There are two ways to hire a mover in San Antonio: collect quote-form callbacks for a week, or spend two minutes on the phone with a moving company that serves San Antonio and get real questions answered. We built this page — and our call line — for the second kind of person.
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Cost factors
May through September is peak everywhere in America, and month-ends spike with lease cycles. Mid-month, mid-week dates are the classic capacity valley. In San Antonio, where 47.6% of households rent (Census ACS), lease-cycle month-ends are the crunch to plan around.
Crew-hours for a local move and shipment weight for a long-distance one both start with your inventory. A one-bedroom flat differs from a four-bedroom house with a garage by a factor of several, and no mover can price the difference without hearing it. Census pegs San Antonio's median household income at about $62,917 a year — and household size, not income, is still what fills a truck.
Local moves bill mostly by time; long-distance moves by weight and miles. The break point is the state line: cross it and federal FMCSA rules apply, including written-estimate and 110%-rule protections.
Stairs, elevators, long walks from the truck, permit-only parking — each adds crew time, and on interstate moves can trigger shuttle or long-carry charges that are legal when disclosed in advance. With San Antonio's median home built around 1984 (Census ACS), access questions aren't hypothetical here.
Pianos, safes, marble, oversized furniture — anything needing extra crew, rigging, or crating is priced as its own line item, legitimately. Surprise specialty charges on moving day are a red flag; disclosed ones are normal.
Interstate movers must include basic released-value protection and offer full-value protection as an option under federal rules; Texas has its own rules for in-state moves. It's insurance-shaped, and it changes the bill — ask about it directly.
A net 133,372 people moved INTO Texas in the most recent Census count. That inbound pressure shows up as tighter delivery spreads around San Antonio in peak months; local-only moves feel it less, but anyone arriving from out of state should lock a window early.
Owners outnumber renters in San Antonio (47.6% renting, per the ACS). Owner-heavy markets mean bigger average jobs — garages, attics, storage rooms — so the inventory conversation matters more than the calendar here.
The ACS puts San Antonio's median build year near 1984 — a split market of prewar walk-ups and newer builds. Whichever side yours is on, access (stairs, basements, elevators, parking) moves estimates more than most people guess.
San Antonio's moving calendar leans military: Joint Base San Antonio's PCS waves, heaviest in early summer, put steady pressure on trucks and crews across the metro. Loop 410 and Loop 1604 organize the geography, with I-35 and I-10 carrying the long hauls. Housing ranges from older homes near the center — narrow lots, mature trees, detached garages — to the fast-growing northeast corridor where Schertz, Cibolo, and Converse are wall-to-wall new subdivisions with HOA parking rules. New Braunfels, up I-35, has grown so fast that its road network is a scheduling factor in itself. Summer heat is relentless, and downtown's historic buildings can mean tight stairwells and no loading zone.
Your protections
Before any money changes hands, know which rules protect your San Antonio move:
| Question | Texas answer |
|---|---|
| Who regulates in-state movers | Texas Department of Motor Vehicles (TxDMV), Motor Carrier Division |
| Credential to ask for | Motor carrier certificate of registration with household goods authority (an 'Active'… |
| Estimates | Under 43 TAC Section 218.56, before loading anything a Texas mover must give you a written proposal that states the maximum amount you could be required to pay for the listed items and services. The proposal must clearly say whether it is binding (exact price) or not-to-exceed (a stated maximum the… |
| Deposits | Texas law does not set a dollar cap on deposits or down payments. Instead, 43 TAC Section 218.56 requires the written proposal to state when payment is required and what forms of payment are accepted, and 43 TAC Section 218.57 requires the mover to release your goods at destination once you pay the… |
| Complaints | File mover complaints with TxDMV: use the department's online Complaint Management System (linked from https://www.txdmv.gov/motorists/consumer-protection/dont-make-a-move), or call the TxDMV consumer helpline at (888)… |
The moment a San Antonio move crosses the state line, federal law takes over from Texas's: FMCSA requires written estimates, caps delivery-day demands at 110% of a non-binding estimate, and gives you arbitration rights. The USDOT lookup at ProtectYourMove.gov is free and takes a minute.
Verifying takes five minutes and beats every review site ever written, because regulators don't take payment for placement.
Work backward from your must-be-out date. Long-distance moves want the most runway — pickup windows and delivery spreads are real on interstate hauls, and the 110% rule only protects you when there's a written estimate to anchor it. Local San Antonio moves can book tighter, but month-end weekends still evaporate first. The practical rhythm: survey and written estimate first, dates second, packing plan third. If your timeline is already tight, say so on the call — dispatchers fill cancellations every week, and flexible daters get those slots.
Building moves run on logistics: elevator reservations, certificates of insurance for the building manager, loading-dock windows, and hallway protection. A mover who asks about your building before quoting is showing you professionalism; one who doesn't is showing you a future dispute. If you rent in San Antonio, get your building's move-in/move-out rules in writing and read them to the mover on the phone — thirty seconds that routinely saves a rescheduled move.
Q & A
On interstate moves with a non-binding estimate, federal FMCSA rules cap what the mover can require at delivery at 110% of the estimate — remaining charges bill later. It exists to prevent hostage-load pressure, and it only works if your estimate is in writing.
Interstate pricing is built on shipment weight, mileage, and services (packing, stairs, shuttles, storage), documented on a rated order for service. That's why phone estimates without an inventory are guesses — and why the written estimate rules exist.
They can give you a process: inventory survey (in person or video), then a written estimate. Anyone offering a firm total in sixty seconds without seeing your inventory is either padding it or planning to renegotiate on your driveway. The call gets you started; the survey gets you the number.
Released value is the free federal minimum on interstate moves — sixty cents per pound per article, which turns a shattered TV into pocket change. Full-value protection costs more and makes the mover repair, replace, or pay out actual value. Which one you have is decided on paper before loading, not after breakage.
Three checks kill most scams: verify registration (USDOT for interstate, Motor carrier certificate of registration with household goods authority (an 'Active' TxDMV certificate number), plus an active USDOT number in-state), insist on a written estimate from a real inventory, and never pay a large cash deposit. FMCSA's ProtectYourMove.gov lists the full playbook — and any mover who resists these basics has answered your question.
A carrier owns trucks and moves you; a broker sells your job to a carrier, and federal law requires brokers to say so. Our line is neither — it connects your call directly to a professional moving company serving San Antonio, and we never take custody of your move or your money.
If you typed 'moving companies near me' from San Antonio, here's the shortcut past the directory maze: (888) 705-1780 reaches a professional moving company serving San Antonio directly — two minutes, real questions, no callbacks from five strangers.
We never sell your number and never run lead forms. When you dial, a professional moving company serving San Antonio answers — that's the whole transaction.