💡 A well-planned DIY move can cut your costs by 50–70% — but only if you go in with a real checklist and a hard budget.
The Real Cost of “Winging It” on a DIY Move
Let me tell you what happened when I helped a friend move last year. No plan, just rented a truck the week before, figured we’d figure out packing supplies “day of.” By the time it was over, they’d spent $340 on supplies (including three emergency trips to the hardware store), $80 in gas, $160 for the truck, and $200 for two extra guys to help with furniture. Total: $780.
A decent full-service mover would have charged them around $600.
The DIY move is genuinely one of the best ways to save money on a local or mid-distance relocation — but only when you treat it like a project, not a last-minute scramble. Here’s the checklist I wish we’d used.
Your 6-Week DIY Move Timeline
flowchart TD
A[6 Weeks Out\nBook truck, start decluttering] --> B[4 Weeks Out\nCollect free boxes, create inventory]
B --> C[2 Weeks Out\nPack non-essentials, confirm helpers]
C --> D[1 Week Out\nPack most rooms, label everything]
D --> E[2 Days Out\nPack essentials bag, confirm truck pickup]
E --> F[Moving Day\nLoad heaviest items first, do final walkthrough]
F --> G[Day After\nReturn truck, unpack priority boxes]
Six weeks feels like a lot of lead time for a simple move. It isn’t. The biggest mistake young movers make — and I’ve seen this repeatedly — is compressing everything into the last two weeks. That’s when panic-buying overpriced boxes happens. That’s when you call a last-minute moving crew and pay double.
Start the clock at six weeks and the whole thing gets dramatically cheaper.
Free and Low-Cost Packing Supplies (Actual Sources That Work)
💡 You can get 80% of your packing supplies for free — it just takes asking in the right places a few weeks early.
Buying boxes from U-Haul or Home Depot is a trap. A 25-pack of medium boxes runs $40–$60. Multiply that across your whole apartment and you’re looking at $150–$200 in boxes alone — before you’ve bought a single roll of tape.
Here’s where to find free boxes instead:
- Liquor stores: Hands-down the best source. The boxes are small, uniform, and reinforced. Just call ahead — they get rid of them weekly.
- Facebook Marketplace / Buy Nothing groups: Search “moving boxes” in your area. People give these away constantly after their own moves.
- Bookstores and copy shops: Slightly irregular sizes, but very sturdy.
- Grocery stores (produce section): Free, but often wet or smelly — use for non-fragile items only.
For padding, towels, blankets, and clothing work better than bubble wrap for most items. Save the actual bubble wrap for anything genuinely fragile — dishes, glassware, electronics. You probably only need one roll.
Packing supply reality check: A full 2-bedroom apartment typically needs 40–60 boxes, 2–3 rolls of packing tape, 1 roll of bubble wrap, and 2 rolls of stretch wrap for furniture. Budget $40–$60 total if you source creatively. Budget $200+ if you buy everything new.
Hiring Selective Help (Without Blowing Your Budget)
Full DIY doesn’t always mean doing every single thing yourself. The smarter version is: DIY everything except the two or three tasks where professional help actually prevents injury or damage.
Specifically, it’s usually worth paying for help with:
- Anything over 200 lbs (couches, pianos, appliances)
- Navigating stairs with large furniture
- Disassembly/reassembly of complex furniture like bed frames with hardware
You can hire labor-only movers (no truck) through platforms like TaskRabbit or Dolly for $40–$60/hour per person, no minimum truck charge. Two strong helpers for three hours runs you about $240–$360. That’s it. You keep the truck rental, you keep the control, you save on the full-service markup.
Has anyone else tried this hybrid approach? I’m genuinely curious how it’s worked for people doing cross-city moves versus staying local.
Tracking Your Budget So Nothing Surprises You
The last piece — and the one most people skip entirely — is keeping a running expense tracker through the whole process.
Print this out. Fill it in as you go. It sounds tedious but takes ten minutes total and is the single most effective thing you can do to stop a DIY move from quietly becoming more expensive than just hiring movers in the first place.
A well-executed DIY move isn’t about suffering through it. It’s about being deliberate — the checklist, the free supplies, the targeted help. Do it right and $300–$400 is genuinely achievable for a local move. That’s a month of groceries back in your pocket.
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Back to Complete Guide: How to Save on Moving Costs: Comparing Services and DIY Moving Tips
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