Midwest → South
Illinois to North Carolina moving cost
A 2-bedroom home moving Illinois to North Carolina averages around $2,803 ($2,382 – $3,363 range) over an estimated 728 miles. Adjust home size, season, and services in the calculator below to refine.
Illinois → North Carolina at a glance
$2,803
2-bedroom average
Calibrated mid-point. See the calculator above for your home size.
728mi
Driving distance
Approximate route mileage used in the corridor-rate calculation.
2–4 days
Typical transit
Range from dedicated-truck (faster) to consolidated load (slower).
0+
Vetted carriers
FMCSA-licensed national van lines serving this corridor.
Cost calibrated against thousands of quotes. See our methodology for the full formula, or browse our verified mover network.
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Typical Illinois → North Carolina costs
Year-round average estimates for 728 miles. Specify a move date in the calculator above to apply seasonality.
| Home size | Estimated weight | Cost range | Mid-point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio | 1,800 lbs | $858 – $1,211 | $1,009 |
| 1 bedroom | 2,500 lbs | $1,191 – $1,682 | $1,401 |
| 2 bedrooms | 5,000 lbs | $2,382 – $3,363 | $2,803 |
| 3 bedrooms | 7,500 lbs | $3,574 – $5,045 | $4,204 |
| 4 bedrooms | 10,000 lbs | $4,765 – $6,727 | $5,606 |
Network
How our verified mover network works
When you request a binding quote, we route your move details to one FMCSA-licensed carrier handling your specific route. The vetting happens before the handoff — by the time a mover contacts you, they've already cleared our verification process.
01
FMCSA-licensed only
Every mover we route a lead to holds active USDOT and Motor Carrier authority. We verify against the FMCSA SAFER database before forwarding any quote request.
02
One mover per request
When you ask for a binding quote, we hand-pick a single carrier suited to your route — never a multi-mover bidding war on your phone number.
03
Phone numbers stay private
Your contact info goes to one mover and to our internal record-keeping only. We don't sell or syndicate phone numbers to data brokers or lead aggregators.
How Illinois → North Carolina pricing works
Long-distance moving costs from Illinois to North Carolina are calculated by weight (driven by home size) multiplied by distance (about 728 miles for this corridor) and a per-mile corridor rate. The national baseline for this corridor is about $0.70 per pound per 1,000 miles.
Moves between Illinois and North Carolina cross state lines, so federal regulation applies — your mover must hold a valid USDOT number and FMCSA Motor Carrier authority. Verify any quote at fmcsa.dot.gov before signing.
Peak season (mid-May through August) runs 15–25% above winter rates because demand for trucks crossing the Midwest→South corridor spikes. Mid-week, mid-month off-peak moves are consistently the cheapest option.
Illinois to North Carolina moving FAQ
Plain-English answers, written to be useful — not to fill space.
- How much does it cost to move from Illinois to North Carolina?
- Moving from Illinois to North Carolina averages around $2,803 for a 2-bedroom home, with a typical range of $3,000–$10,000 depending on home size, services, and time of year. The route is approximately 728 miles, and long-distance pricing is calculated as weight × distance × corridor rate, then adjusted for season and add-on services. MovingCost.net produces a transparent estimate in under 60 seconds.
- How long does a Illinois to North Carolina move take?
- Transit time for a long-distance move from Illinois to North Carolina typically runs 3–10 days, depending on whether the mover uses a dedicated truck (faster, more expensive) or consolidates loads (cheaper, slower). Most professional moves give a delivery window rather than a fixed date — confirm the spread in writing before signing the estimate.
- When is the cheapest time to move from Illinois to North Carolina?
- Late September through April is consistently the cheapest window for any US long-distance move, including Illinois to North Carolina. Movers offer 15–25% discounts in off-peak months because trucks aren't full. The most expensive period is mid-May through August, when 60–70% of US household moves happen.
- Do I need a federally-licensed mover for a Illinois to North Carolina move?
- Yes — moves crossing state lines (interstate) are federally regulated. Your mover must hold a valid USDOT number and Motor Carrier (MC) operating authority from the FMCSA. You can verify any mover's license at fmcsa.dot.gov/registration. Since this route crosses state lines, any mover offering a binding estimate without a USDOT number should be avoided.
Related routes
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