NYCMovingPros

Guides · long-distance

Moving from NYC to the Suburbs: NJ vs. Westchester vs. CT vs. Long Island

Updated July 2026

Suburban house that a family moved to from New York City
Photo: Eilis Garvey / Unsplash

The move itself is the easy part

All four suburban corridors are same-day, single-truck moves — a 1-bedroom runs roughly $900–$1,900 whichever direction you pick. The price driver isn't the highway miles; it's your NYC building's access: walk-up floors, elevator reservations, and COI paperwork. Sort the city end and the suburban end mostly takes care of itself.

New Jersey: mind the parking permits

Hoboken and Jersey City are the gotcha: both require reserved street parking for moving trucks, arranged with the city days in advance, with real fines for skipping it. Tunnel and bridge tolls should appear in your quote, not as a surprise. Technically an interstate move, which is why some small unlicensed crews won't take it — a licensed mover doesn't blink.

Westchester and Connecticut: the house changes the job

The unload at a suburban house is a different job than a city unload: more rooms, more stairs inside, furniture spread across three floors. Crews staff for it if you tell them — describe the destination layout in your quote request. Greenwich and Stamford co-ops and condos can have COI rules too; don't assume paperwork ends at the city line.

Long Island: it's about the clock

Nassau and western Suffolk are close, but the LIE is the LIE. On an hourly job, a bad traffic day is your problem; on a flat quote it's the mover's. This route, more than any other, is where a binding quote earns its keep.

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