Shipping a Car from Massachusetts to Florida (2026): Real Costs, Transit Times & Best Carriers

Shipping a car from Massachusetts to Florida costs $1,000–$1,300 on open transport in 2026, with transit times of 4–6 days from pickup to delivery. The route runs ~1,500 miles primarily on I-95.

Best for: Relocations, second-home moves, online vehicle purchases, snowbird trips.

At-a-glance: Massachusetts to Florida

Detail Range
Distance ~1,500 miles
Transit time (open) 4–6 days
Cost (open, sedan) $1,000–$1,300
Cost (enclosed, sedan) $1,550–$2,000
Primary route I-95
Snowbird corridor? Yes — peak Oct/Nov and Mar/Apr

Northeast snowbird corridor with the longest distance of the bunch. Boston-area pickups and West Palm Beach / Naples deliveries are the dominant pairs.

Cost breakdown by vehicle and service

The headline range above assumes a running sedan on open transport. Larger vehicles, enclosed service, and non-running condition all adjust the price. Below are real cost ranges from tracked Massachusetts-to-Florida shipments in our network during Q1 2026.

Vehicle / service Open transport Enclosed transport
Sedan / compact $1,000–$1,300 $1,550–$2,000
SUV / crossover (+10%) $1,100–$1,430 $1,705–$2,200
Pickup truck (+20%) $1,200–$1,560 $1,860–$2,400
Luxury / higher-value (+30%) $1,300–$1,690 $2,015–$2,600
Classic / exotic (+50%, enclosed only) $2,325–$3,000
Non-running surcharge +$150–$250 (winch-equipped carrier required)

Want a specific number for your vehicle? Our cost calculator takes route, vehicle type, service, condition, and season and returns an instant estimate.

Transit time and dispatch

From the moment you book a Massachusetts-to-Florida shipment, the timeline typically looks like this:

  • Dispatch (booking → pickup): 1–3 days on this corridor — popular routes match faster.
  • Transit (pickup → delivery): 4–6 days door-to-door.
  • Total door-to-door: 5–9 days from booking.

Express service (1–2 day dispatch guarantee) typically adds $100–$250 to the base quote. For most relocations, the standard 5–10 day pickup window is the right balance of cost and speed.

Common pickup cities in Massachusetts

Carriers in our network have strong pickup density throughout Massachusetts, with the heaviest coverage around:

  • Boston
  • Worcester
  • Springfield
  • Cambridge
  • Lowell

Smaller cities and rural addresses are still covered, but pickup windows can extend by 1–2 days because carriers may need to route through a major metro first.

Common delivery cities in Florida

On the Florida side, our carrier network covers:

  • Miami
  • Tampa
  • Orlando
  • Jacksonville
  • Fort Lauderdale

For deliveries to specific neighborhoods or HOA-restricted communities, the carrier may deliver to the nearest accessible point (a parking lot or terminal). Confirm at booking if you need true door-to-door access.

Snowbird season pricing

The Massachusetts-to-Florida corridor is one of the most active US snowbird routes — late October through mid-November sees the heaviest southbound demand, and mid-March through late April sees the corresponding return flow. During these peak weeks, carrier capacity tightens and prices typically rise 10–15% above the year-round average. If you have flexibility, shipping in mid-September (before the southbound peak) or mid-May (after the return wave) can save 15–20%.

Best carriers for the Massachusetts-to-Florida route

Our top-ranked US auto transport carriers for this route, based on tracked dispatch performance and post-delivery shipper surveys:

Carrier Best for this route Review
Sherpa Auto Transport First-time shippers — locked price, no surprise fees on pickup Read review
AutoStar Transport Express Long-haul reliability, strong dispatch on this corridor Read review
RoadRunner Auto Transport Fast online quotes, deep carrier network Read review
AmeriFreight Military / student / senior / first-responder discount stacking Read review
Easy Auto Ship Door-to-door with no surcharge, multi-vehicle moves Read review

Read our methodology for how we score carriers. None of these placements are paid — rankings reflect editorial scoring only.

What’s included in a Massachusetts-to-Florida quote

A standard auto transport quote on this corridor includes:

  • Door-to-door pickup and delivery — the carrier drives as close to your exact pickup and delivery addresses as is legally and physically safe. Narrow neighborhood streets, low-clearance areas, and HOA-restricted communities may require meeting at a nearby parking lot.
  • Cargo insurance — every dispatched carrier holds a minimum $100,000 cargo insurance policy and $1,000,000 liability. The dispatched carrier (not the broker) is the policyholder. Ask for the certificate of insurance before pickup.
  • Bill of Lading (BOL) — a written record of vehicle condition at pickup, signed by you and the driver. Photograph every panel before signing. The BOL is the document any future damage claim is filed against.
  • Real-time tracking on most carriers — text or app updates from the driver. Not every small carrier offers this; ask at booking if it matters.

What’s not included: personal items left in the vehicle (auto transport carriers’ insurance does not cover personal property), vehicle prep (washing, removing toll transponders, draining fuel to ¼ tank), or expedited delivery beyond the standard 4–6-day window.

Should you drive Massachusetts to Florida yourself instead?

For a 1,500-mile drive, the math depends on whether you value your time and whether the wear-and-tear cost matters to you. A rough comparison:

  • Fuel — at 25 mpg average and $3.50/gallon, you’ll spend roughly $210 on fuel.
  • Lodging — for a 1,500-mile trip, expect 4–6 nights of hotel at $100–$150/night = $400–$900.
  • Food on the road — $160–$360.
  • Vehicle wear-and-tear — IRS standard mileage rate is $0.67/mile in 2026, which prices the depreciation, maintenance, and tires at roughly $1,005 for the trip.
  • Time off work / travel days — 5–7 days you can’t be working or with family.

All-in driving cost typically lands $770–$2,475, plus the time. Shipping at $1,000–$1,300 on open transport is comparable on cost and saves you the days. For one-way relocations, snowbird trips, and any move where you’re flying the other direction, shipping is almost always the better choice.

How to cut your Massachusetts-to-Florida quote 15–25%

  1. Open transport over enclosed. Open is 35–45% cheaper and is fine for the vast majority of vehicles. Reserve enclosed for cars valued above $60,000 or true classics.
  2. Flexible 5–10 day pickup window. Tight pickup windows (1–2 days) attract a 10–15% surcharge because carriers have less time to optimize routing.
  3. Major-city pickup and delivery. Routing into and out of Boston or Miami is cheaper than rural addresses on either end.
  4. Avoid peak weeks if applicable. On this snowbird corridor, mid-October and mid-March are the priciest 4 weeks of the year.
  5. Get 3–5 quotes. Quote spread between brokers on this route is typically 15–20%. The cheapest broker isn’t always the lowest final bill — see our Sherpa review on the price-lock alternative.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to ship a car from Massachusetts to Florida?

On open transport, a running sedan from Massachusetts to Florida typically costs $1,000–$1,300 in 2026. Enclosed transport runs $1,550–$2,000. Larger vehicles (SUV +10%, pickup +20%) and non-running vehicles (+20%) add to the base rate. Prices reflect the 1,500-mile distance and current load-board rates.

How long does it take to ship a car from Massachusetts to Florida?

Typical transit time is 4–6 days from pickup to delivery. Add 1–3 days for dispatch (the time between booking and the carrier picking up your vehicle). Total door-to-door time is usually 5–9 days from when you book.

When should I book a Massachusetts-to-Florida shipment?

2 weeks during peak snowbird season (mid-October, mid-March), 5–10 days otherwise. Booking too far in advance (3+ weeks) doesn’t get a better rate — load-board rates only firm up within a 10-day window.

Is it cheaper to ship from Massachusetts to Florida or Florida to Massachusetts?

It depends on the directional balance of the corridor. Carriers price based on whether the return trip will be loaded or empty (a deadhead). On heavily one-directional corridors, the reverse direction can be 5–10% cheaper because carriers prefer paid loads over empty miles.

What’s the cheapest way to ship on this route?

Open transport (vs. enclosed), a flexible 5–10 day pickup window, a major-city pickup and delivery (vs. a rural address), and avoiding peak snowbird weeks if applicable. Stacking these typically saves 15–25% vs. an inflexible booking.

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