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How much does movers cost in United States?

Low $350
Typical $500
High $6,500
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Key takeaways

  • Most movers jobs in United States land between $350–$6,500 — known locally as movers / moving company.
  • Interstate movers must register with the FMCSA and carry a USDOT number, and federal rules require them to provide the 'Your Rights and Responsibilities When You Move' booklet. Intrastate (local) moves are regulated state-by-state — some states license movers tightly, others barely at all, so verification differs by state.
  • Prices below are researched national ranges, updated July 2026 — not quotes.

Movers prices by job size in United States

Researched national ranges in USD, updated July 2026.
Job size Low Typical High
Studio apartment 2 movers, roughly 2-3 hours $350 $500 $800
1-bedroom 2 movers, roughly 3-4 hours $500 $800 $1,200
2-bedroom 2-3 movers, roughly 4-6 hours $900 $1,400 $2,200
3-bedroom house 3-4 movers, most of a day $1,500 $2,200 $3,500
4+ bedroom house Large crew, full day or more $2,500 $4,000 $6,500

Per-unit rates

Typical movers rates in United States.
Unit Low Typical High
per hour (2 movers + truck) $100 $150 $200
per hour (each extra mover) $40 $55 $75

What affects the price

  • Job size and scope — bigger or more complex jobs move you up the ranges above.
  • Access and condition — hard-to-reach areas, older properties or neglected maintenance add labour time.
  • Materials and quality level — where materials are involved, the grade you choose often matters more than labour.
  • Urgency — same-day or out-of-hours work usually carries a premium.
  • Where you live — large metros in United States typically run above the national range; smaller towns below it.

How to save

  • Get at least three quotes and compare like-for-like scopes, not just totals.
  • Be flexible on timing — off-peak slots are often cheaper.
  • Bundle related tasks into one visit to spread call-out costs.
  • Agree the scope in writing up front to avoid change-order surprises.

How to hire a movers pro in United States

  1. For interstate moves, verify the company's USDOT number on the FMCSA website; for local moves check your state's regulator (many states license intrastate movers)
  2. Get a written estimate after an in-home or video survey — binding or not-to-exceed if possible
  3. Ask about valuation coverage: released value (60 cents/lb, near-worthless) vs full-value protection
  4. Check reviews and complaint history (BBB, FMCSA complaint database for interstate movers)
  5. Confirm the hourly rate includes truck, fuel and travel time, and ask about stair/long-carry fees
  6. Never pay a large deposit — reputable US movers take most payment on delivery

Red flags

  • No USDOT number for an interstate move
  • Estimate given sight-unseen over the phone that's far below other quotes
  • Large cash deposit demanded upfront
  • Company name changes frequently or the truck is unmarked
  • Contract left blank 'to fill in later'
  • Goods held hostage for extra payment — report this to FMCSA immediately

How Handld researches prices

These are researched estimates, not quotes and not our transaction data. We compile ranges from published sources — national statistics, trade bodies and incumbent cost guides — normalise them to USD, and adjust city pages by a population-based cost tier. Last updated July 2026. Basis: Angi movers cost guide (angi.com); HomeAdvisor moving service cost data 2025; MoveAdvisor / Thumbtack moving price guides.

Frequently asked questions

Do movers disassemble and reassemble furniture?

Most crews will dismantle beds and large wardrobes and reassemble them at the destination, billed within the hourly rate — but confirm it's included and tell them how many items need it. Flat-pack furniture is fragile when rebuilt more than once; some firms refuse liability for it. Doing your own dismantling the day before saves an hour or more of crew time.

What's the difference between a 'man with a van' and a full moving company?

A man-with-a-van outfit is 1-2 people and a mid-size van — ideal for studio/1-bed moves, single items, and short hops, at roughly half the hourly cost of a full crew. Full moving companies bring bigger trucks, more crew, packing services and proper transit insurance — worth it from a 2-bedroom home upward or when access is difficult.

How do I avoid rogue movers and moving scams?

Warning signs: quotes far below everyone else, large cash deposits, no physical address or registration, and refusing a written contract. The classic scam is a lowball quote followed by a demand for more money while your goods are on the truck. Pay a small deposit at most, check reviews across platforms, and verify any claimed accreditation directly on the trade body's website.

Do movers handle pianos, safes and other heavy items?

Yes, but as a declared specialty item with a surcharge — upright pianos, safes, marble tables and gym machines need extra crew, straps or dollies. Never let a two-person crew improvise a piano move down stairs; ask whether the firm has done that specific item and whether their insurance covers it.

Can movers store my things between homes?

Many moving companies offer short-term storage (their own warehouse or partnered self-storage), useful when completion dates don't line up. Expect a re-delivery fee plus weekly or monthly storage charges, and check whether insurance covers goods while in storage — it's often a separate policy from transit cover.

How are movers priced — hourly or fixed?

Local moves are usually billed hourly for a crew plus truck, with a 2-3 hour minimum; long-distance moves are priced by volume/weight and distance as a fixed quote. Hourly suits small, well-prepared moves; a binding fixed quote protects you on bigger jobs where hours are hard to predict. Ask which model the quote uses and what's included (fuel, travel time, materials).

How much do movers cost per hour in the US?

Two movers with a truck typically run $100-$200 per hour, around $150 in most metros, with a 2-3 hour minimum. Each additional mover adds roughly $40-$75 per hour. A typical local move totals about $880-$2,500 depending on home size.

What is full-value protection and should I buy it?

Federal law requires interstate movers to offer full-value protection, under which the mover repairs, replaces or pays out damaged items — versus the free 'released value' coverage of only 60 cents per pound. For any move with real furniture, the extra cost (often 1-2% of declared value) is usually worth it.

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