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Flat Rate Movers in Allied Gardens, CA

Best Fit Movers, 1st Choice Movers, We Like To Move It, Hulk Movers, Like Movers, The Rock Movers, Finch Moving, QShark Moving, Flexdolly, 24/7 Moving and Storage and Nuvision Moving offer flat rate, binding-price moves in Allied Gardens, CA. The quoted price is the final price. No hourly surprises, no hidden fees. Flat rate pricing is based on cubic footage ($1.60 to $8.00/cf), not time. A 2BR typically runs $1,500 to $4,500 depending on distance and access conditions. 11 providers serve the area with flat rate pricing.

11 verified · 0 surveyed with flat rate · 2026-06-16

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11 movers in Allied Gardens

Best Fit Movers moving truck
1st Choice Movers moving truck
We Like To Move It moving truck
Hulk Movers moving truck
Like Movers moving truck
The Rock Movers moving truck
Finch Moving moving truck
QShark Moving moving truck
Flexdolly moving truck
Nuvision Moving moving truck

Movers Offering Flat Rate Pricing in Allied Gardens

These companies offer binding, flat-rate quotes in the Allied Gardens area, verified through FMCSA and Google data.

CompanyGoogleFMCSAYears
Best Fit Movers Verified-Active-
1st Choice Movers Verified-Active-
We Like To Move It Verified-Active-
Hulk Movers Verified-Active-
Like Movers Verified-Active-
The Rock Movers Verified-Active-
Finch Moving Verified-Active-
QShark Moving Verified-Active-
Flexdolly Verified-Active-
24/7 Moving and Storage Verified-Active-
Nuvision Moving Verified-Active-

Flat Rate Pricing Examples | Allied Gardens

Flat rate pricing is calculated by multiplying your total cubic footage by a per-CF rate that varies with distance, stairs, packing needs, and market conditions. Here is the math for common home sizes.

Home SizeTypical CFLow End ($1.60/cf)Mid Range ($4.00/cf)High End ($8.00/cf)
Studio200 CF$320$800$1,600
1 Bedroom400 CF$640$1,600$3,200
2 Bedroom750 CF$1,200$3,000$6,000
3 Bedroom1,250 CF$2,000$5,000$10,000
4 Bedroom1,850 CF$2,960$7,400$14,800

Per-CF rate varies by distance, stairs, packing needs, and market. Low end reflects short local moves with easy access. High end reflects longer distances with full packing and complex logistics.

Flat Rate vs Hourly | When Each Is Better

The choice between flat rate and hourly depends on your move size, access conditions, and tolerance for price uncertainty. Flat rate eliminates time risk but may cost more for small, fast moves.

FactorFlat RateHourly
How you payOne locked pricePer hour, per mover
Price certaintyGuaranteedVariable
Who absorbs delaysThe moverYou
Best for large moves (3BR+)BetterRisky
Best for small/fast movesMay overpayBetter
Stairs, elevators, long walksIncluded in quoteAdds time = more cost
Complicated movesPrice is lockedEvery complication adds cost
Studio or 1BR, minimal stuffFlat rate premium may not be worth itFast crew = cheap move
Short distance (<10 mi)Works fineMinimal transit time

Choose Flat Rate When

  • Large move (2BR or bigger)
  • Stairs at either location
  • Long carry from door to truck
  • Lots of heavy or bulky items (piano, safe, gym equipment)
  • You want to know the final cost before move day
  • You have experienced bait-and-switch with hourly movers before

Choose Hourly When

  • Studio or 1BR with minimal furniture
  • Short distance (under 10 miles)
  • Ground floor to ground floor, no stairs
  • You know the movers are fast (reviews confirm it)
  • You have already disassembled furniture and are fully packed
  • You want to save money and are comfortable with variable pricing

What Flat Rate Moving Actually Means

Understanding the mechanics of flat rate pricing helps you evaluate whether a quote is fair and whether it is genuinely binding or just an estimate dressed up as flat rate.

Flat rate moving is simple: the price is locked before your move. You pay the quoted amount regardless of how long the move takes. If the movers finish in 3 hours or 8 hours, your bill is the same.

This is the opposite of hourly pricing, where you pay for every minute the crew is on the clock. With hourly movers, a crew that works slowly costs you more. A truck that hits traffic costs you more. Disassembling a bed that takes longer than expected costs you more. Every delay is your problem.

With flat rate, the mover absorbs the time risk. They survey your home, calculate the total volume of your belongings, and quote a binding price. If they underestimate how long the job takes, that is their problem, not yours. The number on the contract is the number you pay.

The key word is binding. A binding quote means the price is contractually locked. This is what separates flat rate from a non-binding estimate, which is just a guess that can change on move day.

How to Get an Accurate Flat Rate Quote

The accuracy of a flat rate quote depends entirely on how much information the mover has about your home, your inventory, and your access conditions. Here are five steps to get the tightest possible quote.

1. In-home survey or video walkthrough. The most accurate flat rate quotes come from a mover physically seeing (or virtually walking through) your home. They open every closet, check the garage, look at the attic. Phone estimates and online forms produce rough guesses, not binding prices.

2. Provide a detailed inventory. If you cannot do an in-home survey, create a room-by-room inventory listing every major item. Include dimensions for oversized pieces (armoires, sectionals, treadmills). The more detail you provide, the tighter the quote.

3. Disclose access issues upfront. Stairs at either location. Elevator availability and reservation requirements. Long carry distances from the door to the truck. Narrow hallways. Low-clearance parking garages. Every access issue affects the quote, and if you do not disclose it, the mover may revise the price on move day.

4. Mention everything that is not furniture. Boxes in the attic, items in the shed, bikes in the garage, patio furniture. Movers cannot quote what they do not know about. Undisclosed items are the most common reason flat rate quotes increase on move day.

5. Ask if the quote is binding or non-binding. Get it in writing. A binding quote means the price is locked. A non-binding estimate means the final price can change. True flat rate is always binding.

Red Flags With Flat Rate Quotes

These warning signs indicate a flat rate quote may not be genuine. A suspiciously low price or a missing contract are the two most common precursors to bait-and-switch on move day.

Suspiciously low quote

If one mover quotes $1,500 and three others quote $3,000-$3,500 for the same move, the low quote is likely bait-and-switch. The mover will show up, claim you have more items than expected, and demand a higher price after your belongings are loaded on the truck. This is one of the most common moving scams.

“Estimate” instead of “binding”

An estimate is NOT a flat rate. If the contract says “non-binding estimate,” the mover can change the price. A real flat rate quote uses the words “binding” or “guaranteed” and locks the price in the written agreement. Read the contract before signing.

No written contract

A verbal flat rate promise means nothing. If the mover will not put the binding price in a written contract with their USDOT number, company name, and terms, walk away. Legitimate flat rate movers always provide written documentation.

Quote without a survey

A mover who gives you a flat rate over the phone without seeing your home (in person or via video) is guessing. That guess will change on move day. Insist on a visual survey before accepting any flat rate quote.

Provider data sourced from FMCSA SAFER, Google Business Profiles, and direct mover surveys. Cubic footage benchmarks and per-CF rates reflect industry standards. Last verified 2026-06-16.

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