From Your
Driveway to
Theirs.
Door-to-door means one carrier handles the whole move — pickup at your address, delivery at your destination. No terminal handoffs, no “who has my car” confusion, no extra trips. The default service level for every carrier in our network.
One Carrier. Start to Finish.
Door-to-door isn’t a premium add-on. It’s how real carriers have always worked. What changed is that brokers started splitting moves across multiple carriers to save on their costs — we don’t.
Give us both addresses — origin and destination. We confirm the carrier can reach both with a full-size trailer.
You get the name and phone of the carrier who will personally pick up and deliver your vehicle. Same person both ends.
Carrier arrives at your door (or the closest safe location). Joint inspection, load, and Bill of Lading signed on the spot.
Same carrier delivers to the destination address. Final inspection together. Keys handed over. Done — no depot detour.
Why Door-to-Door Won.
Terminal-to-terminal auto shipping was common 20 years ago. Door-to-door replaced it for almost every use case — here’s why.
Door-to-Door FAQ.
What does door-to-door auto transport actually mean?
The carrier picks up your vehicle at your origin address and delivers it to your destination address. No terminals, no depots, no handoffs. The same carrier handles the entire move — you know who has your vehicle from start to finish.
Can the carrier really pull up to my driveway?
As close as safely and legally possible. Auto transport trailers are 75–80 feet long. Narrow streets, low-hanging branches, HOA restrictions, or residential weight limits may require the carrier to meet you at a nearby parking lot, school, or shopping center. The carrier coordinates with you in advance if that’s needed.
Does door-to-door cost more?
It’s the default service level for nearly every carrier in our network — not a premium add-on. Terminal-to-terminal is rare in modern auto transport and usually not meaningfully cheaper once you factor in your time and gas getting to the terminal.
What if I’m not home for pickup or delivery?
Someone 18 or older needs to be present at both ends to inspect the vehicle with the carrier and sign the Bill of Lading. If you can’t be there, assign a trusted friend, family member, or neighbor in advance and give the carrier their contact info.
How much notice does the carrier give before arriving?
Your carrier provides a pickup window (usually 1–3 day range) at dispatch, then calls 24 hours ahead of actual pickup and again 1–2 hours before arrival. Same process at delivery. No surprise visits.
What if my street can’t accommodate the trailer?
The carrier will call you before pickup to discuss. Common alternatives are nearby shopping center parking lots, wide side streets, school parking (off-hours), or industrial lots. Most neighborhoods have an accessible spot within a half-mile.
Does door-to-door work in rural or hard-to-reach areas?
Yes, with some coordination. For very rural deliveries, the carrier may arrange to meet you at the closest major road. The carrier can usually reach any address a moving truck could reach.
Other Services.
Door-to-door is standard — pair it with the transport method that fits your vehicle.
Door-to-Door Done Right.
Tell us the two addresses and we’ll match you with a carrier who can reach both. One person, start to finish.