“How much do movers cost?” is the first question almost every Kelowna household asks, and the honest answer is that it depends on a handful of factors you can actually control. Local moves in the Okanagan are almost always billed by the hour, so the real number comes down to how long the job takes and how many movers it takes to do it. Below is a straight look at what local crews charge in 2026, what pushes the price up or down, and how to get an exact figure for your own move instead of a guess.
- Local moves are billed hourly. At MoveOn, two movers and a truck run $175 per hour, a three-mover crew $235 per hour, and a four-mover crew $295 per hour, with a three-hour minimum. You pay for actual time worked.
- A typical move takes 3–6 hours. That puts a studio or one-bedroom around $525–$750 and a three-bedroom house closer to $950–$1,500, before packing or long-carry factors.
- What drives the price: home size, access (stairs, elevators, long driveways), how well you’re packed, and the season.
- Long-distance moves are quoted differently — by weight or a flat rate, not by the hour.
- Get your real number with our instant estimate calculator rather than relying on a range.
How movers actually charge in Kelowna
The great majority of moves inside the Central Okanagan — Kelowna to Rutland, Glenmore to Lower Mission, or across town to West Kelowna — are local moves billed by the hour. You pay for the crew’s time from the moment they start loading to the moment the last box is off the truck. Because of that, the two levers that move your bill most are the size of the crew and how long the job runs.
Here are MoveOn’s actual 2026 rates: $175 per hour for two movers and a truck, $235 per hour for a three-mover crew, and $295 per hour for four movers on the biggest jobs. A larger crew costs more per hour but finishes faster, so the total often lands in the same place — sometimes lower — for a bigger home. There’s a three-hour minimum, and a modest amount of drive time is built into the estimate: about half an hour within town, or an hour for a nearby community like Vernon or Penticton.
These are our real rates, not a teaser — and you’re billed for actual time worked, so a crew that finishes early costs you less. Your final price is confirmed on arrival once we see the actual volume and scope, so there are no surprises after the truck shows up. Because every home and route is different, the way to get a firm figure is a real estimate — more on that below.
What a typical move runs by home size
Time on the job is what you’re really paying for, so home size is the biggest single driver. Using the crew rates above, here is what a straightforward, well-prepared move tends to cost with MoveOn:
- Studio or one-bedroom apartment: about 3–4 hours with two movers — roughly $525–$750.
- Two-bedroom home or condo: about 4–6 hours with two movers — roughly $700–$1,100.
- Three-bedroom house: about 4–6 hours with a three-mover crew — roughly $950–$1,500.
- Four-bedroom or larger: a four-mover crew for most of a day — commonly $1,250–$2,000.
Add packing, specialty items, or a long carry and the hours climb. Strip those out by preparing well and the same home can land at the bottom of its range. Treat these as planning brackets, then confirm with a proper estimate for your exact address and inventory.
The factors that push your price up or down
Two homes of the same size can cost very different amounts to move. These are the things that decide where you land:
- Apartments and condos add about 20%. Elevator waits, buzzer trips and longer carries genuinely take more time than a house with a driveway, and our estimates account for that. Booking your strata’s elevator ahead keeps that number from growing.
- Overweight and oversized items. Pianos, gun safes, treadmills, hot tubs and large appliances take extra hands, equipment and care — tell us about them up front, because they can adjust the price when we confirm the job on arrival. Far better than a surprise on the day.
- Truck or no truck. Our standard rate includes the truck — but if you’ve already got a rental truck, a trailer or a moving container, ask about labour-only loading help. Paying for muscle without the truck is one of the easiest ways to bring the cost down.
- How packed you are. A crew that arrives to sealed, labelled boxes moves fast. One that has to wait while you finish the kitchen is on the clock the whole time.
- Access at both ends. Stairs, a hillside driveway in the Upper Mission, or a long carry from the far end of a parking lot all add time.
- Distance and route. A cross-town move is cheaper than one that crosses the William R. Bennett Bridge at rush hour or runs out to Lake Country.
- The season. Month-end, summer and the UBCO turnover in late August are peak — the busiest, priciest windows.
The good news: most of these are within your control. Packing early and clearing out what you don’t need are the two highest-leverage ways to shrink the bill.
Skip the guesswork. Our instant estimate tool gives you a clear number for your exact home and move date — no obligation.
Local versus long-distance pricing
If you’re staying inside the valley, the hourly model above applies. But a move from Kelowna to Vancouver, Calgary or beyond is priced completely differently — usually by the weight of your shipment plus distance, or as a flat, all-in rate agreed in advance. Long-distance moves aren’t billed by the hour because the crew can’t control highway time, so you get a fixed quote instead.
Moving to or from a nearby town like Vernon or Penticton usually still fits the local hourly model, just with more drive time built in. When you’re not sure which model applies to your route, ask — a good company will tell you which one is cheaper for your situation, even when it’s the smaller job.
How to get an accurate number — not a guess
Ranges are useful for planning, but nobody wants to be surprised on moving day. To lock in a real figure:
- Use the instant estimate. Our online quote calculator asks about your home size, access and date, then returns a price built for your move — not a market average.
- Be honest about the inventory. Mention the piano, the packed garage, the storage locker. Leaving items off only creates surprises later.
- Ask what’s included. Confirm whether the rate covers the truck, fuel, blankets, dollies and any travel fee, so you’re comparing like with like.
- Decide on packing. If you’d rather not do it, add professional packing to the quote up front.
Provincial rules also matter for the logistics: if you’re moving into or out of a strata building, the BC strata housing rules mean you’ll likely need to book the elevator and a move-in window with the property manager. Sort that before the truck arrives so the crew isn’t waiting on access. For a broader sense of national averages, industry resources such as mover.net can add context, but a local estimate will always beat a country-wide number.
Simple ways to lower your moving cost
Because you’re paying for time, anything that speeds the job saves money:
- Purge before you pack. The less you move, the less it costs — and a clear-out beats paying to haul things you’ll never unpack.
- Pack and label everything before the crew arrives, with boxes stacked by the door.
- Move mid-month and mid-week if your dates are flexible, avoiding the month-end rush.
- Disassemble beds and tables yourself the night before.
- Reserve parking close to both doors to cut the carry distance.
Customers who prepare this way routinely come in at the low end of the range. If you’d like to see how other Okanagan families rate the experience, our customer reviews are a good place to start, and the full range of moving services is laid out on our main page.
Frequently asked questions
How much do movers cost per hour in Kelowna?
How much does it cost to move a three-bedroom house?
Why is there a three-hour minimum?
Is it cheaper to hire movers or rent a truck?
How far in advance should I book a mover in Kelowna?
Does the quote change on moving day?
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