You’re planning a move, and you’ve started getting quotes. Some companies offer “full-service moving” for $2,500. Others advertise “labor-only” help for just $400. The price difference is massive, but what’s the actual difference in service?
More importantly: Which option is right for YOUR move?
At Squad 7 Moving, we offer both full-service and labor-only options because we understand that different moves have different needs. But choosing the wrong service can cost you time, money, and serious stress on moving day.
This comprehensive guide breaks down exactly what each service includes, what it costs, and most importantly—how to decide which option makes sense for your specific situation. By the end, you’ll know exactly which service to choose and why.

What is Full-Service Moving?
Full-service moving is exactly what it sounds like: the moving company handles virtually everything from start to finish. You’re paying for a complete, hands-off moving experience.
What’s Included in Full-Service Moving
Packing services:
- Professional packers arrive 1-2 days before your move
- They bring all packing materials (boxes, tape, bubble wrap, paper)
- Every item in your home gets properly packed and labeled
- Fragile items receive special attention and protection
- Everything is organized by room for easy unpacking
Loading and transport:
- Moving crew arrives with a fully equipped truck
- All furniture is wrapped in protective blankets
- Heavy items are properly secured with straps and padding
- Strategic loading to prevent shifting during transport
- Professional equipment (dollies, ramps, hand trucks)
Delivery and unloading:
- Crew unloads at your new location
- Furniture is placed in the rooms you specify
- Boxes are organized by room based on labels
- Basic furniture assembly (beds, tables, etc.)
- Removal of trash and debris
Additional services often included:
- Furniture disassembly and reassembly
- Appliance disconnect and reconnect
- Custom crating for valuable items
- Storage options if needed
- Full valuation insurance coverage available
What you do:
- Decide what you’re taking and what you’re leaving
- Pack personal valuables (jewelry, documents, medications)
- Be present for walk-throughs and final placement
- Make payment
That’s it. Everything else is handled for you.
Full-Service Moving Costs
Average pricing for full-service moves in 2026:
| Home Size | Local Full-Service | Long-Distance Full-Service |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | $800-$1,400 | $2,500-$4,500 |
| 1-bedroom | $1,200-$2,000 | $3,500-$6,000 |
| 2-bedroom | $1,800-$3,500 | $5,000-$9,000 |
| 3-bedroom | $3,000-$5,500 | $7,000-$13,000 |
| 4-bedroom | $4,500-$8,000 | $10,000-$18,000 |
What affects full-service pricing:
- Home size and number of belongings
- Distance of the move
- Stairs, elevators, and accessibility
- Specialty items (pianos, antiques, safes)
- Time of year (peak vs. off-season)
- Level of packing needed
- Insurance/valuation coverage chosen
What is Labor-Only Moving?
Labor-only moving (sometimes called “moving help” or “loading/unloading services”) means you rent your own truck and hire movers just for the physical labor portion of your move.
What’s Included in Labor-Only Moving
The basics:
- Moving crew shows up at your location
- They load your pre-packed belongings into YOUR truck/container
- Or they unload your truck at the destination
- Basic furniture protection (blankets, if you provide them)
- Heavy lifting and safe loading techniques
What’s typically NOT included:
- No truck or transportation
- No packing materials
- No packing services
- No insurance beyond basic liability
- No long-distance transport
- Limited or no furniture assembly/disassembly
- No appliance disconnect/reconnect
What you do:
- Rent your own moving truck (U-Haul, Budget, Penske)
- Purchase all packing materials
- Pack everything yourself
- Drive the truck yourself
- Coordinate timing and logistics
- Provide your own insurance
- Unpack at destination
You’re essentially outsourcing just the heavy lifting while handling everything else yourself.
Labor-Only Moving Costs
Average labor-only pricing in 2026:
Hourly rates:
- 2 movers: $80-$130/hour
- 3 movers: $120-$180/hour
- 4 movers: $160-$240/hour
Common scenarios:
| Job Type | Time Needed | Average Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Load studio apartment | 2-3 hours | $200-$390 |
| Unload studio apartment | 1.5-2 hours | $120-$260 |
| Load 2-bedroom | 3-5 hours | $360-$900 |
| Unload 2-bedroom | 2-4 hours | $240-$720 |
| Load 3-bedroom house | 5-7 hours | $600-$1,260 |
| Unload 3-bedroom house | 4-6 hours | $480-$1,080 |
Additional costs you’ll pay separately:
- Truck rental: $50-$200/day (local), $1,000-$3,000+ (one-way long-distance)
- Fuel: $50-$500+ depending on distance
- Packing materials: $100-$500
- Moving equipment rental: $50-$150
- Insurance/damage waiver: $30-$100
- Mileage charges: $0.79-$1.29 per mile
- Hotel stays (for long-distance): $100-$200/night
- Food and incidentals: Variable
The TRUE Cost Comparison: Breaking Down the Math
Let’s compare what you’d actually spend on a 2-bedroom apartment move (local, 30 miles):
Full-Service Option
Squad 7 Moving full-service quote:
- 3 professional movers, 6 hours
- All packing materials included
- Full packing service (day before move)
- Loading, transport, unloading
- Furniture assembly
- Basic insurance coverage
- Total: $2,200
What’s included in that price:
- 8 hours of packing labor (2 packers)
- All boxes, tape, bubble wrap, paper ($200 value)
- 6 hours moving labor (3 movers)
- Truck and fuel
- Equipment and protective materials
- Insurance coverage
- Time investment from you: 4-5 hours (decision-making, directing placement)
Labor-Only Option
Your DIY cost breakdown:
| Expense | Cost |
|---|---|
| U-Haul 15′ truck rental (1 day, 30 miles) | $110 |
| Fuel for truck | $45 |
| Insurance/damage waiver | $35 |
| Moving blankets rental | $20 |
| Dolly rental | $15 |
| Packing materials (boxes, tape, wrap) | $275 |
| Labor-only movers (3 movers, 5 hrs loading/unloading) | $900 |
| Your time packing (20 hours × your hourly value) | Variable |
| Your time driving truck | 2 hours |
| Food/drinks for helpers | $50 |
| Total out-of-pocket: $1,450 | |
| Total with your time (at $25/hr value): $2,000 |
What this doesn’t account for:
- Stress and physical exhaustion
- Risk of injury
- Risk of damage without full insurance
- Potential for multiple trips if packing is inefficient
- Learning curve for packing fragile items properly
- Time coordinating everything yourself
The Real Savings: $200-$750
When you factor in your time, the “cheaper” option often costs nearly the same as full-service—and that’s if everything goes perfectly. One damaged TV or one extra truck rental day, and labor-only becomes more expensive.
Full-Service Moving: Pros and Cons
Advantages of Full-Service Moving
1. Massive time savings You save 30-50 hours of packing, loading, driving, and coordinating. For most people, that time is worth $750-$1,250 in lost wages or personal time.
2. Zero physical labor No lifting heavy furniture, no risk of back injury, no exhaustion. Professional movers do this every day and have the technique to avoid injury.
3. Professional packing expertise Your grandmother’s china won’t break because it was packed by someone who knows exactly how to protect fragile items. Professionals pack 3-4x faster than amateurs and do it better.
4. Proper equipment and materials Industrial-grade dollies, furniture pads, custom crating for artwork, climate-controlled trucks—equipment you’d never buy for a one-time move.
5. Comprehensive insurance options Full-value protection means if something breaks, it gets replaced at current value. DIY moves leave you completely liable for any damage.
6. Single point of contact One company handles everything. If something goes wrong, you have one phone number to call, not multiple vendors pointing fingers at each other.
7. Predictable timeline Professional crews know exactly how long jobs take. Your move happens on schedule without surprises.
8. Reduced stress Moving is ranked as one of life’s most stressful events. Full-service eliminates 80% of that stress.
9. Perfect for:
- Busy professionals with limited time off
- Families with young children
- People with health issues or physical limitations
- Long-distance moves
- Moves with valuable or fragile items
- Anyone who values peace of mind over saving a few hundred dollars
Disadvantages of Full-Service Moving
1. Higher upfront cost Full-service costs 30-60% more than labor-only on the surface (though the real gap is smaller when you account for all factors).
2. Less control over packing You don’t personally handle each item. Some people prefer to pack their own belongings.
3. Requires advance booking Full-service moves, especially with packing, need to be scheduled 2-4 weeks out during peak season.
4. Minimum commitment Most companies have minimum charges that might not make sense for very small moves (studio with minimal furniture).
5. Stranger access to your home Packers will go through all your belongings (though professionals are trained to be discreet and respectful).
Labor-Only Moving: Pros and Cons
Advantages of Labor-Only Moving
1. Lower immediate out-of-pocket cost You’ll spend 25-50% less in direct moving expenses compared to full-service.
2. More control over belongings You pack everything yourself, so you know exactly how each item is handled.
3. Flexibility in scheduling Labor-only help is often available with shorter notice—sometimes even same-day.
4. Pack at your own pace Start packing weeks in advance and work on your own schedule without coordinating with packers.
5. Keep sensitive items private You don’t have strangers going through your closets and drawers.
6. Works for small moves If you’re moving a studio with just a bed, couch, and 10 boxes, labor-only might make more sense.
7. Budget-friendly for strong DIYers If you’re physically capable, have time, and enjoy the challenge, you can save money.
8. Perfect for:
- Young, healthy individuals with time and energy
- Very small moves (studio or 1-bedroom with minimal furniture)
- Very short distance moves (same building or complex)
- People on extremely tight budgets
- Those who enjoy hands-on projects
- Moves where you’re not transporting fragile or valuable items
Disadvantages of Labor-Only Moving
1. Massive time investment Expect to spend 30-60 hours packing, loading, driving, unloading, and coordinating—often across multiple days.
2. Physical exhaustion Lifting heavy furniture and boxes for hours leads to soreness, injuries, and complete exhaustion.
3. Higher injury risk Amateur movers get hurt frequently—back injuries, crushed fingers, dropped items on feet are common.
4. Steep learning curve Packing fragile items, loading a truck efficiently, driving a large vehicle—all require skills most people don’t have.
5. Higher damage risk Without professional packing and handling, breakage rates are 300-400% higher than professional moves.
6. Coordination nightmare You’re juggling truck rental reservations, scheduling movers, buying materials, planning routes, and coordinating timing.
7. Limited insurance coverage Truck rental insurance is minimal and usually doesn’t cover your belongings. You’re financially liable for any damage.
8. Hidden costs add up fast Extra packing materials, second truck trip, overnight truck fees, gas, food for helpers—small costs snowball quickly.
9. Potential for delays Truck rental issues, bad weather, helpers canceling, underestimating time needed—delays are common and costly.
10. Quality concerns with labor-only workers Labor-only services attract both professionals and less experienced workers. Quality can be inconsistent.
The Hidden Costs of Labor-Only Moving
Most people who choose labor-only focus on the sticker price without considering these hidden expenses:
Your Time Has Value
Packing a 2-bedroom apartment yourself:
- Actual packing time: 15-25 hours
- Shopping for materials: 2-3 hours
- Organizing and planning: 3-5 hours
- Total time investment: 20-33 hours
If your time is worth $25/hour, that’s $500-$825 in opportunity cost. At $50/hour, it’s $1,000-$1,650.
Risk of Damage
Professional packing damage rate: 0.5-2% of items DIY packing damage rate: 5-15% of items
For a 2-bedroom move with $25,000 in belongings:
- Professional packing expected damage: $125-$500
- DIY packing expected damage: $1,250-$3,750
One broken TV, damaged dresser, or shattered heirloom can instantly erase any savings from going labor-only.
Physical Toll
Common DIY moving injuries:
- Back strains and hernias
- Crushed fingers and toes
- Cuts and scrapes
- Muscle tears
- Exhaustion and dehydration
One trip to urgent care costs $150-$500. Physical therapy? $75-$200 per session. Time off work? Even more expensive.
Inefficiency Costs
Professional movers:
- Pack a 2-bedroom in 6-8 hours
- Load truck in 3-4 hours
- Unload in 2-3 hours
- Total: 11-15 hours
DIY movers (first-time):
- Pack a 2-bedroom in 20-30 hours
- Load truck in 5-7 hours (including learning curve)
- Drive (carefully, slowly) in 2x the normal time
- Unload in 4-6 hours (plus unloading inefficiently means harder unpacking)
- Total: 30-45 hours
The inefficiency creates cascading costs—extra truck rental days, more meals out, additional time off work, increased exhaustion.
When Full-Service Makes the Most Sense
Choose full-service moving if ANY of these apply to you:
Life Circumstances
✓ You have a demanding job Taking 3-5 days off to pack and move isn’t realistic. Your time is worth more than the cost difference.
✓ You have young children Trying to pack while watching kids is nearly impossible. Professional packers work around your family’s schedule.
✓ You have health or mobility issues Heavy lifting isn’t safe for you. Professionals have the training and equipment to move safely.
✓ You’re pregnant Heavy lifting and stress aren’t recommended. Let professionals handle the physical work.
✓ You’re older (55+) Physical labor becomes riskier with age. Avoid injury by hiring professionals.
✓ You’re moving for work on short notice Employers often cover moving costs for relocations. Use full-service and focus on your new job.
Move Characteristics
✓ Long-distance move (500+ miles) Driving a 26-foot truck across the country is exhausting, risky, and stressful. Professionals do this routinely.
✓ Large home (3+ bedrooms) The time and effort to pack and move a full house is overwhelming for most people.
✓ Valuable or fragile items Antiques, artwork, pianos, crystal collections—professional packing is essential for protection.
✓ Tight timeline Need to be out by the 1st? Full-service gets it done on schedule without last-minute panic.
✓ Complex move Multiple stops, storage needed, specialty items—professional coordination prevents nightmares.
Financial Considerations
✓ Your employer is paying If your company covers relocation, use full-service and save yourself the stress.
✓ Your time is valuable If you earn $50+/hour, the 30-50 hours you’d spend on DIY moving costs $1,500-$2,500 in opportunity cost.
✓ Peace of mind is worth the premium Moving is stressful enough. Paying $500-$1,000 extra to eliminate anxiety is a smart investment for many people.
When Labor-Only Makes the Most Sense
Choose labor-only moving if ALL of these are true:
Personal Situation
✓ You’re young, healthy, and physically strong Heavy lifting doesn’t intimidate you and you’re not at risk for injury.
✓ You have plenty of free time You can dedicate 3-5 full days to packing, moving, and unpacking without work conflicts.
✓ You enjoy hands-on projects Some people find satisfaction in organizing and executing their own move.
✓ Budget is the absolute priority Every dollar matters and you’re willing to trade time and energy to save money.
Move Characteristics
✓ Very small move Studio apartment with minimal furniture and 15 boxes doesn’t justify full-service cost.
✓ Very short distance Moving to the apartment next door or across the street makes DIY more feasible.
✓ Minimal fragile items Mostly clothes, books, and durable furniture—limited breakage risk.
✓ You’re experienced with moving This isn’t your first rodeo. You know how to pack, load, and drive a truck safely.
Support System
✓ You have reliable help Friends or family who are actually capable and committed to helping (not just saying they will).
✓ You have access to equipment Friend with a truck or trailer, or easy access to affordable rental equipment.
✓ Flexible schedule If something goes wrong (truck breaks down, weather delays), you can adjust without major consequences.
The Hybrid Approach: Best of Both Worlds
Many people don’t realize there’s a middle ground between full-service and pure DIY:
Option 1: Packing Only Service
You handle: Renting truck, driving, logistics Movers handle: Professional packing only
Cost: $300-$1,200 depending on home size Savings: 40-60% less than full-service Benefit: Fragile items are packed safely, but you save money on labor and truck
Perfect for: People comfortable driving a truck but wanting packing expertise for protection.
Option 2: Loading and Unloading Only
You handle: Packing, renting truck, driving Movers handle: Heavy lifting at both ends
Cost: $400-$1,800 depending on home size Savings: 30-50% less than full-service Benefit: No back injuries from lifting furniture, but you control packing and timing
Perfect for: Local moves where you’re comfortable packing but want help with heavy lifting.
Option 3: Moving Plus Packing Materials
You handle: Packing itself Movers handle: Provide all materials, loading, transport, unloading
Cost: 10-20% less than full packing service Savings: Few hundred dollars Benefit: Professional moving without paying for packing labor
Perfect for: Organized packers who just need quality materials and professional transport.
Option 4: Partial Packing Service
You handle: Packing clothes, books, non-fragile items Movers handle: Packing kitchen, artwork, fragile items, plus full moving service
Cost: 20-35% less than full-service with full packing Savings: $400-$1,200 Benefit: Save money on simple packing while professionals handle the tricky stuff
Perfect for: Most people—maximize savings while protecting fragile items.
Making Your Decision: The Ultimate Framework
Use this simple decision tree to determine which service is right for you:
Step 1: Calculate Your Time Value
Question: What’s your time worth per hour?
- Minimum wage ($15/hr): Consider labor-only
- Average professional ($25-$50/hr): Lean toward hybrid or full-service
- High earner ($75+/hr): Full-service is almost always the better financial choice
Step 2: Assess Your Physical Capability
Question: Are you physically able to safely lift and move heavy furniture for 8-12 hours?
- Yes, easily: Labor-only is feasible
- Somewhat, with help: Hybrid approach
- No, or risky: Full-service
Step 3: Evaluate Your Available Time
Question: How much time can you dedicate to moving?
- 5+ full days available: Labor-only possible
- 2-3 days available: Hybrid approach
- 1 day or less: Full-service required
Step 4: Consider Your Move Complexity
Question: How complex is your move?
- Studio/1-bedroom, local, minimal items: Labor-only works
- 2-bedroom, moderate distance: Hybrid approach
- 3+ bedroom, long-distance, or valuable items: Full-service
Step 5: Calculate Total True Cost
Labor-only total cost: Truck rental + fuel + insurance + materials + labor + (your hours × hourly value) + risk buffer = ?
Full-service total cost: Quote from moving company = ?
If the difference is less than $500, full-service is almost always the better choice when factoring in risk and stress.
Common Myths About Full-Service vs. Labor-Only
Myth 1: “Labor-only is always cheaper”
Reality: When you factor in your time, materials, truck rental, fuel, and damage risk, labor-only often costs 70-90% of what full-service costs—sometimes more if anything goes wrong.
Myth 2: “Full-service means strangers rifle through all your stuff”
Reality: Professional movers are trained to be respectful and discreet. You can pack personal items yourself and have movers handle everything else.
Myth 3: “Labor-only workers are less professional”
Reality: Many labor-only workers are professional movers doing side work. However, quality varies more than with established full-service companies.
Myth 4: “I can pack just as well as professionals”
Reality: Professional packers have techniques, materials, and experience that prevent damage. DIY packing has 3-5x higher breakage rates.
Myth 5: “Full-service always takes longer to book”
Reality: While peak season requires advance booking, Squad 7 Moving often accommodates full-service moves within 1-2 weeks.
Myth 6: “Labor-only is faster because I control everything”
Reality: Professional crews work faster than DIYers because they do this every day. What takes you 12 hours takes them 6.
Myth 7: “I need full-service for long-distance but not local”
Reality: Local moves often benefit MORE from full-service because you’re staying in the same area and can use saved time to settle in, not recover from moving exhaustion.
Questions to Ask Companies Offering Either Service
For Full-Service Movers
- What exactly is included in your full-service package?
- Do packers come the day before, or the same day as the move?
- What packing materials do you provide?
- Is furniture disassembly and reassembly included?
- What insurance/valuation options do you offer?
- How do you handle valuable or fragile items?
- What’s your damage claim process?
- Are there any items you won’t pack or move?
- Can I pack some things myself and have you pack the rest?
- What’s your cancellation policy?
For Labor-Only Services
- Do you provide any equipment, or do I need to supply everything?
- What’s your hourly rate and minimum hours?
- How many workers will you send?
- Are your workers insured?
- What if something gets damaged during loading/unloading?
- Will you help with furniture disassembly if needed?
- Do you offer same-day availability?
- What payment methods do you accept?
- Have your workers done moves of my home size before?
- Can you provide references from recent labor-only jobs?
Real Customer Scenarios: Which Service They Chose and Why
Scenario 1: Young Professional Couple, 2-Bedroom Apartment
Situation:
- Both work full-time demanding jobs
- Moving 45 miles for new job
- 2-bedroom apartment with nice furniture
- Combined income: $120,000/year
- Timeline: 3 weeks
Decision: Full-Service
Why: “Our time is worth more than the $800 difference between full-service and labor-only. We’d have to take 3-4 days off work to pack and move ourselves, which would cost us $1,200+ in lost wages. Plus, we have a nice dining table and artwork we don’t want to risk damaging with amateur packing. Total no-brainer for us.”
Scenario 2: College Student, Studio Apartment
Situation:
- Moving into first apartment
- Mostly Ikea furniture and clothes
- 15 miles across town
- Budget: Very tight
- Timeline: Flexible
- Help: Friends available
Decision: Labor-Only
Why: “I only have a bed, desk, dresser, and about 20 boxes. I packed everything myself over two weeks. I rented a U-Haul van for $45 and hired two guys for 2 hours at $90/hour to help load and unload the heavy furniture. Total cost was $225 versus $650 for full-service. As a student, that $425 savings matters a lot.”
Scenario 3: Family of Four, 4-Bedroom House
Situation:
- Relocating 1,200 miles for job
- Two young kids (ages 4 and 7)
- Employer covering moving costs
- 4-bedroom house with basement and garage
- Antique furniture, piano, artwork
- Timeline: 6 weeks
Decision: Full-Service Plus Extra Insurance
Why: “Our company was paying, but even if they weren’t, we’d have chosen full-service. With two little kids, trying to pack and move a 4-bedroom house would’ve been impossible. The movers packed everything in one day, loaded the next day, and delivered three days later. We flew to the new city and the house was set up when we arrived. Worth every penny.”
Scenario 4: Retired Couple Downsizing
Situation:
- Moving from 3-bedroom house to 2-bedroom condo
- Ages 68 and 71
- Already decluttered significantly
- Local move (12 miles)
- Fixed retirement income
- Timeline: Flexible
Decision: Hybrid (Partial Packing + Full Moving)
Why: “We packed our clothes, books, and everyday items ourselves over several weeks. But we hired Squad 7 to pack our china, crystal, and fragile decorations, plus handle all the moving. This saved us about $600 versus full packing, but we didn’t have to risk breaking our valuables or throwing out our backs moving furniture. Perfect middle ground.”
Scenario 5: Single Professional, 1-Bedroom to Storage
Situation:
- Traveling abroad for 6 months
- Putting everything in storage
- 1-bedroom apartment
- Minimal fragile items
- Timeline: 2 weeks
- Budget: Moderate
Decision: Labor-Only Plus Storage
Why: “I was moving everything into a storage unit temporarily, not into another home, so careful placement didn’t matter. I packed everything myself, rented a truck, and hired movers just to load the truck at my apartment and unload at the storage facility. Saved about $500 versus full-service, and since I wasn’t in a rush and had no fragile items, it made sense.”
The Squad 7 Moving Recommendation
After helping thousands of customers choose between full-service and labor-only, here’s our honest professional recommendation:
For 80% of moves, full-service or a hybrid approach provides the best value when you factor in:
- Time saved
- Stress reduced
- Damage risk minimized
- Professional results
- Total true cost
Labor-only makes sense for about 20% of moves:
- Very small moves (studio with minimal items)
- Very short distances (same building/complex)
- Young, healthy, experienced movers
- Extremely tight budgets with ample free time
- Simple moves with minimal fragile items
The hybrid approach (partial services) is growing in popularity because it offers:
- Meaningful cost savings (20-40% less than full-service)
- Professional handling where it matters most
- Flexibility to control certain aspects yourself
- Protection for fragile items while you handle simple packing
Making Your Final Decision
Here’s your action plan:
Step 1: Get Quotes for Both
Contact Squad 7 Moving and request quotes for:
- Full-service moving
- Labor-only option
- Hybrid options (partial packing, loading only, etc.)
Step 2: Calculate Your True Costs
For labor-only, add up:
- Labor hourly rate × estimated hours
- Truck rental
- Fuel
- Insurance
- Packing materials
- Equipment rental
- Your time (hours × your hourly value)
- Risk buffer (10-15% for unexpected costs)
Step 3: Assess Your Situation
Ask yourself honestly:
- How much time do I realistically have?
- Am I physically capable of heavy lifting for 8-12 hours?
- How valuable is my time?
- How much stress can I handle?
- What’s the damage risk to my belongings?
- What’s my true budget (including my time)?
Step 4: Choose the Service That Fits
You’ll know the right choice when:
- The cost makes sense for your budget
- The service level matches your needs
- You feel confident in the decision
- The risk level is acceptable
- Your timeline works
Final Thoughts: There’s No Wrong Choice, Only the Wrong Choice for You
Some people thrive on the challenge of a DIY move and genuinely enjoy the process. Others would rather pay professionals and use their time and energy elsewhere. Both approaches are valid.
What matters is making an informed decision based on YOUR:
- Financial situation
- Physical capability
- Available time
- Stress tolerance
- Move complexity
- Risk tolerance
At Squad 7 Moving, we’re here to help you make the best choice for your unique situation—whether that’s full-service, labor-only, or something in between.
Ready to Get Your Custom Quote?
Contact Squad 7 Moving today for:
✓ Free quotes for full-service, labor-only, and hybrid options ✓ Honest advice about which service fits your situation ✓ No pressure—we help you make the right decision, not the most expensive one ✓ Flexible services tailored to your needs and budget ✓ Transparent pricing with all options clearly explained ✓ Licensed, insured professionals for any service you choose
Get your free, no-obligation quote now and let our experienced team help you choose the right moving service for your situation. Whether you need full white-glove service or just a strong crew to handle the heavy lifting, Squad 7 Moving has the expertise and integrity to make your move successful.
Don’t stress about making the wrong choice. Talk to our team, get accurate pricing for all your options, and make a confident decision based on real numbers and professional advice.
