How Much Does a Long-Distance Move Cost in 2026? A Complete Breakdown
We analyzed 10,000+ real moves to build the most accurate cost database available. Every variable — distance, home size, season, company type — ranked by impact on your final bill.
Source: The Moving Playbook analysis of 10,000+ moves. Ranges shown are midpoints; see full data below.
Moving across state lines is one of the largest personal logistics operations most people will manage in their lifetime. And one of the biggest sources of stress? Not knowing what it is going to cost until the truck is already loaded.
We analyzed 10,000 long-distance moves completed in 2024 and 2025 to give you real numbers — not the vague ranges you will find on competitor sites. Here is everything you need to budget for, and how to avoid the charges that catch most people off guard.
The Honest Cost Range
Long-distance moving costs typically range from $1,500 to $12,000+, with most 2–3 bedroom moves falling between $4,000 and $7,500. The primary cost drivers are:
- Total weight or cubic footage of your belongings
- Distance in miles between origin and destination
- Time of year (summer adds 20–30% to the base price)
- Additional services such as packing, storage, and vehicle shipping
- Access difficulty at either location (stairs, long carry, elevator)
📊 2026 Data Point: A 2-bedroom, 1,000-mile move now averages $5,200 with our carrier network — down from $5,800 in 2023, largely due to increased carrier competition in the Midwest-to-South corridor.
Cost by Home Size and Distance
These ranges are based on full-service moves (loading, transport, unloading) with binding estimates. Container and truck rental options run 20–35% lower.
| Home Size | 500 Miles | 1,000 Miles | 2,000+ Miles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1 Bedroom | $1,500–$3,000 | $2,500–$4,000 | $3,500–$5,500 |
| 2–3 Bedrooms | $3,000–$5,000 | $4,500–$7,000 | $6,000–$9,500 |
| 4+ Bedrooms | $5,000–$8,000 | $6,500–$10,000 | $9,000–$14,000 |
Hidden Fees to Watch For
The biggest source of moving nightmares is not the base price — it is the charges that appear on delivery day. Here are the most common hidden fees and how to avoid them:
- Long Carry Fee ($75–$200): Charged when movers carry items more than 75 feet from the truck to your door. Common with elevators, long driveways, or gated communities.
- Elevator Fee ($75–$150): Some carriers charge per floor or per use of a building elevator, regardless of whether it is operational.
- Shuttle Fee ($200–$500): If a full-size semi-truck cannot access your street or parking, movers may transfer items to a smaller shuttle vehicle at extra cost.
- Storage-in-Transit ($100–$300/month): If your new home is not ready on delivery day, your belongings go into temporary storage — at rates that add up fast.
- Fuel Surcharge (5–10%): Many carriers add a fuel surcharge not reflected in the original quote, especially on long-haul routes.
- Packing Material Fees: If you request last-minute packing supplies (boxes, tape, paper), carriers often charge 3–5x retail prices.
✅ How to avoid them: Ask every carrier for a line-item estimate that includes any applicable surcharges for your specific pickup and delivery locations. Request a binding estimate in writing — this legally caps what you can be charged.
Seasonal Pricing Breakdown
Moving demand follows a predictable annual pattern. Understanding it can save you hundreds to thousands of dollars by timing your move strategically.
| Time of Year | Price Vs. Average | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| June – August | +18% to +30% | Peak season. School year end drives maximum demand. |
| May & September | +8% to +15% | Shoulder season. Still busy but more availability. |
| October – April | Average or below | Best value. Carriers compete harder for bookings. |
| Mid-month (10th–20th) | 5–10% savings | Month-end surges as leases expire. Mid-month is cheaper. |
| Weekdays (Mon–Thu) | 5–8% savings | Weekend moves carry a premium. Weekdays are flexible. |
How to Get the Best Price
The single most effective way to reduce your moving cost is to get multiple binding quotes and compare them side-by-side. Beyond that:
- Book 4–8 weeks in advance. Last-minute availability is scarce and expensive. Carriers price based on demand, and early booking guarantees better rates.
- Declutter before the inventory. Most long-distance moves are priced by weight. Donating or selling items before the inventory walkthrough directly reduces your bill.
- Pack yourself where possible. Full-service packing typically adds $500–$2,000 to a move. Packing your own boxes for non-fragile items cuts this cost significantly.
- Be flexible on delivery window. Carriers offering a 2–5 day delivery window instead of a specific date can save 10–15% — they can consolidate your shipment with other moves on the same corridor.
- Move mid-month, mid-week, off-season. Stacking all three favorable conditions can save 20–35% versus a summer weekend move.
What Is Not Worth Saving On
Some cost-cutting moves create far more expensive problems:
- Choosing a non-binding estimate to save on paper. Non-binding estimates can increase 25–50% on delivery day, leaving you with no recourse. Always get a binding estimate in writing.
- Skipping insurance on high-value items. Basic carrier liability covers just $0.60 per pound — a 10-pound laptop would be covered for $6. Full value protection is worth the additional cost for irreplaceable items.
- Using an unvetted broker. Moving brokers can sell your shipment to any available carrier, including unscrupulous ones. Use only FMCSA-licensed carriers you can independently verify before booking.
- Packing fragile items poorly. A single broken antique or cracked screen can cost more than the entire savings from cutting packing corners. Use proper materials for fragile items.
Based on 10,000+ real moves. Enter your details for an accurate range.
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