Skip to content
Sheds & Structures

Collection: Sheds & Structures

Discover handcrafted small sheds, gazebos, pergolas and playhouses — built from Western Red Cedar to last for decades.

67 products

4' x 2' Garden Chalet Shed
Sale
4.7
Rated 4.7 out of 5 stars
51 Reviews

4' x 2' Garden Chalet Shed

Regular price $885.00 USD
Sale price $885.00 USD Regular price $999.00 USD
6' x 3' Oscar Waste Management Shed
4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
11 Reviews

6' x 3' Oscar Waste Management Shed

Regular price $1,599.00 USD
Sale price $1,599.00 USD Regular price $1,599.00 USD
6' x 3' Patio Garden Shed
Sale
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
128 Reviews

6' x 3' Patio Garden Shed

Regular price From $1,739.00 USD
Sale price From $1,739.00 USD Regular price $1,799.00 USD
8' x 4' GardenSaver Storage Shed - Single Door
Sale
4.9
Rated 4.9 out of 5 stars
16 Reviews

8' x 4' GardenSaver Storage Shed - Single Door

Regular price $3,200.00 USD
Sale price $3,200.00 USD Regular price $3,299.00 USD
8' x 4' GardenSaver Storage Shed - Double Doors
4.9
Rated 4.9 out of 5 stars
16 Reviews

8' x 4' GardenSaver Storage Shed - Double Doors

Regular price $3,299.00 USD
Sale price $3,299.00 USD Regular price $3,299.00 USD
12' x 4' GardenSaver Storage Shed - Sliding Double Doors
4.9
Rated 4.9 out of 5 stars
16 Reviews

12' x 4' GardenSaver Storage Shed - Sliding Double Doors

Regular price From $4,099.00 USD
Sale price From $4,099.00 USD Regular price
8' x 4' SpaceSaver Storage Shed - Single Door
Sale
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
40 Reviews

8' x 4' SpaceSaver Storage Shed - Single Door

Regular price $3,200.00 USD
Sale price $3,200.00 USD Regular price $3,299.00 USD
8' x 4' SpaceSaver Storage Shed - Double Doors
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
40 Reviews

8' x 4' SpaceSaver Storage Shed - Double Doors

Regular price $3,299.00 USD
Sale price $3,299.00 USD Regular price $3,299.00 USD
12' x 4' SpaceSaver Storage Shed - Sliding Double Doors
Sale
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
40 Reviews

12' x 4' SpaceSaver Storage Shed - Sliding Double Doors

Regular price From $3,929.00 USD
Sale price From $3,929.00 USD Regular price $4,099.00 USD
6' x 4' Space Master Storage Shed - Double Doors
Sale
5.0
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars
1 Review

6' x 4' Space Master Storage Shed - Double Doors

Regular price $2,119.00 USD
Sale price $2,119.00 USD Regular price $2,199.00 USD
6' x 6' Maximizer Cedar Storage Shed
Sale
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
6 Reviews

6' x 6' Maximizer Cedar Storage Shed

Regular price From $3,649.00 USD
Sale price From $3,649.00 USD Regular price $3,899.00 USD
8' x 8' Gardener Cedar Storage Shed

8' x 8' Gardener Cedar Storage Shed

Regular price From $4,199.00 USD
Sale price From $4,199.00 USD Regular price
9' x 9' Western Red Cedar – Penthouse Shed

9' x 9' Western Red Cedar – Penthouse Shed

Regular price $7,499.00 USD
Sale price $7,499.00 USD Regular price $7,499.00 USD
8' x 8' SunShed Garden Shed
Sale
4.6
Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars
11 Reviews

8' x 8' SunShed Garden Shed

Regular price From $5,449.00 USD
Sale price From $5,449.00 USD Regular price $5,699.00 USD
8' x 12' SunShed Garden Shed
Sale
4.6
Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars
11 Reviews

8' x 12' SunShed Garden Shed

Regular price From $6,699.00 USD
Sale price From $6,699.00 USD Regular price $6,999.00 USD
12' x 12' SunShed Garden Shed
Sale
4.6
Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars
11 Reviews

12' x 12' SunShed Garden Shed

Regular price From $7,659.00 USD
Sale price From $7,659.00 USD Regular price $7,999.00 USD
12' x 16' SunShed Garden Shed
Sale
4.6
Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars
11 Reviews

12' x 16' SunShed Garden Shed

Regular price From $9,759.00 USD
Sale price From $9,759.00 USD Regular price $10,199.00 USD
8' x 12' Space Master Cedar Storage Shed
4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
6 Reviews

8' x 12' Space Master Cedar Storage Shed

Regular price From $5,499.00 USD
Sale price From $5,499.00 USD Regular price
12' x 12' Space Master Cedar Storage Shed
4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
6 Reviews

12' x 12' Space Master Cedar Storage Shed

Regular price From $7,099.00 USD
Sale price From $7,099.00 USD Regular price
12' x 16' Space Master Cedar Storage Shed
4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
6 Reviews

12' x 16' Space Master Cedar Storage Shed

Regular price From $8,399.00 USD
Sale price From $8,399.00 USD Regular price $8,399.00 USD
10' Cedar Panelized Octagon Gazebo
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
4 Reviews

10' Cedar Panelized Octagon Gazebo

Regular price From $8,999.00 USD
Sale price From $8,999.00 USD Regular price $8,999.00 USD
12' Cedar Panelized Octagon Gazebo
4.8
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
4 Reviews

12' Cedar Panelized Octagon Gazebo

Regular price From $10,299.00 USD
Sale price From $10,299.00 USD Regular price $10,270.00 USD
6' x 6' Little Cedar Playhouse & Sandbox

6' x 6' Little Cedar Playhouse & Sandbox

Regular price $2,999.00 USD
Sale price $2,999.00 USD Regular price $2,999.00 USD
6' x 9' Cedar Playhouse & Sandbox
5.0
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars
2 Reviews

6' x 9' Cedar Playhouse & Sandbox

Regular price $4,699.00 USD
Sale price $4,699.00 USD Regular price $4,699.00 USD

Understanding small sheds and garden structures

A small shed is one of the most useful additions to any backyard. It keeps mowers, hand tools, pots, fertilizers and seasonal gear dry, organized and out of the weather — and it does so without taking over the yard the way a full-size outbuilding does. Most homeowners look at small sheds when their garage, deck box or basement has stopped keeping pace with the season's tool collection, or when a growing garden needs a dedicated home for trowels, twine and seed trays.

This collection brings together small storage sheds and the broader family of garden structures — gazebos, pergolas and playhouses — that turn a plain yard into a usable, beautiful outdoor space. Most structures here ship as pre-cut cedar shed kits made from Western Red Cedar, delivered to your door and engineered for straightforward assembly. The reason we focus on cedar is simple: it lasts. A well-made cedar shed easily outlives the plastic and stamped-metal alternatives sold at most big-box stores, and it looks like a piece of the garden rather than a piece of equipment dropped onto the lawn.

Pair your new shed with a cedar potting table or matching planter boxes for a coherent garden setup that ages gracefully together.

How to choose a small shed (buying guide)

Before you click "add to cart" on any small shed, walk through these five practical questions. They decide whether the shed you buy in May is still serving you well in five winters.

  • Footprint and capacity. Most homeowners under-buy. Measure what you plan to store — push mower, wheelbarrow, two bicycles, a workbench, a season's worth of fertilizer — and add 20–30% for the gear you will accumulate. A 4'×3' tool shed handles hand tools and a small mower; a 6'×8' garden shed accommodates a full kit including a wheelbarrow and shelving; an 8'×12' design adds workbench space.
  • Material and lifespan. Plastic sheds typically last 7–10 years before UV damage shows; light-gauge metal sheds rust at panel seams once the coating fails; cedar, with periodic sealing, will outlast every other option in the same price band. If you intend to keep the shed for the life of the property, choose wood.
  • Site preparation. Every shed needs a level, well-drained base. A gravel pad, concrete slab or pressure-treated wood platform protects the floor from ground moisture and frost heave. Skipping the base is the single most common reason wooden sheds rot prematurely.
  • Climate fit. In wet coastal climates, a steeper roof pitch and full-shingle roof shed water faster. In hot, dry regions, ventilation through a window or roof vent prevents heat buildup that warps tools and dries out seeds. Snow-load regions need a roof rated for the local pound-per-square-foot maximum.
  • Security and permits. A locking door is the difference between a tool shed and a free pantry for the neighborhood. Check your municipality's permit threshold — most U.S. jurisdictions allow sheds under 100–200 square feet without a permit, but verify with your building department before you order.

Types of garden structures in this collection

The collection includes more than just sheds. Each category has a different job to do in the yard:

  • Small storage sheds. Compact footprint (typically 4'×2' to 6'×8'), designed for tools, mowers and seasonal gear — like our GardenSaver storage shed. Best for urban yards and gardens where every square foot counts.
  • Full-size garden sheds. 8'×8' and larger — such as the EZ-Fit Homestead Shed — suited to workshops, potting stations and serious garden use. Pairs naturally with a raised garden bed setup.
  • Gazebos. Open-sided pavilions, typically octagonal, with a full roof. Used as a shaded sitting area, a dining spot or a focal point in a larger landscape design. Cedar gazebos withstand decades of seasonal weather when sealed regularly, while aluminum models cost less and sit safely beside a grill.
  • Pergolas. Roofless overhead structures with lattice or open-rafter ceilings. Designed to support climbing plants — wisteria, grapevines, roses — and to define a transitional space between garden zones. Especially effective over a patio or seating area. See, for example, our premium cedar pergola kit.
  • Playhouses. Children's structures built to adult-grade construction standards. The cedar models in this collection — like our cedar playhouse and sandbox — often include sandbox bases, climbing features and weatherproof roofs that outlast the childhood they were bought for.

Cedar vs. plastic vs. metal — why material matters

This is the question that decides almost everything else. Most small sheds sold in North America fall into one of three material families, and they perform very differently over a 10- to 20-year horizon.

Cedar (Western Red Cedar in particular) is naturally rot-resistant, insect-repellent and dimensionally stable. It contains natural oils that resist decay even in damp climates, and unlike pressure-treated lumber it does not require harsh chemical preservatives. A cedar shed will silver to a soft gray if left untreated, or hold its warm reddish-brown tone with a clear sealant applied every two to three years. Lifespan with reasonable care: 20–30+ years.

Plastic and resin sheds are inexpensive, lightweight and arrive in fewer pieces, which makes them tempting. The downsides accumulate quickly: UV damage causes panels to fade and become brittle within five to seven years; high wind can lift unanchored plastic sheds; and the material is essentially landfill-bound at end of life. Lifespan: 7–10 years typical.

Metal sheds are the cheapest entry point. Galvanized or powder-coated steel resists rot, but the coating eventually fails at panel seams and fasteners, and rust spreads. Metal sheds also condense moisture inside on cool mornings, which damages tools. Lifespan: 10–15 years before structural rust becomes an issue.

EarthEasy's cedar shed kits cost more upfront. The math changes once you amortize: a $1,500 cedar shed that lasts 25 years is far cheaper per year than a $600 plastic shed that needs replacement twice in the same window — and that's before you account for the visual upgrade to the garden and the lower environmental footprint of a single long-lived structure.

Caring for your wooden shed

A cedar shed needs only modest care to deliver decades of service. The full maintenance routine fits on one hand:

  • Seal the wood every two to three years. A clear water-repellent or UV-blocking penetrating sealer (not paint) protects the cedar from sun bleaching and slows moisture cycling. Apply on a dry day, two thin coats.
  • Keep the base dry. Once a year, walk around the shed and clear leaves, mulch and soil away from the bottom plate. Standing organic matter against the wood is the fastest path to rot.
  • Inspect the roof in late fall. Replace any cracked shingles before snow load arrives. A 30-minute fall inspection prevents a leaking roof in March.
  • Tighten hardware annually. Hinges, latches and door handles loosen with seasonal expansion. A quick check with a screwdriver keeps the door square and the lock functional.
  • Lift trapped moisture inside. If you store fertilizer or potting mix, use sealed containers. Open the shed for an hour on dry, breezy days to flush damp air. Good airflow is what makes a cedar shed last a lifetime.

For deeper care across your wooden garden investments, browse our raised bed collection — the same care principles apply to every cedar product in the EarthEasy range.

Final tips and what to do next

The right small shed pays for itself the first time you walk into a tidy, dry space instead of digging through a tarp in the rain. Three closing thoughts before you choose:

  • Buy slightly larger than you think you need. It is the most common regret in shed buying.
  • Invest in a proper base before delivery. A level gravel pad or concrete slab takes a weekend and adds a decade of life.
  • Treat the shed as part of the garden, not as a utility object. A cedar shed paired with matching planter boxes and a potting table reads as one designed space, and that pays back in everyday enjoyment.

Browse the collection above to find the size, style and structure that fits your yard — and reach out if you want help matching a shed to the rest of your garden.