Packing Tips to Reduce Move Costs

💡 Cutting your packing move cost starts before you ever touch a box — declutter first, source free supplies, and pack smart to slash labor hours and truck space.

Why Packing Is Where Most People Bleed Money

Here’s something movers don’t advertise: the average local move costs 30–50% more than it needs to. Not because of the truck. Not because of the crew. Because of packing decisions made two weeks before moving day.

I tested this myself last year when a friend of mine moved a two-bedroom apartment across town. She hired a crew for six hours. They ended up staying nine — mostly because boxes weren’t ready, items weren’t sorted, and half the truck space was eaten up by furniture she hadn’t decided whether to keep. The overage cost her $240.

That’s not a moving problem. That’s a packing problem.

So let’s fix it before it happens to you.

💡 Every item you don’t pack is money you don’t spend moving it.

The Declutter Math Is Actually Kind of Wild

Less stuff = fewer boxes = less truck space = fewer hours = lower bill. Simple in theory, surprisingly easy to ignore in practice.

A 25-year-old I know — first apartment move, minimal budget — sold off two trash bags worth of clothes, an old TV stand, and a broken rowing machine on Facebook Marketplace the week before her move. Pulled in about $180. That covered her packing tape, markers, and a six-pack for moving day. Her move took four hours instead of the six she’d budgeted for.

Not everything needs to sell. Donate what you can to local shelters or thrift stores. Some organizations even do free pickup for furniture — which means you don’t have to haul it yourself or pay someone else to haul it to a dumpster.

The rule I follow: if you haven’t used it in a year and you don’t love it, it doesn’t get a spot on the truck.

flowchart TD
    A[Every Item You Own] --> B{Used in last 12 months?}
    B -- Yes --> C{Do you love it?}
    B -- No --> D[Sell / Donate / Trash]
    C -- Yes --> E[Pack It]
    C -- No --> D
    D --> F[Save Money on Moving]
    E --> G[Pack Efficiently]
    G --> F

Free Boxes Are Everywhere — If You Know Where to Look

Buying a pack of moving boxes from a big-box store will run you $50–$100 for a two-bedroom apartment. That’s before you add bubble wrap, packing paper, and tape. And honestly? You don’t need to spend a cent on most of it.

Source What You Can Get Cost Notes
Liquor stores Small, sturdy boxes with dividers Free Great for glasses and bottles
Grocery stores Medium produce and dry goods boxes Free Ask at customer service early morning
Bookstores / libraries Small, heavy-duty boxes Free Built for book weight — ideal for dense items
Facebook Marketplace / Nextdoor Mixed sizes, sometimes bubble wrap too Free–$5 Search “moving boxes free” in your area
Recycling bins near office buildings Banker’s boxes, copy paper boxes Free Uniform sizes stack perfectly

Packing paper? Use newspaper, clothing, or kitchen towels. Seriously — your t-shirts can wrap your dishes just fine. You’d be surprised how much “packing material” you already own.

💡 Substitute packing materials with soft items you’re already moving: towels, socks, sweaters.

Pack Smarter, Not Heavier

Efficient packing isn’t about Tetris skills. It’s about thinking in weight and trip counts.

Overstuffed boxes are harder to carry, slower to load, and more likely to get dropped or restacked wrong — all of which adds time and time adds cost. Keep heavy items (books, tools, appliances) in small boxes. Use large boxes for pillows, linens, and light bulbs. That ratio matters more than most people realize.

Room-by-room packing also cuts down on unpacking chaos, which means movers spend less time figuring out where to put things. Less confusion = faster finish.

Am I the only one who finds this confusing at first? I initially packed everything in the same large boxes because they felt “efficient.” Wrong. They were too heavy to stack, which meant less cube utilization in the truck, which meant we needed more trips. Lesson learned the hard way.

mindmap
  root((Packing Move Cost))
    fa:fa-box Boxes
      Free from stores
      Right size per weight
      Uniform shapes stack better
    fa:fa-trash Declutter First
      Sell on Marketplace
      Donate furniture
      Less = cheaper move
    fa:fa-tag Label Everything
      Room name
      Fragile markers
      Load order
    fa:fa-clock Time = Money
      Fewer trips
      Faster unload
      Less mover confusion

The Label System That Actually Saves You Money

Here’s the thing — labeling isn’t just for organization. It directly reduces your labor cost.

When movers (or your friends helping out) can read a box and know exactly where it goes, they move faster. No questions. No “hey where does this go?” No setting boxes in the wrong room and moving them again later. A 30-something couple I know cut their unloading time by almost an hour just by color-coding their boxes with painters tape — blue for bedroom, green for kitchen, yellow for bathroom.

Simple system. Real savings.

Write the contents on the side, not the top. That way you can read the label when boxes are stacked. Mark fragile items on at least two sides. And if you’re hiring movers, put a “LOAD LAST” label on anything going to the first room you’ll unload — it keeps high-priority items accessible without a full stack re-sort at the new place.

💡 Labels on the side (not top) of boxes stay readable when stacked — speeds up unloading and reduces mover time.

None of this is complicated. That’s what makes it so easy to skip. But every hour you shave off your move is real money back in your pocket — and on a tight budget, that’s exactly the kind of win that adds up.


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