
United Van Lines agent serving the St Louis and Kansas City corridors. Long history and steady performance in the Midwest.
99 of the most-used national, regional, and DIY brands — scored on FMCSA records, BBB status, and customer reviews.
Each profile breaks down pricing tiers, service area, deposit and claims policies, and the gotchas hidden in standard contracts.
Includes FMCSA-verified options near you.
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Every carrier on this page lists the same baseline: USDOT number, MC number, BBB rating, year founded, and headquarters. Those five fields settle whether the company is real and trading. They don't, by themselves, tell you whether the company is good — that's where the editorial summary, complaint history, and price range come in.
The directory currently profiles 99 national, regional, and DIY brands. Coverage isn't ranked; the order on the hub is alphabetical-ish for browsing. The actual scoring lives on each company's own page.
USDOT is the federal carrier ID assigned by the FMCSA. Anyone moving household goods across state lines has to have one. If a website doesn't list it, that's a yellow flag at minimum.
MC number (Motor Carrier authority) is what gives the company permission to move freight for hire across state lines. It's a separate filing from USDOT and shows up on the same SAFER record.
BBB rating runs A+ through F. The letter is the BBB's own scoring of the company, not customer reviews. A company can have an A+ from BBB and still average 2.5 stars from customers — both numbers belong on the page.
National carriers (Allied, United, Mayflower, North American, Atlas) operate as agent networks. The brand handles dispatch, billing, and tracking; the actual crew is a local agent. Quality often tracks more closely with the agent in your specific city than with the brand on the truck.
Regional and local independents own their fleet, hire their own crews, and usually price 15–25% under the national brands on local jobs. Trade-off: limited geography, smaller claims department, and capacity that disappears in peak season.
DIY platforms (PODS, U-Pack, U-Haul U-Box, 1-800-PACK-RAT) are container-and-driver services. You load and unload; they handle the long-haul. For interstate moves under 1,500 miles with a flexible delivery window, this is consistently the cheapest option that's still safe.
Click any carrier for the full review, pricing range, and verdict.
Company summaries are based on publicly available information from official mover websites, FMCSA records, BBB profiles, and recent customer review patterns. Logos are displayed for brand identification in an independent directory and do not imply partnership, sponsorship, or endorsement.
Showing 51–60 of 99 companies

United Van Lines agent serving the St Louis and Kansas City corridors. Long history and steady performance in the Midwest.

Atlas Van Lines agent and one of Atlanta's longest-running movers. Strong Southeast corporate-relocation track record.

Global relocation operator with offices on six continents. Best fit for international relocations rather than purely domestic US moves.

Global mover with strong international corporate-relocation business. Domestic US moves are available but not the primary focus.

One of the oldest US movers with deep specialty in fine art, antiques, and high-value household goods. Climate-controlled storage facilities support museum-grade handling.

Local mover specializing in NJ-NY tri-state moves with strong building-management relationships in Hoboken and Jersey City high-rises.

Northeast independent carrier with steady East Coast operations and competitive long-distance quotes.

Long-distance moving broker with a vetted carrier network. Useful for collecting multiple binding-NTE quotes in one inquiry.

Florida-based moving broker with transparent quoting tools. Useful as a comparison shop alongside direct carrier quotes.

Long-running long-distance broker. Pricing can be competitive but the carrier match-up is the variable — read your contract for the assigned hauler before paying any deposit.