Free moving cost calculator. Estimate your total moving expenses for local or long-distance moves, and compare DIY vs. full-service moving company costs side by side.
Moving costs surprise most people. A local move for a 2-bedroom apartment averages $800-$2,500, while a long-distance move for a 3-bedroom house can run $3,000-$7,500+. Add in deposits, temporary housing, travel, and all the small expenses, and a move can easily cost $5,000-$15,000.
The biggest decision: DIY (rent a truck, recruit friends) vs. hiring professional movers. DIY saves 40-60% but requires significant time, physical labor, and risk of damage. Full-service movers are convenient but expensive. Many people find a hybrid approach (pack yourself, hire movers for loading/transport) hits the sweet spot.
This calculator breaks down all moving costs, compares DIY vs. full-service options, and helps you build a realistic moving budget with no surprises. Timing matters too — peak moving season runs from May through September, when demand drives prices up 20-30% compared to off-season rates, so factoring in your move date can save hundreds or even thousands of dollars.
Most people underestimate moving costs by 30-50%. This calculator ensures you budget for everything — from the obvious (truck rental, movers) to the hidden (utility deposits, cleaning fees, meals during the move) — so there are no financial surprises. A complete budget lets you compare relocation options with confidence and avoid going into debt over a move.
DIY Cost = Truck Rental + Fuel + Supplies + Tolls + Insurance + Meals + Helper Pay Full-Service Cost = Mover Quote + Tip + Insurance + Extra Services Total Moving Budget = Moving Cost + Deposits + Travel + Temporary Housing + Cleaning
Result: DIY: ~$2,100 | Full-Service: ~$5,500 | Savings: $3,400 | Total budget with extras: ~$7,200
For an 800-mile move of a 3-bedroom home: DIY costs include $1,200 truck rental (1-way), $350 fuel, $250 supplies, $120 meals, and $200 insurance = ~$2,100. Full-service at $4,500 plus $500 tip and $500 insurance = $5,500. DIY saves $3,400 but requires 2-3 days of physical labor. Either way, add $1,000-$2,000 for deposits, cleaning, and travel for total budget.
The moving truck is just the beginning. A complete relocation budget includes: the move itself, new home deposits, utility transfers, address changes, new furniture or replacements, and the "settling in" period where you inevitably need things (curtain rods, shower heads, that specific light bulb). Budget $500-$1,000 extra for the first month of settling expenses.
Long-distance movers price primarily by weight and distance. A typical 3-bedroom home weighs 7,000-10,000 lbs. At $0.50-$0.70 per pound per 1,000 miles, that's $3,500-$7,000 before extras. Reducing weight by decluttering can save $500-$1,500. Every box of books you donate saves $15-$25 in shipping.
If your employer offers a relocation package, negotiate hard — moving allowances of $5,000-$15,000 are common. Some companies offer lump-sum payments, others pay actual costs. A lump sum gives you incentive to move cheaply and pocket the difference. If no relocation package exists, factor moving costs into salary negotiations.
Local moves (under 50 miles) typically cost $300-$1,500 for a studio/1-bedroom and $800-$2,500 for a 3-bedroom with professional movers. Hourly rates are $80-$120/hour for 2 movers + truck, with most moves taking 3-8 hours. DIY with a rental truck: $50-$200 for the truck plus fuel and helpers.
Long-distance moves (500+ miles) for a 2-3 bedroom home range from $3,000-$7,500+ with professional movers. Cost depends heavily on weight/volume and distance. Cross-country (2,500+ miles) with a full household can reach $8,000-$12,000. DIY with a one-way truck rental: $1,500-$3,500 plus fuel, food, and lodging.
DIY saves 40-60% but costs 2-5 days of labor and carries injury/damage risk. Good candidates for DIY: small apartments, short distances, young and able-bodied, tight budgets. Hire movers if: large homes (3+ bedrooms), long distances, heavy/fragile items, limited time, or health concerns. The hybrid (self-pack, hire labor for loading) is often the best compromise.
Commonly forgotten: security deposits ($500-$2,000), utility connection fees ($100-$300), cleaning fees at old place ($200-$400), address change costs (new licenses, vehicle registration $50-$200), eating out during the move ($100-$300), childcare/pet boarding ($100-$300), and temporary storage if move-in and move-out dates don't align ($100-$300/month). Budgeting an extra 10–15% above your estimated costs as a contingency fund covers most of these surprises.
Check USDOT license number for interstate moves. Read reviews on multiple platforms (not just the company's website). Get binding estimates in writing. Avoid companies that demand large deposits upfront, give quotes over the phone without seeing your items, or use a different name on the contract. Ask about insurance coverage (basic is $0.60/lb, which is almost nothing for valuables).
The cheapest: September through April, especially mid-month, on a weekday (Tuesday-Thursday). The most expensive: May through August (summer), especially month-end and weekends. Rates can vary 30-50% between peak and off-peak. If you have flexibility, moving in winter can save $500-$2,000 on a typical household move.