This page is your move roadmap. Follow these steps to estimate cost, choose your strategy, prepare your home, and avoid the common mistakes that blow up budgets and timelines.
You have decided to move. Good. Now the goal is not to “do everything”, but to do things in the right order, so you don’t create expensive chaos.
Step 1- How to Pick the Moving company
Not all movers operate the same way. Before discussing price, understand licensing, insurance, review quality, crew size logic, and how estimates are built. The right company reduces friction; the wrong one multiplies it.
Read: How to Pick the Moving Company
Step 2- Get a Rough Cost Idea Before You Call
Many disputes start because expectations were never realistic. Before requesting a quote, calculate volume, access complexity, crew size, and distance. Cost is not a number — it is a structure.
Read: Get a Rough Cost Idea Before You Call
Step 3- Choose Your Strategy: DIY, Delegate or Hybrid
You don’t need to do everything yourself. But you also shouldn’t delegate blindly. Decide early what you will pack, what professionals should handle, and where your time is better spent.
Read: Choose Your Strategy: DIY, Delegate or Hybrid
Step 4- Prepare the Home for a Smooth Move
Access defines time. Elevators, parking, staircases, heavy items, and building rules can change the entire move dynamic. Most delays are predictable.
Read: Prepare the Home for a Smooth Move
Step 5- Moving Week Checklist
The final week determines whether your move feels controlled or chaotic. Confirm logistics, protect floors, finalize packing, and avoid last-minute escalations.
Read: Moving Week Checklist
Step 6 – Arrival and First 72 Hours
The move does not end when the truck leaves. The first days in the new place shape your transition. Stabilize before reorganizing everything.
Read: Arrival and first 72 Hours
Before calling anyone model your move:
Access Complexity Score Calculator
These tools help you see risks and cost drivers early — before they become expensive surprises.
Still have questions?
If your situation is specific or unusual, reach out. Clarifying details early prevents misunderstandings later.