I thought I'd document my journey here for all to see since long-distance moves have been discussed a few times.
We close on our Michigan house in 3 hours, so these decisions have been made already. But I thought some might be interested in the details.
Situation:
Moving from 48430 (mid-Michigan) to 33954 (southwestern Florida). 1,294 miles from door to door. Gotta get my crap outta Michigan for the most reasonable price possible.
Possible solutions (and first impressions):
- U-haul and lots of manual labor (ow my back!)
- Moving company (ow my bank account!)
- Pods or similar (sounds good)
- Sell everything and move nothing (maybe somewhere short of selling everything)
Discovery:
- U-haul - 20' moving truck - $2742 + $400 in fuel (10 mpg assumed) for truck, plus $200 for fuel for the minivan. We'll call that $3400 all in.
- U-box containers were harder to figure out the final cost, but it's similar to above after you pay to have them delivered and picked up.
- Moving company. Nope. We did that once. They stole stuff, rifled through my wifes underwear drawer, broke stuff, then held our stuff hostage on the truck until we paid 25% more than the agreed-upon price. Never going that route again. Never.
- Pods - One 16' container was about $4600 plus fuel surcharges that were an unknown. Pods is well-knows for hidden fees that can add 30% to your total. 13-16 day transit time. $200 in fuel for the minivan.
- Pack Rats - Same concept as pods but more affordable and not a crappy reputation. $4113.39 for a 16' container. 10-13 day transit time.
- Upack - similar to the above two but they drop off a 27' trailer. you pack your stuff and pay for the linear feet you use. 16' of trailer space is $3452 BUT each linear foot of trailer is 1.5' wider and 1.5' taller than Pods or Pack Rats. So it's much more affordable. 8-10 day transit time. $200 in fuel for the minivan.
Decision time:
Dollar-wise U-haul and Upack are basically the same. If we went U_haul I'd be driving a 20' truck 700 miles a day. My wife wouldn't be able to share driving duties. That'd be tough. That left Upack, Pods, and Pack Rats. We went with Upack because it's about a grand cheaper, more volume per linear foot, and the flexibility to use as much or as little (5' minimum) trailer as you need. When you're all packed up you install a supplied bulkhead and lock it with your lock. They then fill the rest of the trailer with a commercial load that is dropped off en route to your destination. That stop is baked into your transit time. When you are pricing it out they tell you that there are NO hidden fees. That's their claim to fame. They do tell you that your price is based on the length you are inquiring about (16' in our case), and that each additional foot will be $XX. In our case, based on our distance (I assume) each foot above 16' will it $87. The max for the whole trailer is $4200. That's still less than Pods for one 16' trailer!!
In order to cut down on the amount of stuff we are taking, thus making it cheaper, we sold, gave away, or threw away LOTS of stuff. By my napkin math we sold about $3500 worth of stuff. Basically paying for the trailer.
There are potential downsides to the Upack though. The trailer is a tractor-trailer, so the load floor is reached by a ramp. That ramp is going to feel steep when I'm rolling a 60 gallon air compressor and tool boxes up. The Pod or Pack Rat is a container that sits in the driveway. That's nice.
Another difference is with Pods and Pack Rats you are paying for 30 days with the trailer. Subtract the transit time and you have 6-8 days to load, and 6-8 days to unload. With Upack you have 3 business days to load, and three to unload. Now, our trailer is being dropped off today, Friday. We'll actually have 5 calendar days to load. The trailer will more than likely be dropped off at the new house on a Thursday, giving us 5 days to unload. Personally I think three days is enough, but it's a difference between the services for sure.
I'll leave this here for now and update as things progress. This will be in real time so the updates won't be swift. The trailer won't leave Michigan until the 11th, and dropped off in FL on a Thursday, giving us 5 days.