{"title":"How to Move (16 Moving Tips from a Professional Mover)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-move","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"Moving Tips","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS4poahGebmYwlWpZdZ-dIg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gki2r5dv79g"},"tldr":"Pro mover's 16-tip guide to a stress-free move. Pack early, color-label boxes by room, protect breakables, and walk into your new place organized.","totalDurationSeconds":701,"difficulty":"medium","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Set a Budget and Start Packing 4 Weeks Out","text":"Sit down before you touch a single box and write two lists: a budget (truck, movers, supplies, deposit, utility hookups) and a moving timeline. Give yourself four weeks if you can, two weeks at the absolute minimum. Two days is not a moving plan, it is a panic.While you're at it, call your utility companies and schedule the cable, gas, and electric switch-over for the day you arrive. Same with mail forwarding and your driver's license address. Doing this in week one means you walk into a new place with the lights on, not a cold shower at 9 PM."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Decide Whether to Hire Movers","text":"Be honest about what you can lift and who is actually showing up to help. If your only volunteers are a brother-in-law with a bad back and a friend who keeps texting \"maybe,\" pay the movers. The price covers the truck, the labor, and the insurance on the stuff they break. The price you don't see is the chiropractor bill and the friendship strain when one couch ruins someone's weekend.Get three quotes. Ask each one how they bill (hourly vs flat), whether they pack or just load, and how they handle damage claims. A good mover will ask about stairs, parking, and the heaviest piece in your house. If they don't ask, that's the answer."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Declutter Before You Pack a Single Box","text":"Every box you pack is a box you pay to move and then pay to unpack. Go through closets, the attic, the basement, and the garage and pull out anything you haven't used in a year. Donate, sell, or toss it. You are not moving the bread maker. You are not moving the treadmill that holds laundry.Then set a timer for one hour a day and pack. That's it. One hour. Start with the rooms you barely use - guest bedroom, china cabinet, off-season closet. By the time you get to the kitchen and bedroom, you're a packing veteran and the daily pile is small enough that you don't dread it."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Pack an Essentials Tote and Color-Label Every Box","text":"Pack one bag with the stuff you need on day one: toothbrush, toilet paper, phone charger, two days of clothes, basic toiletries, snacks, the dog's food, your medication. That bag rides in your car, not in the truck. Without it you spend the first night digging through fifteen boxes for a hairbrush.Then give every room a color. Kitchen is red, bedroom is blue, kids' room is yellow, bathroom is green. Slap a strip of colored tape on every box from that room and on the doorframe of the destination room. Movers walk in, see red tape on the box and red tape on the kitchen door, and the box ends up in the right room without anyone asking you where it goes."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Use the Right Size Box and Don't Overpack","text":"Heavy stuff goes in small boxes. Books, canned food, tools, dishes - all small box. A book box that you can lift with one hand stays manageable. A book box the size of a TV is going to drop on someone's foot.Light, bulky stuff goes in big boxes. Pillows, comforters, lampshades, toilet paper. The box doesn't weigh much, but it fills the truck efficiently. And whatever the size, never leave empty space at the top. Stuff packing paper, a towel, or balled-up newspaper in the gaps so nothing rattles around in transit. A loose plate in a half-empty box always cracks."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Protect Breakables and Use Suitcases and Garbage Bags","text":"Wrap glasses, plates, and bottles individually in packing paper or bubble wrap. Pack plates standing on edge like records, not stacked flat - they survive bumps way better that way. Stuff a layer of paper at the top and bottom of every dish box.Save money on boxes by using what you already own. Suitcases and rolling duffels are perfect for heavy stuff like books because they have wheels. Laundry hampers are great for blankets and pillows. And the garbage-bag clothes trick from the video is real: lay clothes inside a heavy-duty trash bag, push the air out (vacuum hose works fastest), twist it tight, and you've shrunk an entire dresser drawer into a bag the size of a basketball."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Photograph Furniture and Isolate Hazardous Items","text":"Before you unscrew anything, take a phone photo. Photograph the bed frame, the IKEA shelf, the cable connections behind the TV. Future you, at midnight in the new place trying to figure out which screw goes where, will thank you. Drop all the hardware (screws, bolts, the little hex key) into a zip-top bag and tape that bag to the underside of the furniture piece it came from.Then look at what you cannot pack with normal stuff: paint, propane, gasoline, fire extinguishers, ammonia, drain cleaner, anything aerosol. Movers won't take most of these by law, and you don't want them tumbling around with your couch anyway. These go in your own car in a separate plastic bin, or get used up and tossed before the move."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Pack the Kitchen, Seal Liquids, and Keep Jewelry Close","text":"The kitchen takes longer than every other room combined. Plates, glasses, mugs, pans, mixing bowls, knives, and the weird gadgets nobody uses. Bubble-wrap every glass and plate. Pack plates on edge. Wrap knives in dish towels before they go in any box. Label the box \"KITCHEN - FRAGILE\" on at least two sides, not the top - movers can't see the top once boxes are stacked.Bathroom liquids leak. Always. Unscrew the cap of every shampoo, lotion, and toothpaste tube, lay a square of plastic wrap over the opening, then screw the cap back on through the plastic. Whatever escapes the cap dies in the plastic instead of soaking the box. And jewelry goes in a small labeled box that rides in your car with you, not in the truck. Stuff disappears in moves. Not the rest of the bedroom - just the small valuable things. Keep them close."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-23T14:21:00.609Z","published":"2026-05-23T14:15:06.591Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}