Washington · moving costs
Washington Moving Cost Calculator
Estimate the cost of a local or long-distance move in Washington, adjusted for local labor rates.
Moving costs in Washington
Moving costs in Washington run above the national average because of regional labor and cost-of-living differences. Local moves are billed by crew and hours; long-distance moves by weight and miles. Enter your home size and distance below for a Washington estimate.
Estimated moving cost
$810 – $1,140
Midpoint estimate $950
- Crew
- 3 movers · ~5 hrs
Estimate excludes packing services, storage, and specialty items.
What drives moving cost in Washington
Moving costs in Washington run above the national average — about +15% — because local movers price their crews to Washington's labor market and cost of living. As a baseline, a local 2-bedroom move here runs roughly $810–$1,140, while a 1,000-mile long-distance move of the same home is about $4,400–$6,210.
Two very different pricing models are at work. A local move is billed by crew size × hours × an hourly rate, plus a flat truck-and-materials fee — so it scales with how much you own and how long the day runs. A long-distance move is priced by shipment weight and distance instead. Washington's cost-of-living multiplier of 1.15× nudges both models up, which is why the same household costs +15% versus the national figure here.
Within Washington the real swing comes from four things: home size (a studio versus a 4-bedroom is a 5× weight difference), distance, season, and add-on services like packing, stairs, and storage. Summer and month-end dates cost the most because demand peaks. Treat these figures as a planning baseline, then get two or three binding Washington quotes for your exact move.
What affects your price
| Factor | Effect on cost |
|---|---|
| Home size | Weight and crew scale with bedrooms — a studio vs a 4-bedroom is roughly a 5× difference |
| Move distance | Local moves are billed by the hour; long-distance by weight × miles |
| Local labor rate | Washington crews are priced to local cost of living (+15% vs national) |
| Season & timing | Summer and month-end dates cost the most; mid-week, off-peak moves are cheapest |
| Add-on services | Full packing, stairs or long carries, and storage-in-transit each add to the base price |
| Access & parking | Elevators, narrow streets, and shuttle needs in Washington metros raise labor hours |
How Washington compares on moving cost
| Reference | Cost vs national |
|---|---|
| National average | 0% |
| Highest-cost (Hawaii) | +35% |
| Washington | +15% |
| Lowest-cost (Mississippi) | -12% |
Washington moving tips
- Get two or three binding (not "non-binding") quotes from licensed Washington movers before booking.
- Book 4–6 weeks out and avoid summer and month-end dates — that's when rates and availability are worst.
- Declutter first: long-distance moves are priced by weight, so every box you don't ship cuts the bill.
- Verify licensing — a USDOT number for interstate moves, plus Washington state registration for local movers — and confirm insurance/valuation coverage.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to move?+
For a local move (under ~50 miles), most households pay roughly $400–$1,500 depending on home size, since local movers charge by the hour and crew size. A long-distance move is priced by weight and distance and typically runs $2,000–$8,000 or more for a cross-country household. Enter your home size, distance, and state above for a tailored estimate.
How is a long-distance move priced?+
Long-distance movers price by the weight of your shipment and how far it travels — more stuff and more miles cost more. A 3-bedroom home weighs roughly 7,500 pounds; moving it 1,000 miles often lands in the $5,000–$9,000 range before packing services. Getting rid of items before you weigh in is the single biggest lever on the price.
How much do local movers cost per hour?+
Local movers typically charge per mover, per hour. Two movers commonly run $90–$120/hour combined, and a larger crew for a big home costs more but finishes faster. Add a base truck/fuel fee. This calculator uses a transparent per-mover-hour rate you can see, so you understand where the number comes from.
What affects the cost of a move the most?+
Four things: how much you're moving (home size/weight), how far, your region's labor costs, and add-ons like packing, stairs, storage, or specialty items. Distance and weight dominate long-distance moves; crew hours dominate local ones. Decluttering before the move and being flexible on dates are the easiest ways to lower the bill.
Is it cheaper to move myself or hire movers?+
A DIY move with a rental truck is usually cheaper up front — you mainly pay for the truck, fuel, and equipment — but it costs your time and effort and carries more risk of damage or injury. Full-service movers cost more but handle loading, driving, and unloading. For long distances or large homes, professional movers or a moving container often become more competitive.
How far in advance should I book movers?+
Book at least 4–8 weeks ahead for a long-distance move and 2–4 weeks for a local one. Summer (May–September), weekends, and the start and end of the month are the busiest and priciest times — moving mid-week or mid-month can lower your cost and improve availability.
Planning estimates based on industry-typical rates, not quotes. Your actual Washington price depends on the mover, season, access, and add-ons. Get binding quotes before booking.