I learned this the hard way. A few years ago I pulled a vintage 50mm lens out of a closet in my parents' house and discovered a spider-web pattern of fungus etched across the rear element. That single moment cost me a $400 repair and pushed me into researching how to store camera gear the right way.
If you are looking for a fast answer: store camera gear in a sealed airtight container with silica gel, keep relative humidity below 65%, remove the batteries, and place the container inside an air-conditioned room or dry cabinet. The rest of this guide walks through the why and how, plus a step-by-step checklist I now use for every lens and body I own.
Whether you are storing a single mirrorless kit or a collection of vintage glass, the same principles apply. Humidity, dust, and temperature swings are the three silent killers of photography equipment. Below, I break down what I have tested in my own workflow and what professional gear maintenance protocols recommend in 2026.
Quickly Move to
Lens fungus is not just a cosmetic problem. Once fungal spores land on optical elements and find moisture above 65% relative humidity, they grow hyphae that chemically etch the coating on your glass. That etching cannot be polished out. In humid climates like Singapore, Mumbai, or coastal Florida, lenses stored unprotected can develop visible fungus in as little as 6 to 12 months.
Battery leakage is the second biggest silent destroyer. Alkaline and even lithium batteries can vent or leak when stored inside a camera body for months. The leaked electrolyte corrodes battery contacts and can migrate onto the circuit board. I have personally seen two cameras written off from a single forgotten set of AA batteries inside a Speedlite.
Dust and debris scratch aperture blades, jam zoom rings, and settle under focus screens. Extreme heat warps plastic mounts and degrades lens lubricant. Cold snaps followed by warm rooms create condensation inside lenses that accelerates fungal growth the moment the moisture settles. Each of these problems is preventable with the right storage setup.
Before you put anything into long-term storage, every piece of gear needs a quick prep pass. I spend about 5 to 10 minutes per item, and it is the single biggest insurance policy against fungus and corrosion.
Use a clean microfiber cloth to remove fingerprints, dust, and skin oils from the camera body and lens barrel. For stubborn grime, slightly dampen the cloth with distilled water, wipe, then immediately follow with a dry microfiber. Never spray anything directly onto the lens or sensor.
Take every battery out of the camera body, Speedlite, grips, and any remote triggers. Storing a battery inside a device for months invites leakage. Store the batteries separately in a cool, dry place at around 40 to 60 percent charge for lithium-ion packs to preserve cell health.
Pull the SD, CFexpress, or XQD card out of the camera. Memory cards left inside cameras for extended periods can be harder to recover if the camera fails. Back up your images to a separate drive, then store the card in a labeled case.
Put both front and rear lens caps on every lens. Cover the camera's lens mount with a body cap. Close every port cover on the body. Sealing off openings dramatically reduces the surface area where fungal spores can settle.
This is the core of the guide. Below are the methods I have personally tested over the past five years, ranked from most budget-friendly to premium.
This is the budget-friendly workhorse method. I keep three of these setups around my studio. A simple plastic food storage container with a rubber gasket seal works well for under $20. A Pelican case is the more durable, crush-proof option if you want extra protection during stacking or transport.
Inside the container, place 1 cup of indicating silica gel per half cubic meter of storage space. Indicating silica gel beads change color from orange to dark green (or blue to pink, depending on the type) when saturated, so you know exactly when to recharge them. Place the silica gel in a breathable cloth bag or old sock so the beads do not spill onto your gear.
Silica gel does not last forever. To regenerate it, spread the beads on a microwave-safe plate and heat them on medium power for 30 seconds to 2 minutes. The exact time depends on the quantity. The beads dry out and return to their original color, ready to absorb moisture again. Repeat this every 4 to 8 weeks depending on your climate.
An air-conditioned room naturally lowers humidity because the AC system pulls moisture out of the air while it cools. Aim for a room temperature between 20°C and 25°C (68°F to 77°F) with humidity below 60%. Warning: when you first bring cold gear into a warm humid room, let it acclimatize in its case for at least 30 minutes. This prevents condensation from forming on cold optical elements.
A standalone dehumidifier is the next step up. I run a 50-pint dehumidifier in my storage closet year-round. It holds the room at around 45% RH, which is comfortably below the fungus threshold. For context, similar cold-weather camera care principles apply to electronics that suffer in high-humidity environments. If you are also shooting in extreme conditions, our guide on the best cameras for cold weather covers gear that handles temperature swings.
A dry cabinet is a sealed glass-door cabinet with a built-in digital dehumidifier and humidity display. You set your target RH (I run mine at 45%) and the cabinet maintains it automatically. This is the gold standard for collectors and working professionals who own more than $5,000 worth of glass. Brands like Eureka, Andbon, and Sirui dominate this category.
Store lenses standing upright on their rear caps, never on their sides. Storing lenses horizontally for months lets gravity slowly shift internal elements and can pool lubricant at the bottom of the zoom mechanism. I learned this from a camera repair technician who showed me a lens with permanently uneven zoom action caused by years of side storage.
Below is a quick comparison to help you pick the right setup for your gear and budget.
Even with perfect storage, inspect your lenses once a year. Here is the routine I follow.
If fungus is present, isolate the affected lens immediately. Spores can spread to other glass in shared storage. A professional cleaning costs $80 to $200 and is worth it if the etching has not yet started.
Film cameras and stored film need slightly different care. Loaded film left inside a camera body for more than a few weeks can degrade, especially in heat. Color film stored above 24°C (75°F) shifts color balance and increases grain. Black and white film is more forgiving but still suffers above 30°C (86°F).
For long-term film storage, keep unexposed rolls in their original sealed packaging inside your dry cabinet or silica gel container at 13°C (55°F) or below. A refrigerator dedicated to film storage is the gold standard for serious film shooters.
Your location changes the playbook. In humid climates (anything above 70% average RH), skip the DIY airtight container and go straight to a dry cabinet or a strong room dehumidifier. In dry climates (below 40% average RH), your main risks are dust and static, so focus on sealing gear in clean, soft padded containers rather than chasing moisture control.
Store your gear in a sealed airtight container with silica gel, keep relative humidity below 65%, remove batteries and memory cards, and place the container in an air-conditioned room or dry cabinet.
Keep relative humidity below 65% at all times using silica gel, a room dehumidifier, or a dry cabinet. Clean lenses before storage, cap both ends, and inspect annually for early signs of fungal growth.
Below 50% relative humidity is ideal. Anything under 65% prevents fungus growth. Above 70% for sustained periods creates high risk of fungal contamination on optical elements.
Loaded color film can degrade in as little as a few weeks in hot conditions above 24°C. Black and white film tolerates longer. For best results, develop film within a few weeks of shooting or store unexposed rolls in a refrigerator at 13°C or below.
Use about 1 cup of indicating silica gel per half cubic meter of storage container. Recharge the beads in a microwave every 4 to 8 weeks or when the color indicator shows saturation.
Knowing how to store camera gear to prevent fungus and damage comes down to controlling three things: humidity, temperature, and cleanliness. Start with a simple airtight container and silica gel if you are on a budget, then graduate to a dry cabinet as your collection grows.
Set a calendar reminder to inspect your lenses once a year. Check silica gel monthly. Recharge or replace desiccant as needed. With a 30-minute setup and a few minutes of maintenance per month, your gear will outlast the next decade of camera releases.