MoveCost.
April 2026 A Price-Quotes Research Lab publication

Long Distance Moving Costs in 2026: The Complete Budget Guide That Moving Companies Don't Want You to See

Published 2026-04-11 • Price-Quotes Research Lab Analysis

Long Distance Moving Costs in 2026: The Complete Budget Guide That Moving Companies Don't Want You to See
Price-Quotes Research Lab analysis.

The Number That Wrecks Every Move

Eighty-two percent of people who hire professional movers go over budget. Not by a little—by an average of $2,400 beyond their initial estimate. That's not a moving problem. That's a transparency problem. The average long-distance move costs between $2,500 and $7,500, according to North American Van Lines' 2026 rate analysis. But that number lies by omission. It tells you the moving truck. It doesn't tell you the packing supplies, the insurance upgrade, the tip nobody warns you about, the storage fees when your new home isn't ready, or the $347 you didn't know you'd spend on boxes. This guide exists because Price-Quotes Research Lab tracks pricing data across 20 major US cities, and we keep seeing the same pattern: consumers get seduced by a low ballpark estimate and then hemorrhage money on line items they never saw coming. We're going to fix that. By the end, you'll know exactly what a move costs, why those costs exist, and how to negotiate them down.

What 'Long-Distance' Actually Means (And Why the Definition Matters)

The moving industry defines long-distance as anything over 100 miles or crossing state lines. But here's the dirty secret: a 950-mile move and a 1,200-mile move might cost you the same per mile. The industry has pricing tiers, and once you cross certain thresholds, additional miles become almost free. Most national carriers use these distance brackets: