Key Takeaways
- Price alone is not enough to compare a moving quote. Homeowners must compare scope, manpower, access conditions, timing, liability, and other factors side-by-side before choosing a mover.
- All quotes must be based on the same inventory list and property details for a fair, like-for-like comparison. Without this, the cheapest option will almost always look better on paper.
- Common hidden costs include stair charges, long carry fees, packing materials, last-minute additions, and after-hours surcharges that only appear on the final bill.
Moving quotes should clearly itemize all included services, from packing and unpacking through to furniture disassembly, wrapping, and reassembly. Using a simple checklist and asking the right questions before accepting any free quote can greatly reduce surprise costs on the moving day and help save money and time.
Introduction: Why Moving Quotes Can Be Confusing
Most Singapore homeowners collect two to four moving quotes before a move. While the totals may look similar, the services behind those numbers can differ drastically. One quote might cover full service packing, dismantling, and protection and another might only cover transport and basic loading, leaving everything else as extras billed on the day.
This article is a practical comparison guide focused on how to evaluate quotations fairly. It is not a full pricing guide for moving costs in Singapore. Whether you are comparing local moves, planning a regional relocation, or reviewing international moving quotes from different movers, the same principles apply. By the end of the article, you will have a step-by-step structure and a simple checklist to compare movers on equal terms.
Why Comparing Moving Quotes Properly Matters
A cheaper initial quote can end up costing more if important details were left out at the start. Hidden charges often come from access issues, extra items, additional manpower, or services that were assumed but not included. This is why a written quotation with a clear breakdown is necessary before a move.
Careful comparison helps you:
- Avoid hidden costs such as stair charges, condo management charges, and overtime fees.
- Understand what is truly included before the moving day, reducing last-minute negotiations at the loading bay
- Match service level to risk, especially when moving valuable electronics, antiques, or business equipment
- Identify professional movers who provide transparent pricing and are confident enough to itemize their scope of work in writing
Itemized quotes help identify potential hidden costs early. Hidden fees often arise from additional services not listed in quotes, so clarity at this stage saves both money and stress.
Don’t Compare Based on Price Alone
For example, two S$900 quotes for a 4-room HDB move can represent very different work. One may include professional packing, dismantling of beds and wardrobes, wrapping of all furniture, and protective floor mats. The other may cover transport and basic loading only, with boxes, tape, mattress covers, and piano handling billed separately.
A lower price may indicate fewer included services, lighter manpower, or more exclusions. Before accepting the lowest quote, check what is excluded and whether the scope matches the other quotations you are comparing.
It also helps to confirm whether the quote is fixed, estimated, or subject to revision after a survey or on moving day.
Binding estimates guarantee a fixed price based on the agreed scope of work, regardless of actual weight or volume. This may include:
- Volume (not always weight for local moves)
- Access conditions (stairs, lift availability)
- Agreed services (packing, dismantling, etc.)
Non-binding estimates may change based on actual weight and services used.
Binding not-to-exceed quotes (maximum cap quotes) Binding not-to-exceed quotes set a maximum price ceiling. You will not pay more than the quoted amount, and may pay less if the actual volume is lower.
Knowing which type you have received makes all the difference when comparing moving company quotes.
What to Compare in a Moving Quote
It is helpful for you to treat each subsection below as a checklist item. Put two or three quotes side-by-side and mark each point as “Included,” “Not included,” or “Extra charge.” The same structure works for local moves, office moves, and cross-border move quotations.
Scope of Services Included
Scope is often the biggest difference between similar-looking quotes. Check whether each quote covers:
- Packing and unpacking of household items
- Provision of boxes and packing materials (cartons, bubble wrap, wardrobe boxes)
- Dismantling and reassembly of beds, wardrobes, and shelving
- Wrapping and protection of furniture surfaces and safe handling of delicate items
- Floor and wall protection at both locations
Moving quotes should clearly itemize packing materials and labor costs. Many “transport only” quotes assume you pack everything yourself and exclude professional packing for TVs, mirrors, or computer equipment.
Also confirm whether disposal, temporary storage, or handyman work are part of the same quote or billed separately as additional services. A packing service that covers fragile items may cost more upfront but prevents expensive damage claims later.
Number of Movers and Truck Size
Manpower and lorry size directly affect how long the move takes and how much physical effort falls on your family. Check:
- The exact number of movers provided and whether a supervisor is on-site
- Truck size (10-ft vs 14-ft vs 20-ft lorry) and whether it covers your estimated volume
- Whether single or multiple trips are needed
Shipment volume significantly affects moving costs. One company may propose 2 movers and multiple trips, while another suggests 4 movers handle everything in a single larger truck at a slightly higher but more efficient total cost. More movers also reduce damage risk when handling heavy fridges, large printers, or bulky furniture.
Property Type and Access Conditions
Accurate quotes in Singapore depend heavily on whether the property is HDB, condo, or landed. Access conditions are a frequent source of hidden surcharges, so confirm whether quotes account for:
- Narrow corridors and limited lift size
- Long push from loading bay to unit entrance
- Staircase use if no lift is available
- Condo management time windows and lift booking requirements
Access fees may apply if the crew must navigate stairs or long carries during the move. Property type and access can change both the scope and final cost of a move. To compare quotes fairly, send the same photos or short videos of corridors, lifts, and loading areas to every mover so they are quoting on the same conditions.
Timing and Scheduling
Date and timing affect both availability and pricing. Peak moving season runs from May to September in Singapore, coinciding with school holidays and lease cycles. Check:
- Whether the quote is tied to a specific moving date or valid across a range
- Weekday vs weekend pricing differences
- Condo or office building restrictions (e.g., moves only 9am–5pm)
- After-hours or public holiday surcharges
Urgent or weekend moves may carry surcharges that should be listed clearly in the quotation. Make sure all quotes are based on the same moving date and time so you are comparing like-for-like.
Special or Fragile Items
Pianos, safes, aquariums, servers, medical equipment, and large flat-screen TVs all need special handling and careful handling beyond what standard movers handle. Check whether:
- Special items are listed line-by-line with their own handling charges
- The mover accepts liability for these items or requires extra insurance coverage
- Professional packing or crating is needed as a separate purchase
Insurance and liability terms should be treated as part of the comparison, not as an afterthought, especially for fragile items and expensive equipment. Always check what level of protection is included and whether any exclusions apply.
Inclusions, Exclusions, and Extra Charges
Every quote should clearly label what is in the base price, what is excluded, and which situations trigger extra fees. Common hidden fees to check for include:
- Stair carry beyond a certain floor
- Long carrying distance from loading bay to unit
- Fuel surcharges, which can increase moving costs unexpectedly
- Destination handling fees, which are often omitted from initial quotes
Extra trips, packing materials, and after-hours work
Ask for a written list of potential surcharges even when the company advertises a free quote and “no hidden fees.” Challenge vague lines like “miscellaneous charges” and ask for specific conditions and rates. If one mover is very specific about exclusions and another is completely silent, be cautious about the silent one.
Are You Comparing Like-for-Like Quotes?
Fair comparison only works if every quote covers the same scope of work. It is important to check that all quotes cover the same list of services for accurate comparison. Comparing multiple quotes helps identify potential hidden costs, but only when the baseline is identical.
Prepare a standard inventory list with the same photos and move details, then send exactly the same information to at least three movers. Get at least three moving quotes to compare services and prices properly. If one quote is based on fewer boxes, fewer bulky items, or easier access assumptions, its total will naturally look cheaper but be inaccurate.
A legitimate moving quote includes a pre-move survey, whether in person or via video. Inspecting items in person can provide more accurate estimates for moving costs and removes guesswork from both sides. If inventory or access details change, ask all movers to revise their quotations so comparisons stay aligned.
Questions to Ask Before Choosing a Quote
Use these questions in an email or WhatsApp chat with every moving company on your shortlist:
- Is packing included, partially included, or excluded from the price?
- Is furniture disassembly and reassembly covered? Are tools supplied?
- Are packing materials (cartons, shrink wrap, bubble wrap, wardrobe boxes) included or billed separately?
- Are there extra charges for stairs, long push, shuttle vans, or difficult parking?
- Is the written quote fixed, a range estimate, or subject to re-calculation on moving day?
- What happens if inventory changes after the quote is issued?
- Who is responsible for the move’s handling and any damage during transit?
Review customer feedback on third-party platforms to assess reliability, communication, and handling care. It is also helpful to verify the company’s credentials and business details before making your final decision.
A Simple Checklist for Comparing Moving Quotes
Use this as a quick-reference checklist. Print it or copy it into a spreadsheet with one column per mover.
Some homeowners request as many as five quotes for broader comparison, though in practice two to three detailed, written quotes based on the same inventory usually provide enough clarity without creating analysis paralysis.
Understand the Bigger Picture Before Deciding
Comparing quotes fairly is just one part of planning a successful move. You still need to plan timelines, decluttering, labelling systems, and address changes before moving day.
Good labelling and tracking make unpacking faster and reduce missing-item disputes. For a step-by-step overview beyond quotations, refer to our house moving guide in Singapore for broader preparation, scheduling, and settling-in guidance.
When It Helps to Speak Directly with a Mover
Some moves are too complex for a one-page email quote. Office relocations, partial warehouse moves, and international shipments involving customs clearance and customs support need direct conversation. Air freight costs several times more than sea freight, and freight rates fluctuate, so international moving services require careful scoping.
Requesting a site survey or video walkthrough helps clarify inventory, access challenges, fragile items, and timing. Use these conversations to assess responsiveness, transparency, and willingness to confirm the agreed scope in writing. The goal is to choose a mover whose quotation matches your actual moving needs and expectations.
For moves that need broader coordination beyond quotation review, speaking directly with a mover can help clarify the scope, manpower, timing, and access requirements in advance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get two to three written quotes based on the same inventory and moving date. This helps compare movers realistically without confusion. Shortlist movers first based on reviews and clear scopes before requesting quotes.
A moving quote should detail services like packing and unpacking, packing materials, furniture dismantling and reassembly, wrapping and protection, loading and unloading, truck size and manpower, access conditions, timing, special item handling, inclusions, exclusions, and extra charges such as stair or long carry fees.
Quotes differ due to service scope, manpower, truck size, packing services, access conditions, timing, and hidden fees. A cheaper quote might exclude packing or dismantling or assume easier access, leading to higher costs later.
Lowest quotes aren’t always the best. Compare like-for-like based on inventory, services, and conditions. Low prices may lack services or hide fees, causing higher final costs or poor service.
Ensure quotes use the same inventory, property details, and date. Check itemized services, manpower, truck size, access, timing, special items, inclusions, exclusions, and extra charges. Use a checklist and ask questions to clarify.
Request quotes 4–6 weeks before a move, or 8–12 weeks for peak or cross-border moves. Early requests secure dates and refine inventory. Late requests limit options and increase costs.
Ready to compare movers more confidently?
Choosing the right quote is not just about price. It is about making sure the scope, access, timing, and included services match your actual moving needs.
If you need help understanding what should be included in a quotation, our house movers Singapore team can guide you through the scope and planning requirements for your move.


