Cost guide · Greater Boston
How much does a move cost in Boston?
Most moves in Boston run $900 – $1,700, with a typical move around $1,300. Adjust the estimate for your job below. Figures reviewed 2026-07.
Flights without an elevator, counting both ends.
Estimated range
$900 – $1,700
Typical move around $1,300
A ballpark from regional averages — not a quote. Your price depends on the specifics of the job, so get written quotes from two or three licensed pros before deciding.
How this estimate works
A ballpark from regional averages — not a quote. Your price depends on the specifics of the job, so get written quotes from two or three licensed pros before deciding.
- Local bands are the hourly math at 2026 area crew rates — two movers and a truck at $100–$230 per hour (typically $150–$180), three movers $150–$280, four $200–$300 — rolled into flat totals by home size.
- The practical local minimum is $450–$550: crews bill a 2–3 hour minimum plus a travel fee of roughly one hour's rate.
- Long-distance figures are moveBuddha 2026 route tiers by home size (grouped studio–1BR / 2–3BR / 4BR+); season, stairs, and piano adders apply to local moves only — long-distance quotes fold access into the flat rate.
- Packing figures are national full-pack rates with the ~1.2× local uplift applied, materials included, split by home size within the $350–$1,800 span.
- The piano band covers uprights ($250–$600 typical); grand pianos run about $450–$1,200.
Ranges reflect published Greater Boston contractor pricing and regional cost data, last reviewed 2026-07.
What drives the price
Home size drives the crew math
A studio is two movers for a few hours; a 4-bedroom house is a four-person crew most of a day at $200–$300 per hour. Since local moves bill hourly, everything that adds time — furniture that needs disassembly, an overstuffed basement — moves the total, which is why honest movers ask for an inventory before quoting.
The calendar
May through September runs about 25% over winter rates, and the days around September 1 — Boston's great lease turnover — run 35% or more with crews booked solid 6–8 weeks out. The identical move in mid-October is the cheapest version of itself.
Stairs, elevators, and the curb
Walk-up flights add $50–$75 each (or simply more billed hours), a long carry from a distant parking spot adds $100–$300, and a reserved-curb permit runs $69–$109. The region's triple-decker walk-ups are exactly where these access charges concentrate — flag them when you book, not on moving day.
Distance flips the pricing model
Local moves are hourly: crew size × hours. Long-distance moves are tariff-priced by weight and route, which is why a small apartment to New York can cost less than a big local move. The two models don't compare per-mile — get binding estimates for any interstate move and compare totals, not rates.
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Request coverageMove cost questions, answered
- How much do movers cost in Boston?
- Two movers and a truck run $100–$230 per hour in Boston — typically $150–$180 — and the totals work out to about $450–$900 for a studio, $900–$1,700 for a 2-bedroom, and $2,200–$3,200 for a 4-bedroom home. Expect a practical minimum around $450–$550 even for a tiny move: crews bill 2–3 hours minimum plus a travel fee of roughly an hour's rate.
- Why is moving around September 1 so expensive in Boston?
- September 1 is Boston's lease-turnover day — a huge share of apartment leases roll over at once, and every truck and crew in the region is spoken for. Rates run 25–40% above standard (this estimate uses 35%), and reputable movers sell out 6–8 weeks ahead, so book early. If your lease allows any flexibility at all, moving even a few days off the 1st saves real money and gets you a better crew.
- How much does a move from Boston to New York or Florida cost?
- Long-distance moves price by weight and route, not by the hour. From Boston, a studio-to-1-bedroom move to New York runs about $1,000–$3,500 and a 2–3-bedroom $1,750–$5,000; to Florida figure $2,500–$5,900 and $3,300–$7,900 respectively; cross-country runs $3,400–$7,600 for small homes up to $10,100–$15,600 for 4+ bedrooms. Binding written estimates matter far more on these — get at least three.
- How do I know a mover is legitimate in Massachusetts?
- For moves within Massachusetts, the mover must hold the state's household-goods carrier certificate — the MDPU number in Massachusetts — and reputable companies print it on their estimates; interstate movers need a USDOT number you can look up. A mover who can't produce either isn't bound by the rules that govern estimates, liability, and claims, and that's exactly where lowball-quote-then-hostage-fee stories come from.
- Do I need a parking permit for the moving truck in Boston?
- In much of Boston, yes — reserving curb space for a moving truck runs about $69–$109 through the city, with a few days' lead time, and some movers charge a handling fee to file it for you. It's cheap insurance: without reserved space the truck parks wherever it fits, and long-carry charges of $100–$300 kick in — more than the permit ever cost.