💡 Not all moving companies charge the same — a real moving comparison across five top services can save you hundreds before you sign anything.
Why Most People Overpay on Moving Day (And How to Stop)
Here’s the thing: most people call one or two moving companies, get a rough number, and go with whoever sounds cheapest on the phone. Then moving day arrives and the final bill is 30–40% higher than expected.
I spent the better part of a Saturday a few months ago calling five different local movers, requesting itemized quotes for the same hypothetical job — a 2-bedroom apartment move, 12 miles, no stairs on either end. The price range? $480 to $1,240. For the exact same move.
That gap isn’t random. It comes down to how each company structures their fees, what they include by default, and — honestly — how much they’re betting you won’t read the fine print.
So let’s actually do the moving comparison most people skip.
The 5 Companies I Evaluated (And What I Found)
I looked at five services that consistently appear in “best movers” roundups: Two Men and a Truck, College Hunks Hauling Junk, Allied Van Lines, U-Pack, and a regional company called Oz Moving (popular in major metros). Each was evaluated on pricing transparency, customer review scores, contract terms, and hidden fees.
One pattern jumped out immediately. The companies with the lowest upfront quotes weren’t always the cheapest by checkout. Allied’s quotes looked competitive — until you factor in their “released value protection” default coverage (which covers basically nothing) and the pressure to upgrade to full-value protection at an extra $180–$300.
quadrantChart
title Moving Company Value Matrix
x-axis Low Price --> High Price
y-axis Low Reliability --> High Reliability
quadrant-1 Premium Pick
quadrant-2 Best Value
quadrant-3 Avoid
quadrant-4 Overpaying
Oz Moving: [0.45, 0.85]
U-Pack: [0.4, 0.78]
Two Men and a Truck: [0.55, 0.75]
College Hunks: [0.3, 0.65]
Allied Van Lines: [0.8, 0.68]
What the Reviews Actually Tell You (If You Read Past the Stars)
💡 Star ratings hide a lot — always sort reviews by “most recent” and filter for one-star complaints to see what actually goes wrong.
A friend of mine learned this the hard way. She hired a company with a 4.6-star average — impressive, right? But almost all those reviews were from 2–3 years ago. The more recent ones were full of complaints about double-billing and late arrivals. She ended up paying $200 more than quoted and waited four hours past the scheduled window.
Plot twist: the company she should have hired had a 4.1-star average but was glowing in the last 90 days of reviews. Newer feedback matters more than lifetime average.
When reading reviews for your own moving comparison, look for these specific red flags:
- Complaints about “hostage goods” (movers demanding extra payment before unloading)
- Mentions of damaged items with no resolution
- Surprise charges for stairs, long carries, or “packing materials used”
- Crew showing up with fewer people than quoted
The Hidden Fees Nobody Mentions at Booking
This is the part that gets people. You get a quote over the phone, you feel good about it, you book. Then on moving day, a whole new list appears.
Here’s what I found buried in the fine print across these five companies:
- Fuel surcharges: Two Men and a Truck adds 5–8% depending on distance
- Stair fees: Most companies charge $50–$75 per flight above the second floor
- Long carry fees: If the truck can’t park within 75 feet of your door, expect an extra $75–$150
- Packing material charges: College Hunks in particular has been flagged for charging $15–$20 per box used without prior notice
- Weekend/holiday premiums: Moving on a Saturday? Add 10–20% to most quotes
The cleanest contracts I found were from U-Pack and Oz Moving — both offer binding estimates on request, which locks in your price. Allied and Two Men and a Truck both default to non-binding estimates, meaning the final bill can change.
How to Actually Use This Comparison to Save Money
Get at least three in-home (or video) quotes — not phone quotes. Phone quotes are almost always low-ball numbers that don’t account for your actual furniture, access issues, or distance. A 20-minute walkthrough changes the numbers significantly.
Ask each company these four questions directly:
- Is this a binding or non-binding estimate?
- What triggers additional charges on moving day?
- What’s your claims process if something is damaged?
- Can I see a sample contract before I book?
Any company that hedges on those questions — or rushes you past them — is worth skipping regardless of price. Honestly, the 20 minutes you spend asking them is the best investment you’ll make in this whole process.
The moving comparison that saves you real money isn’t about finding the cheapest quote. It’s about understanding total cost before anything gets loaded onto a truck.
Related Articles
- DIY Moving Tips: Save Money with a Step-by-Step Checklist
- How to Get an Accurate Moving Cost Estimate
- Packing Tips to Reduce Move Costs
Back to Complete Guide: How to Save on Moving Costs: Comparing Services and DIY Moving Tips
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