48 Hours Before Moving Day

A calm checklist for when time is short

At this point, planning is no longer abstract. Everything you don’t decide now will decide itself- usually badly.

This checklist focuses on preventing the most common last-minute failures.

You don’t need perfection. You need coverage.

Reconfirm access – both pickup and drop-off

Do not assume anything still holds.

Check again:

  • elevator reservations (time slot + duration)
  • loading dock access
  • parking rules and permits
  • street sweeping schedules
  • building moving-hour restrictions

Why this matters

Even one missed detail can delay the crew, push you into overtime, or block the truck entirely.

If something changed, inform the moving company now, not on the moving day.

Eliminate “surprise volume”

Walk through your home once with this question: “Is there anything here movers don’t know about?”

Check:

  • storage units
  • closets
  • balconies
  • garages
  • hallway piles
  • items you mentally postponed

If it exists, it counts.

Why this matters

Surprise volume breaks estimates and crew planning

Decide what travels with you

Prepare a separate bag or box for:

  • documents
  • medications
  • valuables
  • chargers and essential electronics
  • keys
  • personal items you’ll need immediately

This bag should not go on the truck.

Why this matters

Access matters more than safety in the first 24 hours.

Pack all small items- completely

By now:

  • drawers should be empty (unless agreed otherwise)
  • shelves packed
  • loose items boxed

Label boxes on the side, not just on top

During a move, boxes are almost always stacked. When the one box is placed on top of another, any label on the top becomes invisible. Side labels stay visible no matter how boxes are arranged. This allows movers to:

  • identify rooms quickly
  • place boxes correctly
  • avoid stopping to ask questions

Fewer questions mean less walking, less waiting, and less time billed. A label that can’t be seen is a label that can’t help.

If possible:

  • group boxes by room
  • move them closer to exits

Why this matters

Unpacked small items create delays, confusion, and frustration during the move.

Separate “do not move” items clearly

Create a visible zone or label for:

  • trash
  • donations
  • items staying behind
  • prohibited items (fuels, perishables, pets, etc)

Tell the movers clearly: “Nothing in this area goes to the truck”.

Why this matters

Accidental loading causes emotional and logistical problems later.

Final check for prohibited or special items

Confirm that you have removed or prepared:

  • gasoline, fuel, flammable liquids
  • firearms and ammunition
  • perishable food
  • pets and pet supplies
  • sensitive plants (especially in ceramic pots)

If you have appliances:

  • confirm disconnection if required
  • verify movers are not expected to handle licensed work

Prepare yourself, not just the house

Moving day requires decisions. You will need:

  • water
  • food
  • rest
  • patience

Fatigue turns small problems into conflicts.

Being available and calm is part of your role, especially if you choose full service.

What Full Service Actually Means

The principle of the last 48 hours

At this stage, every unclear detail becomes expensive. Clarity now:

  • reduces time
  • reduces cost
  • reduces conflict

If something feels uncomfortable to ask or disclose, that is usually the exact thing that must be clarified. A move doesn’t collapse because people are careless. It collapses because information arrives too late.

Why Last Minute Changes Explode Budgets

Useful free tools:

Personalized Moving Plan

Moving Time Estimator

Access Complexity Score Calculator

Move or Replace Calculator