The Search That Looks Simple But Is Not
"Movers near me" is one of the most typed searches in the country every day. It returns a mix of national brands, local companies, aggregators, and brokers — and not all of them are what they appear to be. Knowing how to read those results is the first skill you need.
Proximity Is Just the Starting Point
Being close to you matters for scheduling and response time, but it tells you nothing about quality. A company headquartered in Sterling, VA is close to anyone moving in Loudoun, Fairfax, Arlington, or the broader Northern Virginia corridor. What matters beyond proximity is how long they have been operating, whether they own their trucks and storage, and whether their crew is trained staff or hired-by-the-day labor.
How to Read Reviews Without Being Misled
Online reviews are useful but uneven. Look for patterns across a large number of reviews rather than reacting to individual one-star or five-star outliers. Pay attention to reviews that describe specific situations — a complicated staircase, a last-minute change in schedule, damage that was handled well or poorly. Those specifics tell you more than a generic five-star rating.
Questions to Ask Before You Book
- Do you have a physical address and warehouse I can visit?
- Are you a broker or do you handle my move directly?
- Can I see your USDOT number and insurance certificate?
- How long have you been operating in this area?
- What is your process if something is damaged during the move?
Campbell Moving and Storage has a fixed address in Sterling, VA, owns its equipment, and has operated continuously in the Washington D.C. metro since 1978. Those answers are straightforward because the operation is real.
Brokers vs. Carriers: An Important Distinction
A moving broker collects your information and sells your job to a carrier you have never vetted. The company that shows up may not be the one you researched. A carrier handles your move with its own crew and equipment from start to finish. When you are searching "movers near me," confirming you are talking to the actual carrier is an important early question.
Local Knowledge Has Real Value
A mover who has spent decades operating in a specific area knows the roads, the HOA rules about elevator reservations, the traffic patterns by season, and the parking permit requirements in different neighborhoods. That local knowledge translates to fewer delays and fewer surprises on move day. It is not a small thing.