Moving checklist: what to do before moving day
Short answer
Work backward from moving day: at 8 weeks, research movers and start decluttering; around 2 weeks, confirm your mover in writing and begin transferring utilities and changing your address; in the final week, pack room by room and set aside an essentials box. Doing the utility and address work early is what keeps moving week calm.
How to use this timeline
A move goes smoothly when the slow tasks that depend on other companies happen early and the physical packing happens last. The common trap is doing it in reverse: bubble-wrapping dishes in week one and leaving utility transfers and address changes for the last few days, when those are the exact tasks that hinge on a mover's, utility's, or landlord's schedule.
The weeks below are counted backward from moving day. If you have less lead time, start at the week that matches your situation and pull the earlier tasks into whatever days you have. Treat the dates as general (estimates only), since mover availability, lease notice periods, and utility scheduling windows vary by company and region.
8 weeks before: research and declutter
This is your planning window. The single most useful thing you can do is get rid of what you won't move: every box you don't pack is one you don't carry, and movers price partly by volume and weight.
Research is the other job. Get written quotes from two or three movers, or price a truck rental if you're moving yourself. This is also when you set a number; the Budget Calculator can frame movers, deposits, and supplies before costs pile up. Worked example: 8 weeks out you research movers and start decluttering.
- Get written quotes from two or three movers, or reserve a rental truck for your date
- Go room by room and sort into keep, donate, sell, and toss
- Set a budget covering movers, supplies, deposits, and a buffer
- Start a folder for quotes, receipts, and lease or closing paperwork
- If you rent, check your lease notice period so you don't owe an extra month
4 weeks before: supplies and paperwork
With the big decisions made, gather boxes and start on the accounts tied to your address. Order supplies now rather than paying last-minute prices or running out mid-pack.
Begin the paper trail. Requesting records and notifying schools or medical offices takes days to process, so starting a month out keeps moving week clear.
- Gather boxes, tape, bubble wrap, and markers; a Packing List Generator can size quantities for your home
- Book time off for moving day if you need it
- Request medical, dental, school, and vet records so transfers aren't rushed
- Use up freezer food and cut back on grocery runs
- Start packing what you rarely touch: off-season clothes, books, decor
2 weeks before: confirm the mover and transfer utilities
This is the pivot week. Confirm your mover in writing, including the date, arrival window, and price, so there's no confusion the morning of. Worked example: 2 weeks out is when you confirm the mover and start transferring utilities.
Schedule your current services to shut off the day after you leave and your new home's services to turn on the day before you arrive, so you never land in a dark house. Electricity, gas, water, internet, and trash each have their own lead time; internet installation in particular can book out, so make it one of your first calls.
- Reconfirm the mover or truck rental in writing
- Schedule electricity, gas, and water to switch over around your move dates
- Book internet and cable installation at the new place early, since slots fill up
- Arrange trash and recycling service and note the pickup days
- Fill and transfer prescriptions to a pharmacy near your new home
1 week before: change your address and pack in earnest
Address changes belong here, before the final-day rush. File a change of address with USPS so mail forwards while you update everyone directly. Forwarding is a safety net, not a substitute for telling the companies that matter.
Update your bank and credit cards, your employer for payroll and tax records, and any subscriptions or deliveries, from streaming to meal kits to mail-order refills that quietly ship to the old place. Packing shifts into high gear: work room by room, keep each room's contents in its own boxes, and label every box with its destination room and a note on what's inside.
- File a USPS change of address and set the forwarding start date
- Update your address with your bank, credit cards, and employer
- Update subscriptions, deliveries, insurance, and government ID or voter registration
- Label every box by destination room, not just contents
- Bag hardware from disassembled furniture and tape it to the piece
The day before and moving day
Almost everything is boxed now, which is why one small box matters most. Worked example: the day before, you pack an essentials box with chargers, medications, documents, and a change of clothes, plus toiletries, snacks, and anything you'd hate to dig through twenty boxes for on night one. Keep it with you, not on the truck. Then defrost the fridge, confirm arrival times, and sort out how you'll pay the movers.
On moving day your job is coordination, not lifting. Be there when the movers arrive, point out anything fragile, and walk every room, closet, cabinet, garage, and attic before you lock up. Confirm the old place's utilities are set to shut off. At the new home, check the box count and note any damage right away, while the movers are still there.
- Pack the essentials box: chargers, medications, documents, a change of clothes
- Defrost and dry the refrigerator and freezer the day before
- Walk the empty home fully, including closets and outdoor spaces
- Keep the essentials box, documents, and valuables with you, not on the truck
- Check the box count on arrival and flag damage before movers leave
- Confirm utilities are on at the new place and off at the old one
Common mistakes
A few predictable errors cause most moving-day trouble. Knowing them ahead is half the fix.
- Leaving utilities too late: installation slots book out, and you can arrive to no power or water. Schedule transfers around two weeks ahead.
- Putting off address changes: waiting until the last day means missed bills and mail that never catches up. Handle USPS, bank, and employer the week before at the latest.
- No essentials box: if chargers, medications, and documents are buried on the truck, your first night is miserable. Pack that box separately and keep it with you.
- Under-estimating packing time: the easy rooms still take longer than they look, so start them a month out.
- Labeling boxes by contents only: a box marked books tells movers nothing about where it goes. Always add the destination room.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I transfer my utilities?+
About two weeks before moving day. Schedule the old home's services to end the day after you leave and the new home's to start the day before you arrive, so there's no gap. Internet and cable are the exception: installation appointments book out further ahead, so line those up as soon as you have your new address and date.
Does filing a USPS change of address update everyone automatically?+
No. USPS forwarding only redirects mail for a limited time; it does not tell your bank, employer, or subscriptions where you moved. Treat forwarding as a backstop and still update your bank, credit cards, employer, insurance, and any recurring deliveries directly during the week before your move.
What exactly goes in the essentials box?+
Anything you'd need on the first night without unpacking: phone and laptop chargers, medications, important documents, a change of clothes, toiletries, snacks, and the keys or paperwork for the new place. Keep this box with you in the car rather than loading it onto the truck.
How early should I start packing?+
Begin with rarely-used items about four weeks out and move room by room from there, saving daily-use kitchen and bathroom items for last. Packing tends to take longer than expected, so starting early on the easy rooms keeps the final week from becoming a scramble.
What if I only have a week or two before I move?+
Prioritize what other people control: confirm your mover or truck, schedule utility transfers immediately, and file your USPS and bank address changes. Then pack the essentials box and work through rooms by how often you use them. The timeline is a guide, so compress the early weeks into the days you have.
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