Moving from Connecticut to Florida

Moving from Connecticut to Florida: cost & guide.

Moving from Connecticut to Florida costs roughly $5,235$10,670 for a typical 3-bedroom home with full-service movers, covering about 1,054 miles (2–3 days of driving). A DIY rental truck runs about $757$2,261; a hybrid option falls in between. Here's the full breakdown.

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Cost by home size

Full-service estimates for the ConnecticutFlorida lane, by home size. Bigger homes weigh more, and weight is the biggest driver of an interstate bill.

Connecticut to Florida — full-service cost by home size
Studio / 1-bedroom$3,885$7,9702-bedroom$4,485$9,1703-bedroom$5,235$10,6704+ bedroom$6,135$12,470

Estimates use industry weight rules-of-thumb (AMSA) and 2026 mid-market interstate rates. Get written quotes for an exact price.

Cost by service level (3-bedroom)

The same ConnecticutFlorida move, priced three ways. DIY is cheapest but you do everything; full-service costs the most but is hands-off.

Connecticut to Florida — cost by service level
Rental truck (DIY)$757$2,261Hybrid (you pack, they drive)$2,265$4,951Full-service movers$5,235$10,670

Distance & transit time

Connecticut to Florida is approximately 1,054 miles (about 1,286 road miles), which is a cross-country move. If you drive it yourself, plan for 2–3 days of driving plus rest stops. Full-service van lines quote a multi-day delivery window because long-haul shipments are often consolidated.

What affects your Connecticut-to-Florida cost

  • Weight — the single biggest factor; declutter before you get quoted.
  • Distance — fixed for this lane (~1,054 mi), but it sets the line-haul base.
  • Season — May–September is peak; expect 15–20% more and tighter availability.
  • Service level — DIY vs hybrid vs full-service, shown above.
  • Access — stairs, long carries, and shuttle fees at either end add up.

This is an interstate move — what to verify

Because Connecticut and Florida are different states, any mover you hire is regulated federally by the FMCSA. Before you sign, confirm the company has active USDOT and MC numbers, a published tariff, and gives you a written (binding or non-binding) estimate. Verify at FMCSA "Protect Your Move". See red flags when hiring movers and our editorial standards.

How to find and hire a licensed mover for this move

Before you book a mover for the Connecticut-to-Floridaroute, do your own due diligence — it is the best protection against the most common moving complaints:

  • Get at least three written estimates for the same inventory, addresses, and dates, so you can compare like for like.
  • Confirm active USDOT and MC numbers and read the complaint history before you sign anything.
  • Read independent reviews across more than one platform, and treat a quote far below the others as a warning sign, not a bargain.
  • Never pay a large upfront deposit — reputable movers bill on or after delivery.

Verify any company yourself before you book: see how to check a mover's license and look the company up in the FMCSA SAFER database. MovingRated is independent and is not a moving company, carrier, or broker.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to move from Connecticut to Florida?

A full-service move of a typical 3-bedroom home from Connecticut to Florida runs about $5,235–$10,670, covering roughly 1,054 miles. A DIY rental truck is cheaper at about $757–$2,261. Your actual price depends on home size, exact addresses, time of year, and how much you move.

How long does it take to move from Connecticut to Florida?

The drive is roughly 1,286 road miles — 2–3 days of driving. Full-service van lines typically quote a delivery window of several days to two weeks on a cross-country move like this one, because your shipment may be consolidated with others.

What's the cheapest way to move from Connecticut to Florida?

Renting a truck and driving it yourself is almost always cheapest (about $757–$2,261 for a 3-bedroom load), but it means doing all the loading, driving, and unloading. A hybrid "you pack, they drive" service splits the difference. Full-service movers cost the most but do everything. Get at least three written estimates before deciding.

Do I need a licensed mover for a Connecticut-to-Florida move?

Yes — this is an interstate (state-to-state) move, so any mover you hire must be registered with the FMCSA with active USDOT and MC numbers and must provide a written estimate. Verify any company at fmcsa.dot.gov before signing.

How do I find a licensed mover for a Connecticut-to-Florida move?

Choosing a mover for a Connecticut-to-Florida move is your decision, so vet candidates yourself. Get at least three written estimates for the same inventory and dates, confirm each company has active USDOT and MC numbers, read reviews on more than one platform, and avoid any mover that asks for a large upfront deposit. Verify licensing yourself before you sign.

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