Binding vs. Non-Binding Moving Estimates Explained

💰 Moving Costs

Binding vs. Non-Binding Moving Estimates Explained

The type of estimate you sign is the single biggest factor in whether your moving bill stays predictable. Here is exactly what each type means and which one to always request.

JS
Moving Cost Analyst, The Moving Playbook

Every long-distance moving estimate falls into one of three legal categories: binding, non-binding, or binding not-to-exceed. Understanding the difference before you sign determines whether your final bill matches the quote — or comes in thousands of dollars higher.

The Three Types of Moving Estimates

Estimate TypeIs the Price Fixed?Can It Go Higher?Can It Go Lower?
BindingYes — legally cappedNoNo
Non-BindingNo — estimate onlyYes, no capYes
Binding Not-to-ExceedCapped at the quoted amountNo (carrier absorbs overages)Yes, if final weight is lower

Binding Estimates: What They Mean

A binding estimate is a legally binding contract. The amount quoted is the amount you pay — regardless of the actual weight of your shipment or how long delivery takes. The carrier cannot charge more than the binding estimate, even if your inventory weighs more than estimated on survey day.

Binding estimates are the gold standard. Always request a binding estimate for interstate moves. If a carrier refuses or says they only offer non-binding estimates, that is a red flag worth acting on.

Non-Binding Estimates: The Risk

A non-binding estimate is exactly what it sounds like: a quote, not a commitment. Your final bill is based on the actual weight of your shipment, not the estimated weight. Under federal regulations, a carrier cannot require you to pay more than 110% of the non-binding estimate before releasing your goods at delivery — but they can bill you for the remainder afterward.

The practical risk: if the original estimate was based on an incomplete inventory or an optimistic weight calculation, your bill could increase 20–40% on delivery day. Most moving complaints filed with the FMCSA involve non-binding estimates that came in far higher than quoted.

Binding Not-to-Exceed: Best of Both Worlds

This hybrid type caps your maximum cost at the binding estimate amount but allows the final price to drop if your actual shipment weighs less than estimated. It is the most consumer-favorable option when available. Not all carriers offer it — ask specifically.

The One Question to Always Ask

Before signing any estimate: “Is this a binding estimate?” If the carrier says yes, ask for it in writing. The document should use the words “binding estimate” explicitly. If they hesitate or redirect, you are looking at a non-binding quote regardless of what they call it verbally.

Editorial Disclosure

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a carrier refuse to give a binding estimate?
Yes — carriers are not legally required to offer binding estimates. However, the absence of binding estimates is a strong signal to get quotes elsewhere. All carriers in our vetted network provide binding estimates as a standard practice.
What happens if my actual weight is more than the binding estimate assumed?
With a true binding estimate, you pay the quoted amount regardless. The carrier absorbs any overage. That is why binding estimates are worth slightly more than non-binding quotes for equivalent service.
Are binding estimates more expensive than non-binding ones?
They can be — carriers build a margin into binding estimates to absorb potential weight overages. The premium is typically 5–10% over a non-binding estimate for the same inventory. Given the protection they provide, this is worth paying.