Vehicle and Motorcycle Transport via Moving Companies

Vehicle and motorcycle transport through licensed moving companies occupies a specialized niche within the broader relocation industry, governed by distinct federal regulations, equipment requirements, and liability frameworks. This page covers how auto and motorcycle transport is defined, how the physical and logistical process works, the most common situations that prompt vehicle shipping, and the decision boundaries that determine when a full-service moving company is the right choice versus a dedicated auto hauler. Understanding these distinctions matters because the wrong service selection can expose vehicle owners to uninsured damage, regulatory violations, or unexpected costs.


Definition and scope

Vehicle and motorcycle transport, as a moving-adjacent service, refers to the professional conveyance of personal automobiles, motorcycles, ATVs, and similar wheeled vehicles from one location to another — typically as part of a household move or corporate relocation. Unlike freight or dealership transport, consumer vehicle shipping falls under the jurisdiction of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), which requires carriers operating interstate to hold active USDOT numbers and, where applicable, Motor Carrier (MC) operating authority.

The scope of this service includes open transport (exposed carrier deck), enclosed transport (fully covered trailer), and drive-away services (a licensed driver operates the vehicle to the destination). Motorcycles present particular handling requirements: they cannot be driven onto standard auto transport ramps under their own power safely in all configurations and require individual wheel chocks, frame straps, and soft ties to prevent damage during transit. A standard enclosed 53-foot trailer can hold between 3 and 5 motorcycles depending on model dimensions and loading configuration.

Specialty moving companies may offer vehicle transport as an add-on to a full household move, but the vehicle itself is almost never loaded onto the same truck as furniture and household goods — federal weight and cargo classification rules require separation. For more on how specialty services connect to household relocations, see the specialty services topic context.


How it works

The transport process follows a structured sequence from inspection to delivery:

  1. Pre-transport inspection — A condition report documenting existing scratches, dents, and mechanical condition is signed by both the driver and the vehicle owner before loading. This document is the baseline for any damage claims filed after delivery.
  2. Carrier assignment — Moving companies that do not operate their own auto transport equipment use licensed broker networks to assign the vehicle to a qualified carrier. The broker must be registered with FMCSA under 49 CFR Part 371 (FMCSA Broker Regulations).
  3. Loading and securing — Vehicles are driven or winched onto the transport deck and secured with wheel straps, axle chains, or soft-tie systems. Motorcycles require specialized cradles or crates; improper securing is the leading cause of transit damage.
  4. Transit — Open carriers expose vehicles to road debris, weather, and temperature fluctuation. Enclosed carriers eliminate those risks but increase cost by 30–60% compared to open transport, depending on route and vehicle size (industry cost variation documented by the American Moving and Storage Association).
  5. Delivery inspection — Upon arrival, the condition report is reviewed against the vehicle's current state. Any new damage must be noted on the Bill of Lading before the owner signs for delivery. Signing without notation may limit or void claims.

The claims process for specialty moves follows similar documentation logic — pre- and post-condition records are the foundation of any successful damage recovery.


Common scenarios

Vehicle transport alongside a professional moving engagement typically arises in four identifiable situations:

Military PCS (Permanent Change of Station) moves represent a significant volume of vehicle transport activity nationally. The Department of Defense authorizes shipment of personally owned vehicles through its Defense Personal Property Program (DP3), which operates under separate entitlement rules from civilian relocation.


Decision boundaries

The core decision is whether to use a moving company that offers vehicle transport bundling versus engaging a standalone auto transport carrier.

Moving company bundling is most appropriate when:
- The household move and vehicle transport share an identical origin-destination corridor
- A single point of contact for scheduling, insurance, and claims is a priority
- The company holds its own FMCSA auto carrier authority rather than subcontracting

Standalone auto transport carrier is preferable when:
- The vehicle moves on a different timeline than household goods
- Enclosed or specialty crated transport is required for a high-value or classic vehicle
- The move is vehicle-only with no accompanying household goods

On the insurance side, standard moving company cargo liability (typically valued at $0.60 per pound per article under released value) does not apply meaningfully to vehicles — a 400-pound motorcycle valued at $15,000 would receive only $240 in released-value coverage. Declared value coverage or third-party transport insurance is necessary. Reviewing specialty item insurance options clarifies how gap coverage is structured for high-value transported goods.

Licensing verification is non-negotiable: any carrier or broker handling interstate vehicle transport must be searchable in FMCSA's SAFER system with an active operating status. Carriers without verifiable USDOT authority are operating outside federal compliance, and damage or loss claims against them carry no federal enforcement backstop.


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