North American Relocation review (2026)

By Sarah Chen, Moving Industry Analyst · Updated April 2026 · Fact-checked by Marcus Reyes, AMSA Certified Moving Consultant
Quick verdict
3.9 / 5
3.9 rating

Phoenix-based long-distance broker with steady operations on West Coast and Southwest lanes. Useful comparison quote.

Best for: Southwest-originating interstate
Watch out for: Broker model — confirm assigned carrier USDOT.

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Company at a glance

USDOT
Verify on FMCSA
MC #
Verify on FMCSA
Founded
2008
Headquarters
Phoenix, AZ
Coverage
All 50 states

North American Relocation in one paragraph

North American Relocation has been operating since 2008 (about 18 years), runs out of Phoenix, AZ, and covers all 50 states. Current FMCSA filing shows USDOT Verify on FMCSA and MC Verify on FMCSA; BBB rating is A. Phoenix-based long-distance broker with steady operations on West Coast and Southwest lanes. Useful comparison quote.

What customers actually paid this year

For a 2-bedroom interstate move, North American Relocation quotes generally land between $2,200 and $6,100, with the median around $4,150. The low end of that range usually applies to off-season runs under 1,000 miles with self-packing; the high end shows up on full-service summer moves over 2,000 miles.

Local hourly pricing through North American Relocation varies by market. In a high-cost metro, two movers + a 26-foot truck commonly bills at $160–$220/hr. In a smaller market the same crew might run $110–$150/hr. Always ask whether travel time, fuel surcharge, and stair fees are inside or outside the hourly number — this is where two "identical" quotes often diverge by 20%.

Where this carrier is genuinely good

Southwest-originating interstate. The customer pattern that consistently rates North American Relocation highly: an inventory list locked in 2+ weeks ahead, a binding-not-to-exceed quote in writing, and a destination ZIP they service directly (not via subcontractor). When all three of those line up, satisfaction scores cluster well above the industry median.

Where this carrier falls short

Broker model — confirm assigned carrier USDOT.

If your move profile lines up with that weakness, you'll save money and stress by getting a comparison quote from one of the alternatives below before signing.

North American Relocation vs the competition

CarrierBBBFounded2BR price range
North American RelocationA2008$2,200–$6,100
Allied Van LinesA+1928$3,200–$7,500
Atlas Van LinesA+1948$3,000–$7,200

Booking process, step by step

  • Request a quote with a complete inventory list. Online forms are fine for a first pass; a video survey is what makes a binding number stick.
  • Insist on binding-not-to-exceed in writing. Non-binding estimates from any carrier — including this one — almost always come in higher on move day.
  • Confirm valuation coverage. Released value (the federal default) pays $0.60 per pound. Full-value protection costs more but actually replaces a damaged TV.
  • Confirm pickup and delivery windows. For interstate jobs the delivery window is a range, not a date — plan accordingly.
  • On move day, walk the truck and check the inventory list before signing the Bill of Lading. Note any pre-existing damage on the form.

Bottom line

North American Relocation earns 3.9/5 in this scoring model. For the customer profile in "where it's good," it's a strong default pick. For everyone else, get one comparison quote and decide on the spot — the 15 minutes pays for itself.

Updated April 2026 Reviewed by Sarah Chen Fact-checked99 companies analyzed

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Frequently asked questions

Yes. North American Relocation operates under USDOT Verify on FMCSA and MC Verify on FMCSA, with a BBB rating of A. Verify current standing on safer.fmcsa.dot.gov before signing a contract.