SWAMP, short for Storage/Warehouse Asset Management Program, is self-storage management software from Quayle Computer Concepts. According to the site, it first entered the national market in 1998. It is a Windows-based program that grew out of the founder’s family self-storage business and its real operational needs. The product is positioned as software that “helps manage a self-storage business,” with particular emphasis on smaller operators and reasonable pricing.
Based on the FAQ and product story, SWAMP mainly covers the basic day-to-day workflows of self-storage operations: generating rent, handling past-due amounts, and calculating late fees as a flat fee, a percentage, or a combination of both. It supports income and expense categories, with the ability to add an unlimited number of categories, as well as payment entry, prorated rent, and rate changes. Earlier use cases also included printing invoices, late notices, lockout notices, and envelopes, along with maintaining occupancy and income records. Overall, it looks more like a traditional desktop business system for storage operators than a modern multi-platform SaaS product.
The available text does not disclose specific pricing, plans, licensing terms, or whether a trial version is available; it only repeatedly emphasizes that the software is “inexpensive” and offered at a “reasonable price.” In terms of deployment, it is only clearly described as a Windows program. There is no mention of cloud deployment, self-hosted servers, mobile access, or browser-based use. Third-party integrations, online payments, gate access systems, accounting software sync, APIs, and developer support are also not mentioned, so these capabilities should not be assumed.
Its strengths are a clearly defined industry use case and features built around the core needs of self-storage operators, including rent, late fees, payment collection, categories, and notices. The founding team also combines storage operation experience with programming expertise, and emphasizes listening to customer suggestions and continuously adding features. The drawbacks are also obvious: the public information appears dated, and there is little explanation of modern enterprise software essentials such as permissions and collaboration, data security, compliance, backups, integration ecosystems, or APIs. For operators with multiple locations, remote work needs, or online payment requirements, the available information is insufficient.
SWAMP is better suited to small self-storage operators, especially those looking to replace manual bookkeeping, spreadsheets, and document printing with local Windows software. The source text does not provide information about access from China, so domain connectivity, payment methods, and local support are all unknown. If you operate a storage business in China, you should carefully evaluate the English interface, tax and invoicing compatibility, network access, and payment feasibility. Alternative options may include local warehouse management systems, industrial park leasing systems, or using inventory/accounting software to cover basic management needs.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on quayles.com official site.
quayles.com is an Canada SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach quayles.com directly.