Why the count matters more than the budget
Buying too small is more expensive than buying right.
The most common mistake we see is parents buying a storage solution that is slightly too small for the real collection — usually because they estimated instead of counted. The garage fills up immediately. The overflow returns to the floor. The parent buys a second solution six months later to handle the overflow. The total spend ends up higher than if they had bought the right-sized garage the first time.
A 91-slot garage for a collection of eighty cars will have eleven spare slots on day one. Within three months, those eleven slots will be full and the overflow problem will be back. Buy for the collection you will have in twelve months, not the one you have today. Add twenty to thirty percent to whatever the count tells you, and choose the tier that covers that number.
The opposite mistake — buying too large — is much less costly. A 94-slot garage for a collection of thirty cars means the child has sixty-four empty slots. Those slots fill up over time. The garage does not become irrelevant; it grows into the collection. The only downside of buying slightly too large is that the piece looks partially empty for a year. The downside of buying too small is that it fails immediately and needs replacing.
When in doubt, go up one tier. The collection will catch up. The garage will not shrink.


