Top US moving companies, independently reviewed

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.

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How to read a moving-company profile

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.

What the license line actually means

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 carrier, van line, or local independent

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.

The directory

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 8190 of 99 companies

#81

Nashville-based local mover with strong customer satisfaction scores. Hires only W2 movers and refuses to subcontract.

Why we picked it: Nashville local moves.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20142BR est. $600–$2,400
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#82
All Around Moving Services logo

All Around Moving Services

4.0/ 5

All 50 states

NYC-based long-distance moving broker. Useful as a comparison quote alongside direct carrier estimates.

Why we picked it: NYC long-distance broker quotes.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20022BR est. $2,300–$6,300
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#83
Mover Junction logo

Mover Junction

4.0/ 5

All 50 states

Online long-distance broker with vetted Southeast and East Coast carriers.

Why we picked it: Southeast long-distance broker quotes.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20112BR est. $2,300–$6,200
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#84
Moving Pros Network logo

Moving Pros Network

3.9/ 5

All 50 states

Long-distance moving broker with online quoting and a vetted carrier network.

Why we picked it: Multi-quote long-distance comparison.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20102BR est. $2,200–$6,000
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#85
Expo Movers logo

Expo Movers

4.4/ 5

Interstate (48)

Brooklyn-based mover with binding flat-rate quotes and strong East Coast interstate operations. Good fit for NYC-to-FL and NYC-to-DC lanes.

Why we picked it: NYC and East Coast interstate.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20092BR est. $1,800–$5,500
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#86

DC-area mover with experience in military PCS, federal-government, and corporate relocations.

Why we picked it: DC-metro and military relocations.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20062BR est. $2,700–$6,800
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#87
Executive Moving Systems logo

Executive Moving Systems

4.3/ 5

All 50 states

Atlas Van Lines agent serving Virginia, DC, and the broader Mid-Atlantic with strong corporate-relocation business.

Why we picked it: Virginia and Mid-Atlantic interstate.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 19812BR est. $2,800–$6,900
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#88
White Glove Moving & Storage logo

White Glove Moving & Storage

4.4/ 5

Interstate (48)

NYC-area mover with fine-art and luxury-furniture handling. Strong building-COI experience in Manhattan high-rises.

Why we picked it: NYC high-value and luxury moves.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 20032BR est. $2,200–$6,200
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#89
Ben Hur Moving & Storage logo

Ben Hur Moving & Storage

4.3/ 5

Interstate (48)

Long-running NYC mover with both local and interstate operations. Storage facilities support multi-week transitions.

Why we picked it: NYC long-running independent.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 19572BR est. $2,300–$6,300
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage
#90

Budget local mover with locations across the Southwest and West. Pricing is competitive but read recent reviews for your specific branch.

Why we picked it: Budget local moves.
USDOT Verify on FMCSAFounded 19732BR est. $500–$2,200
LocalLong-distancePackingStorage

Questions to ask any mover before booking

  • What's your USDOT number? (Verify it on SAFER while still on the call.)
  • Is the quote binding, non-binding, or binding-not-to-exceed?
  • What's included in the linehaul vs billed as accessorial?
  • Do you subcontract this lane, or run it with your own crew and truck?
  • What's the delivery window — date or range?
  • What valuation coverage do you offer, and what does each tier cost?
  • What's the deposit, and when is the balance due?
  • What's the claims process if something arrives damaged?

Scam patterns the FMCSA flags every year

  • Hostage loads — quote low, double the price on delivery, refuse to unload until you pay cash.
  • Phantom companies — no USDOT, no MC, a website with stock photos and a phone number that goes to voicemail.
  • Bait-and-switch quote — verbal price online, much higher binding number on move day.
  • Cash-only deposit — over $100 in cash before pickup is the single clearest red flag in this industry.
  • Blank Bill of Lading — never sign one. Once it's blank and signed, the carrier writes whatever they want above it.
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Frequently asked questions

Look up the USDOT number on safer.fmcsa.dot.gov. The record shows active status, insurance on file, and complaint history. Takes about 30 seconds and should be done before any deposit.