carpet, and engine compartments. The result for outdoor-stored vehicles is corrosion that accelerates 2–3x compared to dry-climate storage, plus persistent mildew in interior cabins.

Afternoon thunderstorms and rain damage

From June through September, Naples receives an average of 8–9 inches of rainfall per month, most of it in intense afternoon thunderstorms. Wind-driven rain finds every seal weakness. RV roof seams, slide-out gaskets, and boat console drains take a beating. Covered storage with proper canopy clearance keeps wind-driven rain off horizontal surfaces and dramatically extends seal life.

Tire degradation

UV plus heat plus humidity ages trailer and RV tires roughly twice as fast as in cooler climates. The industry rule of thumb in Naples: an uncovered trailer tire that should last 5 years lasts closer to 3. Covered storage preserves tire life, sidewall integrity, and reduces blowout risk on the next trip out — which matters because a blown tire on a fully loaded RV on I-75 isn’t just an expense, it’s a safety event.

The Math on Covered Storage

A $30/month premium for covered over outdoor storage = $360/year. Most owners recover that several times over in preserved paint, decals, seals, tires, and battery life — typically within the first 18 to 24 months. On resale, a well-preserved boat or RV brings 10–20% more than a sun-faded equivalent.

Section 06

How to Choose the Right Storage Facility

Not every Naples storage lot deserves your vessel. A 38-foot Sea Ray represents a six-figure asset, and the wrong facility can cost you far more in fade, theft risk, and storm damage than you’ll ever save in rent. Here are the six criteria that separate a professional storage operation from a parking lot with a fence — and the red flags that tell you when to walk away.

Criterion 01

Security Infrastructure

Full perimeter walls (not chain-link), 24/7 gated access with personalized codes, AI-driven security cameras with motion detection, and license plate readers at every entry point.

Red flag: Chain-link fencing, generic CCTV with no recording retention, shared gate codes.

Criterion 02

Hurricane Resilience

Ask two specific questions: how did the facility perform during Hurricane Irma in 2017, and what wind ratings are the covered canopies engineered for?

Red flag: Vague answers, no Irma record, unbranded canopy structures with no published wind rating.

Criterion 03

24/7 Access

If you can’t get to your boat at 5:30 AM on a Saturday, the facility doesn’t work for the lifestyle you bought it for. 24/7 gated access with a personal code is the standard.

Red flag: Limited hours, no after-hours emergency access, manual gate operation.

Criterion 04

30 Amp Electric

Marine and RV batteries discharge in 8–12 weeks. Power hookups in covered storage protect batteries, dehumidifiers, and onboard electronics.

Red flag: No electric available, shared outlets, or per-kWh fees with no metering transparency.

Criterion 05

Ownership & Longevity

A family-owned facility with deep local roots outperforms a corporate-managed lot on the daily details that protect your asset. Ask who owns it and how long they’ve operated.

Red flag: Frequent management turnover, absentee corporate ownership, no name on the door.

Criterion 06

Drive Time

Aim for 10 to 15 minutes from home. Closer than 5 is rare in Naples; farther than 20 discourages regular use — and you’ll stop taking the boat out as often as you should.

Red flag: Anything over 25 minutes from your community.

Section 07

Insurance Implications Most Owners Miss

Where you store your boat or RV directly affects your insurance premium, your covered perils, and your claim outcomes. Most Naples owners discover this only after a claim. A few things worth knowing before you sign with any facility:

Marine and RV policies care where the vehicle sleeps

When you bind a marine or RV policy, your insurer asks for a primary storage location. Storing at a secured, gated facility with documented security infrastructure typically reduces premiums by 5–15% compared to driveway storage. Storing in a hurricane-resilient covered facility can shift hurricane named-storm coverage from a high-deductible peril to a lower-deductible one, depending on the carrier.

Driveway storage is often the riskiest classification

From an underwriter’s perspective, residential driveway storage exposes the vehicle to theft, vandalism, vehicle strike, fallen tree damage, and full-exposure hurricane wind. Some carriers in Florida have begun adding surcharges or coverage limitations for boats and RVs stored at home in Collier County, particularly post-Hurricane Ian. Your premium savings from off-site storage can offset a meaningful portion of the monthly rent.

Homeowner’s policies have liability exclusions you may not know about

If your boat or RV is stored on your homeowner property and an HOA records a lien for fines, some homeowner’s policies treat this as a covenant-breach event that affects coverage. The connections are subtle and policy-specific — worth a 10-minute call to your agent before letting fines accumulate.

Section 08

Which Naples Communities Have the Strictest Rules

Restrictions vary, but these Naples communities consistently rank among the most rigorously enforced for boat, RV, and trailer storage. The “Strictest” tag indicates communities that pursue same-week violation notices, employ private patrols, or have litigated enforcement in the past five years.

Pelican Bay — no recreational vehicles visible from any street; private community patrol; cumulative $100/day fines

Strictest

Park Shore — strict 24-hour visibility rule; active patrols; architectural review denials for screening attempts

Strictest

Olde Naples — district HOA enforcement layered on top of City of Naples parking ordinances; double exposure

Strictest

Pelican Marsh — written notices within 48 hours of violation; documented selective-enforcement defense rejections

Strict

The Vineyards — recreational vehicles prohibited in driveways entirely; no exception if garage door must stay open

Strictest

Lely Resort, Verona Walk, Fiddler’s Creek — documented covenant enforcement; standard 14-day cure periods

Strict

Aqualane Shores — even waterfront homes face restrictions; trailer-launched boats subject to 24-hour staging window only

Strictest

If you live in any of these, off-site storage isn’t a preference — it’s the practical requirement. The enforcement isn’t going to relax, and the secondary market knows it: buyers in these communities now ask sellers where the boat or RV is stored before they make offers.

Section 09

Why Naples Homeowners Choose The Hideout

The Hideout Storage Park is a family-owned Naples storage facility located four miles east of US 41 and Collier Blvd — roughly 10 to 15 minutes from every major Naples community. We’ve operated under the Basik family in Southwest Florida since 1972, and in March 2026, Toy Storage Nation named us Facility of the Month. We’re the largest vehicular storage facility in Florida, and the only Naples facility with a documented zero-damage record through Hurricane Irma.

What that means for your boat or RV:

Covered and outdoor storage options sized for everything from a 22-foot bay boat to a 45-foot Class A motorhome — plus Phase II Elite Storage Condos for owners who want to own their space outright

Baja-engineered canopies on every covered storage space — engineered for sustained Florida hurricane winds, the same system that came through Irma with zero damage

30 amp electric hookups in covered spaces, AI-driven security cameras with license plate recognition, full perimeter walls, and 24/7 gated access via personal codes

Phase II Elite Storage Condos: 25×55 ft units with mezzanine, private bathroom, and custom cabinetry — designed for collectors who want a private workshop alongside their storage

Heather, our office manager, who knows the regular owners by name and remembers what you store — operational continuity corporate facilities don’t offer

After the third HOA letter, I gave up. Heather had me set up at The Hideout the next morning. Best decision I’ve made since moving to Naples.

— Paraphrased from recurring owner feedback

Section 10

Common Mistakes Homeowners Make

The most expensive mistakes we see Naples homeowners make when responding to an HOA storage violation — each one has a dollar figure attached:

Waiting for the second or third notice
Fines compound. Most Naples boards offer a courtesy first-letter cure period at zero cost. Past that, the math runs $100/day. Owners who wait 60 days regularly accrue $3,000–$5,000 in fines before they act.
Choosing the cheapest lot
A $120/month uncovered lot with chain-link fencing saves $1,000/year vs. premium covered — and can cost you $15,000 in sun fade, dried seals, and storm damage over 24 months. Resale takes another 10–20% hit on a sun-faded vessel.
Storing a fueled boat with no battery maintenance
Marine batteries die in 8–12 weeks without a trickle charge. Replacement runs $200–$600 per battery; large RVs and twin-engine boats can total $1,500+ in dead batteries every season. Always confirm 30 amp electric is available.
Forgetting hurricane season starts June 1
Covered storage with engineered canopies fills up by April. Owners who wait until June end up either uncovered (full storm exposure) or commuting 30+ minutes outside Naples. Reserve in February or March if hurricane season matters.
Not asking about Irma performance
Every Naples facility claims security. Few have a 2017 record to prove it. Irma damaged or destroyed canopy systems at several Collier County storage lots — owners with vessels at those facilities filed claims averaging $20,000–$80,000. Always ask.
Not reading the storage contract
Florida self-storage law allows facilities to lien and auction your contents for nonpayment after as little as 60 days. Read the cure period, the auto-renewal clause, and the rate-escalation provision. Family-owned facilities tend to have friendlier terms than corporate operators.
Ready to Solve This Today

Your Boat or RV Deserves Better Than a Driveway Fight

Heather can walk you through availability, pricing, and the right storage type for your vessel in under five minutes.

Reserve Your Space →

Or call directly — 10 to 15 minutes from most Naples communities

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

Can my Naples HOA really fine me for parking my boat in my own driveway?

Yes. Florida Statute 720 gives HOAs the right to enforce recorded covenants, including driveway parking rules. Most Naples HOAs issue a written notice first, then fines of around $100 per offense or per day until the vehicle is moved. Unpaid fines can become liens on your property, and in extreme cases, lead to foreclosure.

Q

How much does HOA-compliant boat storage near me in Naples cost?

Outdoor storage in Naples typically runs $175 to $200 per month. Covered storage with engineered canopies runs $200 to $230 per month. Enclosed units start around $250 per month and rise with size and electric. Most facilities offer month-to-month terms with no long-term contract required.

Q

How far from home should my off-site storage be?

The Naples sweet spot is 10 to 15 minutes from home. The Hideout sits four miles east of US 41 and Collier Blvd, putting most Naples, Marco Island, and Bonita Springs communities within that window. Closer than five minutes is rare; farther than 20 discourages regular use.

Q

Is covered RV storage worth the extra cost in Southwest Florida?

Yes, for most owners. UV exposure in Naples is severe year-round, salt air accelerates corrosion 2–3x faster than dry climates, and afternoon thunderstorms hammer exposed vehicles. Covered storage typically pays for itself in preserved paint, decal, seal, and tire life within 18 to 24 months — plus a 10–20% resale premium.

Q

What happens to stored boats and RVs during a hurricane in Naples?

It depends entirely on the facility. The Hideout came through Hurricane Irma in 2017 with zero damage to stored vehicles thanks to Baja-engineered canopies and full perimeter walls. Lower-grade facilities lost roofs, fences, and stored vessels in the same storm, with owner claims averaging $20,000–$80,000.

Q

Do I need to keep my boat or RV battery on a charger while in storage?

Yes, if you want to start it without trouble. Marine and RV batteries discharge within eight to twelve weeks without a maintainer. Facilities with 30 amp electric hookups in covered spaces let you keep a trickle charger connected, which protects the battery, the electronics, and the engine seals from moisture-related corrosion.

Q

Can I access my stored boat or RV after hours?

At The Hideout, yes — 24/7 gated access with a personal code is standard. Not every Naples facility offers this. If you fish at sunrise or pack up the RV before a Saturday drive, confirm before-dawn access before signing anywhere. Limited-hours facilities turn weekend mornings into headaches.

Q

Is it better to rent storage or buy a storage condo in Naples?

For owners with multiple vehicles, long-term plans in Naples, or collector-grade assets, buying an Elite Storage Condo at The Hideout often makes more financial sense than 10 to 20 years of rent payments. For single-boat or single-RV owners, monthly rental remains the simpler option.

Q

Can my HOA foreclose on my home for unpaid storage-related fines?

Yes, under Florida Statute 720, an HOA can foreclose on a lien filed for unpaid fines, even if your mortgage is fully paid off. This is rare but documented in Collier County. The path: violation → fines → lien recording → collection lawsuit → foreclosure. Most cases settle before foreclosure, but the threat is real.

Q

Does off-site storage lower my boat or RV insurance premium?

Usually yes — by roughly 5 to 15 percent for boat and RV policies, depending on the carrier. Storing at a secured, gated facility with documented security reduces exposure to theft, vandalism, vehicle strike, and storm damage. Some Florida carriers now charge surcharges for home-stored recreational vehicles in coastal counties.

Q

Are storage rates negotiable, and what should I ask for?

At family-owned facilities like The Hideout, yes — particularly for long-term commitments, multiple vehicles, or off-peak move-ins. Ask about prepaid annual discounts, waived move-in fees, locked rate periods, and bundled covered + outdoor pricing if you have both a boat and a trailer. Corporate facilities have less flexibility.

Q

What happens to my stored vehicle if a hurricane is forecast?

At a facility with engineered canopies and full perimeter walls, the vehicle stays put. Owners typically visit pre-storm to remove valuables, secure canvases, and confirm trickle chargers are off. At lower-grade facilities, owners often move vehicles inland or to family property. The Hideout’s Irma record means our owners largely stayed in place and recovered without claims.

The Bottom Line

For Naples Homeowners

An HOA storage violation feels personal when the letter arrives. It isn’t. It’s a community covenant doing exactly what your neighbors voted for it to do — and Florida law gives the board real teeth to enforce it. Fighting it almost always costs more than solving it, and the cost is rarely just legal fees: it’s months of compounding fines, possible liens on your property, insurance complications, and damaged neighbor relations that affect everything from architectural review approvals to resale buyer perception.

The Naples homeowners who handle this best treat the off-site storage decision as an upgrade, not a concession. The right facility protects your boat or RV better than a driveway ever could, costs less than a single 30-day fine cycle, often reduces your insurance premium, and gives you back the weekends you bought the vessel for in the first place.

If you’re ready to talk through your options, Heather and the team at The Hideout are 10 to 15 minutes from most Naples communities and can walk you through covered, outdoor, and Elite Storage Condo availability the same day. Reserve a space at The Hideout and put the HOA letter behind you.

 

Keith Basik

Owner — The Hideout Storage Park

Keith Basik owns and operates The Hideout Storage Park — a 40-acre purpose-built RV, boat, car, and vehicle storage facility in Southeast Naples, FL. His family has been in the Naples and Marco Island area since the early 1970s. Keith has worked with hundreds of Collier County RV and boat owners navigating HOA restrictions and has spent years building a facility specifically designed to solve the off-property storage problem for Southwest Florida residents.