Choosing a long-distance moving company isn’t like hiring a local handyman. The stakes are higher, the variables are more complex, and a bad decision can cost you significantly more than money. Your belongings travel hundreds — sometimes thousands — of miles, often without you present for most of the journey. Getting this choice right deserves more attention than a quick Google search.
Start With Licensing and Insurance — Not Price
The first thing to verify before anything else is whether a company is properly licensed and insured for interstate moves. In the United States, long-distance movers are required to be registered with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration and carry a valid USDOT number. This information should be easy to find on their website or available upon request — if a company is evasive about it, that’s a clear signal to move on.
Insurance coverage is equally important and frequently misunderstood. Basic carrier liability, sometimes called released value protection, covers only a fraction of what your belongings are actually worth. Ask every company you speak with about full value protection options and whether they work with third-party insurers. The cost difference is usually modest compared to what you stand to lose if something goes wrong in transit.
How to Read Reviews Without Being Misled
Online reviews are useful, but only if you know how to read them properly. A five-star average built on fifty reviews tells a different story than one built on five hundred. Look for patterns in the negative reviews rather than fixating on individual complaints — recurring themes around damaged goods, hidden fees, or poor communication are worth taking seriously.
Prioritize reviews on third-party platforms like Google, the Better Business Bureau, and the FMCSA’s own complaint database. Reviews hosted exclusively on a company’s own website carry far less weight. Pay attention to how the company responds to negative feedback, too. A measured, professional response to a complaint says more about a company’s character than a wall of five-star praise.
Getting Quotes the Right Way
Collecting quotes is a standard part of the process, but there’s a right and wrong way to do it. Never accept a quote based solely on an inventory list you provide over the phone or via email. A reputable long-distance mover should conduct either an in-person walkthrough or a detailed virtual survey of your home before issuing a binding estimate.
Get at least three quotes and compare them carefully. Unusually low estimates are a common tactic among less reputable operators — a practice known in the industry as a lowball quote, where the price climbs significantly once your belongings are loaded on the truck. Ask specifically whether each quote is binding or non-binding, and get everything in writing before signing anything.
A few things to clarify before committing to any company:
- Whether they subcontract the move to a third party
- What their claims process looks like if items are damaged
- Whether storage is available if your move-in date shifts
- What fees apply for stairs, long carries, or elevator use
Match the Company to the Specifics of Your Move

Not every long-distance mover is equally suited to every type of relocation. A company with strong experience in corporate relocations may not be the best fit for a residential move with antique furniture and fragile items. Likewise, someone moving back home after years away often has a more complex inventory than a first-time mover — accumulated furniture, sentimental items, and sometimes vehicles — which requires a company with the capacity and experience to handle it carefully.
Ask prospective movers directly about experience with moves similar to yours in terms of distance, volume, and item type. If you have specialty items — artwork, pianos, wine collections — confirm that the company has handled those before and ask how they approach packing and transport. A company that handles everything in-house rather than outsourcing to brokers generally offers more consistency and accountability throughout the process.
The right long-distance mover isn’t always the most prominent or the least expensive. It’s the one whose licensing checks out, whose reviews hold up under scrutiny, and whose team can answer your specific questions with confidence. That combination is harder to find than it should be — but it’s worth the effort to look.

