Freezer Trailer Rental for Bakeries & Commercial Baking
When a production run outgrows your walk-in, or the walk-in freezer quits at the worst possible hour, KryoFridge stages a food-safe freezer or refrigerated trailer right at your bakery across California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Hawaii. We run one of the largest dual-purpose trailer fleets in the West, backed by 30+ years in the equipment-rental industry.
A freezer trailer is the fastest way for a bakery to add walk-in-grade cold storage exactly where the flour meets the bench, with no permanent build, no permit, and no scramble for freezer space the morning your wholesale orders are due. Park it beside the loading dock, plug it in, and you have hundreds of cubic feet of temperature-controlled space holding frozen dough, laminated croissant blocks, par-baked bread, sheeted pie shells, buttercream cakes, and cheesecakes at the exact setpoints your product needs. For a bakery pushing through a holiday production run or stocking a brand-new location, that difference is measured in orders that ship complete and dough that bakes off with full volume, not in a Sunday spent triaging a warm freezer.
Bakeries reach for a rented freezer trailer for a handful of recurring reasons, and the questions are always the same: when to book, what size fits the production volume, the temperature and power setup that keeps dough and finished product safe, how delivery and placement work, and how a trailer compares to squeezing more into the walk-in or renting a reefer truck. How KryoFridge answers each one comes straight from how we actually dispatch to retail bakeries, wholesale plants, commissaries, and dessert kitchens across our six regions, not a generic spec sheet. Whether you run a single storefront, a wholesale bread operation feeding grocery accounts, or a dessert company holding thousands of cheesecakes, the same trailer flexes to fit. And it slots into your day right alongside our freezer trailer rental for catering and event work, since so many bakeries handle both wholesale and event orders under one roof.
The #1 Choice for Bakery Cold Storage in the West
KryoFridge is a direct, owner-operated refrigeration company, not a broker or reseller that farms your bakery out to whoever has a trailer free. You deal with the people who own the fleet, and that fleet is built specifically for food-grade cold storage.
Every KryoFridge trailer is dual-purpose: the same unit runs as a deep freezer for dough, laminated blocks, and par-baked product, or as a refrigerator for retarding, cold proofing, and dessert holding, so a bakery is never locked into one mode for a production week that needs both. That flexibility, paired with one of the largest fleets in our markets, is why we can cover a peak holiday week when every commissary in the region is maxed out and a single-trailer operator is already committed elsewhere. And because we own every trailer, there is no broker or third-party middleman standing between your bakery and the unit. We come from a long line of rental entrepreneurs, and cold storage is what we do every day.



When Bakeries Rent a Freezer Trailer
Most bakery cold-storage needs fall into a handful of patterns. But each one runs on a different timeline and calls for a different setpoint. Here are the six we field most often.
Frozen Dough & Par-Baked Holding
Sheeted dough, par-baked baguettes, and rolls hold for months at 0°F. A trailer adds deep-freeze capacity when your production outruns the built-in freezer.
Retarding & Cold Proofing
Overnight retards and cold proofing need a steady refrigerated setpoint. Run the trailer as a walk-in retarder when your proof box and cooler are full.
Laminated Dough
Croissant, danish, and puff blocks live or die on steady cold. A trailer holds them at 0°F with none of the swings that break the butter layers.
Walk-In Freezer Failure
When the walk-in freezer quits, months of frozen dough inventory are on the clock. A trailer on-site fast is the difference between a save and a total loss.
Holiday & Wholesale Surges
Thanksgiving pies, Christmas volume, and grocery wholesale spikes bury a bakery. Temporary capacity covers the surge without overbuilding for slow months.
New-Location Stocking
Opening a second shop? Park a trailer at the new site to build frozen dough and product inventory before the permanent walk-in is even commissioned.
When the Walk-In Freezer Fails, the Clock Starts
The walk-in freezer is the vault of a commercial bakery. Months of sheeted dough, laminated croissant blocks, par-baked bread, pie shells, and finished cakes sit inside it, and every one of them represents days of labor and real money already spent. When that walk-in fails, and it always seems to fail on a weekend or a holiday, the product does not wait. Frozen dough that thaws and refreezes loses gas retention and bakes off flat. Laminated blocks that soften bleed butter and lose their lamination for good. A bakery can lose an entire quarter of frozen inventory in the hours it takes to find help.
A rented freezer trailer stops that loss cold. We keep emergency dispatch moving across California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico, so when the call comes in we prep a trailer and route the nearest unit to your dock. You transfer the frozen inventory into a trailer already pulled down to 0°F, and the product holds while your walk-in gets repaired. One wholesale bakery owner who lost a compressor on a Saturday told us afterward that the trailer was the only reason Monday’s grocery orders shipped at all.
A bakery with a dead walk-in still needs walk-in-grade cold storage. The trailer brings it fast.
One Trailer, Every Setpoint a Bakery Runs
A single KryoFridge trailer holds any setpoint between -10°F and +50°F, covering every cold zone a baking operation uses. Where a bakery’s product sits on that scale:
Our Freezer Trailers, Hard at Work for Real Bakeries
Every one of these started with a phone call from a bakery that suddenly had more product than cold storage. Different situation each time, same result: the dough stayed safe and the orders shipped.
Golden Crumb Bakehouse: A Saturday Compressor Loss
A Bay Area wholesale bakery lost the compressor on its main walk-in freezer on a Saturday with a full week of grocery orders staged inside. We prepped a trailer and had it at their dock so the frozen dough transferred straight across.
Sugar Pine Pie Co.: A Thanksgiving Pie Run
A Sacramento pie shop takes thousands of pre-orders across Thanksgiving week and had nowhere near the freezer space to hold par-baked shells and finished pies. A 6×16 trailer parked out back carried the whole run.
Rue Beurre Bakery: Protecting the Lamination
A Las Vegas croissanterie sheets and shapes days of laminated dough ahead, but summer heat kept spiking the walk-in every time the door opened. A dedicated trailer held the blocks at a rock-steady 0°F.
Wasatch Hearth Breads: Stocking Store Number Three
A Salt Lake bakery group opened a third location and needed to build frozen dough inventory before the permanent walk-in was installed and commissioned. A trailer on-site became the freezer for the entire pre-opening ramp.
Desert Rise Baking Co.: A Grocery Account Ramp
A Phoenix wholesale bakery landed a new grocery chain account that doubled its frozen output overnight, well past the commissary’s built-in freezer. A trailer absorbed the overflow while a permanent expansion was planned.
Isla Dulce Desserts: A Valentine’s Cheesecake Crush
An Oahu dessert company builds thousands of cheesecakes and mousse cakes for the Valentine’s window and ran out of refrigerated holding. A trailer set to a steady refrigerated hold carried the finished-product overflow.
None of these are lucky exceptions. They are what a large, owner-operated fleet and a dispatch team that actually answers the phone make routine, across every kind of cold-storage gap a bakery can hit. Whatever the situation, the difference between orders that ship and product you have to throw out comes down to who you call and how far ahead you lock in the trailer.
What Size Freezer Trailer Does Your Bakery Need?
Match the trailer to the production you’re holding, not to your whole plant. Most single-location bakeries land on a 6×12 or 6×16. High-volume wholesale runs, holiday production, and multi-location commissaries step up to an 8×20 or run two trailers split between freezer and refrigerator.
| Trailer | Approx. capacity | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 6×12 | ~1 small walk-in | Retail bakery, single-shop dough & product holding, short overflow |
| 6×16 | ~1.5 walk-ins | Busy retail shop, holiday pie or bread run, wholesale week |
| 8×20 | ~2 to 3 walk-ins | Wholesale plant, grocery account ramp, large holiday production |
| Multi-trailer | Scaled to demand | Freezer + retarder split, commissary overflow, multi-location stocking |
A quick way to right-size: estimate how many days of frozen dough and product you hold at peak and how many of those need frozen versus refrigerated holding. A standard 6×16 comfortably stages a busy retail shop’s frozen dough plus a holiday run with room to organize by product, while a 6×12 suits a single storefront’s day-to-day overflow. If your operation carries both frozen and refrigerated loads at once, say frozen dough and par-baked product alongside retarding racks and cheesecakes, tell us. We can either run one trailer split between a freezer zone and a refrigerated zone, or stage two units side by side so neither load compromises the other. So when in doubt, size up one step. Running out of freezer space mid-production is a far bigger risk than a little extra room.
Sealed, washable, food-safe interiors, with shelving that racks sheet pans and dough boxes like a permanent walk-in.
Freezer and retarder in one trailer
Every KryoFridge unit holds a tight, adjustable setpoint as warm as +50°F or as cold as -10°F, so the same trailer can run as a deep freezer for dough, laminated blocks, and par-baked product or as a refrigerator for retarding, cold proofing, and dessert holding. For a bakery we keep frozen product at 0°F or colder and refrigerated holding at or below 41°F per the FDA Food Code.
Our team sets the exact temperature your product needs before the trailer ever reaches your dock, and the unit holds that setpoint steadily, hour after hour. There is no monitoring or logging service to buy from us. The trailer has a digital setpoint control on the unit and holds its temperature, and your team records readings under your own HACCP or food-safety plan, exactly the way you already do for a permanent walk-in.
Holding Frozen Dough, Laminated Blocks & Par-Baked Product
Frozen dough is the backbone of a modern bakery’s production schedule. Sheeted and shaped dough holds for months at 0°F, letting a shop bake off fresh from frozen every morning instead of mixing from scratch. But that only works if the freezer holds a truly steady temperature. Dough that warms and refreezes loses the gas cells that give it volume, so it bakes off dense and short. Par-baked bread, the two-stage method where loaves are baked partway, blast frozen, then finished at point of sale, is just as unforgiving of temperature swings.
Laminated dough is the most temperature-sensitive product a bakery makes. Croissant, danish, and puff blocks are built from paper-thin butter layers folded through the dough, and that structure survives only when the block stays cold and steady. Held below the point where the butter softens, the layers stay crisp and separate, and the pastry puffs into hundreds of leaves in the oven. Let it warm and the butter melts into the dough, the lamination is gone, and no oven can bring it back. A KryoFridge trailer holds 0°F without the door-open swings that plague a busy walk-in, which is exactly why bakeries lean on it to protect their most valuable, most fragile product.
Steady 0°F holding keeps frozen dough and laminated blocks bake-ready, run after run.
Powering the Trailer: Generator or a Dedicated 20-Amp Circuit
A freezer trailer needs continuous power to hold temperature, and at a bakery there are two clean ways to feed it. We confirm which one fits your site during the quote so delivery is one-and-done.
Dedicated 20-Amp Circuit
A KryoFridge trailer runs on a dedicated 120V, 20-amp circuit within 100 feet of where it parks. It is never a 208 or 240 volt hookup. If your bakery can spare one, we confirm it during the quote so the unit powers up the moment it lands.
Standby Generator
Back lot, gravel yard, or no spare circuit near the dock? We add a quiet diesel generator so the trailer holds temperature anywhere, no bakery power needed and no electrician.
Set & Hold
We dial in your exact setpoint before delivery, anywhere from a refrigerated retarder to a deep freezer, and the unit holds it steadily once it is plugged in or running on the generator.
Power is the single most common cause of a delivery hiccup, which is why we settle it before the trailer leaves the yard. Many bakeries have a dedicated 120V, 20-amp circuit free near the dock, and when they do, the trailer simply plugs in and pulls down to setpoint. When the nearest open circuit is too far away or already loaded by ovens, mixers, and sheeters, the standby generator solves it without pulling an electrician or tripping your kitchen’s power. To be exact about the spec so there is no confusion on site: it is a dedicated 120V, 20-amp circuit within 100 feet, or a generator. It is not a 208 or 240 volt connection. Getting that right on the quote is what keeps the drop clean and the compressor running from the moment the trailer lands.
Delivery, Setup & Where to Park It at the Bakery
Planned rentals land in a scheduled delivery window you pick, usually ahead of your production so your team can load on its own schedule. For a walk-in failure we move as fast as our fleet allows. Here’s the four-step flow.
Freezer Trailer vs. Walk-In vs. Reefer Truck for a Bakery
Bakeries weighing extra cold storage usually compare three options. For a surge, a failure, or a new location, the trailer wins on speed and flexibility. Here’s the honest breakdown.
Freezer Trailer
- Walk-in capacity at your dock in days, not months
- Freezer or refrigerated retarder, holds steady
- Generator option = works anywhere on the lot
- Daily to monthly terms, no capital tied up
Built-In Walk-In
- Weeks to months to build and commission
- Permit, contractor, and permanent floor space
- Fixed capacity you overbuild for slow months
- No help the day yours fails
Reefer Truck
- Ties up a whole vehicle and cab
- Engine idles to make power
- Awkward tailgate loading height for sheet pans
- Built for transport, not steady on-site storage
A permanent walk-in is the right long-term answer for your baseline capacity, but it takes weeks or months to build, it needs a permit and floor space, and it does nothing for you the afternoon it fails or the week a holiday run doubles your volume. A reefer truck can hold cold in a pinch, but it sacrifices a whole vehicle, runs its engine to keep the box cold, and forces staff to load at tailgate height all shift. A dedicated freezer trailer threads the needle: it arrives ready in days, sits at a workable height with real shelving for sheet pans and dough boxes, holds a rock-steady freezer or refrigerated setpoint, runs on a generator anywhere on the lot, and bills on whatever term the job needs. That’s why it’s the default choice when a bakery needs cold storage now.
Scaling Cold Storage for Holiday & Wholesale Surges
Cold storage isn’t only a failure tool. It’s also how a high-volume bakery scales for a busy stretch without overbuilding for the slow months. The Thanksgiving-to-Christmas pie and bread run, the Valentine’s and Mother’s Day dessert windows, wedding-cake season, and a new grocery wholesale account all hit the same wall: not enough freezer in the commissary for a short, predictable spike in production. Turning away a grocery reorder or capping holiday pre-orders because your walk-in is full is revenue you never get back.
A trailer rented for the surge gives you the capacity exactly when you need it and goes away when you don’t. Park it beside the commissary and use it to build ahead, staging frozen dough, par-baked product, pie shells, and finished cakes for weeks of orders at once, then release the unit once the season clears, with no capital tied up in walk-in space that sits empty most of the year. One bakery owner who ran a December trailer told us afterward that they took every wholesale reorder for the first time in years instead of capping the list.
Scale freezer capacity for the holiday crush, then send the trailer back in January.
Food-Safe Construction & Health-Code Compliance for Baking
A freezer trailer that touches dough and finished product has to do more than get cold. It has to satisfy the same temperature and sanitation logic a health department applies to any cold-holding equipment in a permitted bakery.
Our trailers are built with sealed, washable, food-safe interiors made for food contact, not a dusty cargo box pressed into service. Insulated walls hold the setpoint through a hot summer afternoon, and the temperature range supports HACCP plans and the health-department requirements your county applies to a baking operation. The core standard is simple: frozen dough and par-baked product stay solid at 0°F, and any refrigerated product stays at or below 41°F, and a KryoFridge unit holds those temperatures the same way a permanent walk-in does.
If you maintain a HACCP plan or a food-safety program, a rented trailer simply slots in as another cold-holding unit under your existing monitoring and corrective-action steps. To be clear about scope: we provide the cold-holding equipment and the digital setpoint control on the unit, but we do not provide a temperature-monitoring, logging, or alarm service, so your team records temperatures under your own plan just as it would for built-in equipment. For the federal baseline behind all of this, the FDA Food Code spells out the time-and-temperature rules every bakery works to, and your county environmental-health office is the final word on local requirements.
Where KryoFridge Delivers Bakery Cold Storage
We dispatch freezer and refrigerated trailers across six regions from regional yards, so your bakery gets a unit from the nearest base, not a cross-country wait. Browse our full freezer trailer rental hub for every service and city we cover.
In California we cover the heaviest bakery and wholesale volume in our footprint, from Los Angeles and the Southland through San Francisco and the Bay Area, up to Sacramento and the Central Valley. In Nevada we serve the Las Vegas valley’s enormous hospitality and wholesale bakery calendar, and across Utah we reach Salt Lake and the Wasatch Front. In Arizona we cover Phoenix and the surrounding metro, and across New Mexico we reach Albuquerque and the Rio Grande corridor. Hawaii works a little differently, because island logistics reward booking well ahead, so we line up the trailer in advance rather than last-minute. Wherever your bakery is in our footprint, the call starts the same way: tell us your product volume, your dates, and your site, and we’ll route the nearest unit.
What Bakeries Say
Illustrative testimonials. Verified customer reviews are being collected and will replace these.
“Our main walk-in freezer died on a Saturday with a full week of grocery orders inside. They had a trailer at our dock and we transferred everything straight across. Saved the whole account.”
“We hold days of laminated dough ahead and summer kept spiking the walk-in. The trailer held a dead-steady 0 degrees and every croissant kept its layers. We book one every summer now.”
“Thanksgiving week we take thousands of pie pre-orders and never have the freezer for it. A trailer out back held the entire run. Easy team, painless pickup.”
Bakery Freezer Trailer Rental FAQ
How cold does a freezer trailer get for frozen dough?
Can one trailer handle both frozen dough and refrigerated retarding?
How do you power a freezer trailer at a bakery?
My walk-in freezer just failed. How fast can you get a trailer out?
What size freezer trailer does a bakery need?
Is a freezer trailer food-safe for dough and finished product?
Can I use a trailer to stock a new bakery location before it opens?
How long can I rent, just for the holiday rush?
Will laminated dough like croissants and danish hold up in a trailer?
Do you monitor or log the temperature for me?
How do I get a quote for a bakery freezer trailer?
Which areas do you serve for bakeries?
Bakery Cold-Storage Field Notes
Short, practical reads from the way we actually dispatch to bakeries. Skim these before you book and you’ll size and place the trailer right the first time.
Holding Frozen Dough Without Losing Volume
Frozen dough keeps for months at a steady 0°F, but the enemy is temperature swing, not time. Every warm-and-refreeze cycle costs gas retention, so bakes come out shorter and denser. The fix is a freezer that holds its setpoint through door traffic and summer heat, which is exactly where a busy walk-in struggles and a dedicated trailer shines. When you transfer dough into a trailer, load it already pulled down to 0°F, keep boxes off the floor and away from the door, and do the transfer in one clean pass so the product barely warms.
Retarding & Cold Proofing in a Rented Trailer
Retarding slows fermentation by holding shaped dough cold, typically in the 35°F to 40°F band, so you can proof overnight and bake fresh in the morning. Run a KryoFridge trailer as a refrigerated retarder when your proof box and cooler are full, and keep laminated dough at or below the point where the roll-in butter softens. Rack the trailer so airflow reaches every tray, and give the unit time to recover its setpoint after a big door-open transfer before you rely on it for a critical overnight retard.
Sizing a Trailer for a Holiday Production Run
Holiday runs spike frozen and refrigerated demand at the same time: par-baked shells and frozen dough on the freezer side, finished pies and cream desserts on the refrigerated side. Estimate your peak days of held product, split it frozen versus refrigerated, and size up one step from your first guess. A 6×16 carries most single-shop holiday runs, while wholesale plants and multi-location groups step to an 8×20 or a freezer-plus-refrigerator pair. Book early, because peak weeks book out across every yard.
Getting Power Right Before Delivery
The trailer runs on a dedicated 120V, 20-amp circuit within 100 feet, or on a standby generator we provide. It is never a 208 or 240 volt connection. Bakeries are full of high-draw equipment, so the open circuit near your dock may already be loaded by ovens, mixers, and sheeters. Tell us what’s free during the quote and we’ll match the trailer to a real dedicated circuit or bring the generator, so the compressor runs the moment the unit lands and never fights your kitchen for power.
Reserve a Freezer Trailer for Your Bakery
Scheduled delivery across CA, NV, UT, AZ & NM (advance booking in HI). Tell us your product volume, dates, and site and we’ll size it in minutes.
