Moving in BC comes with its own to-do list — BC Hydro or FortisBC transfers, an ICBC address change with a legal deadline attached, strata elevator bookings, and in the Okanagan, summer moving dates that disappear weeks in advance. The difference between a smooth move and a frantic one is rarely moving day itself; it’s the eight weeks before it. Here is everything in order.
- Start 8 weeks out by booking your movers — July and August weekends in Kelowna routinely sell out a month or more ahead.
- 4 weeks out, transfer utilities (BC Hydro or FortisBC, depending on where you land in the valley), set up Canada Post forwarding and book your strata elevator.
- Within 10 days of moving, BC law requires you to update your address with ICBC for your licence and vehicle registration.
- MoveOn’s local rate starts at $175/hour for two movers and a truck (3-hour minimum), with your final price approved on arrival — no surprises before we start.
8 weeks out: lock in the big decisions
Two months sounds early, but this is when the choices with the longest lead times get made — and in the Okanagan, the biggest one is your moving date. Month-end Saturdays between May and September go first; a mid-week or mid-month date is easier to book and easier on the budget.
- Book your movers. Get quotes now, not at week two. Our guide to what movers cost in Kelowna breaks down realistic totals by home size so you can budget properly.
- Give notice if you rent. BC tenancy rules require a full month’s written notice on a month-to-month tenancy, timed to the day before your rent is due — miss it by a day and you can owe another month.
- Scope the move. Staying in the valley is a straightforward local move; heading to the Coast, the Island or Alberta means planning a long-distance move, where dates and logistics need more runway.
- Start a moving folder — quotes, lease or sale documents, and this checklist.
6 weeks out: declutter and start the paperwork
Every box you don’t pack is money saved — movers charge for time, and time is mostly volume. Six weeks out is the sweet spot to shrink the load calmly.
- Purge room by room. Donate what’s usable, and book a junk removal pickup for the rest — one trailer load cleared now beats hauling clutter across town. Old mattress not making the trip? Here’s how to deal with a mattress in Kelowna.
- Start school transfers. If you have kids and you’re moving into (or within) the Central Okanagan, contact School District 23 about registration and catchment for your new address — popular schools fill, so earlier is better.
- Gather records — transcripts, veterinary and medical files, and a list of subscriptions with addresses attached.
- Order packing supplies — or skip the whole job and book packing services so a crew does it in a day instead of your evenings for a month.
4 weeks out: utilities, address changes and the strata elevator
This is the most BC-specific stretch of the checklist. Work through it in one sitting with your new address in hand.
- Transfer your electricity. Who you call depends on where you land: Kelowna proper is FortisBC territory for electricity, while BC Hydro serves other Okanagan communities, including Vernon. Both let you move or start service through your online account — give them at least a couple of weeks’ notice.
- Sort your natural gas. FortisBC handles gas across the region; transferring it is a separate step from electricity even when both are FortisBC.
- Book the strata elevator. Moving into or out of a condo or apartment building? Most stratas require you to reserve the elevator for a move-in/move-out window, often with a damage deposit and sometimes weeks of lead time. Call the property manager now — an unbooked elevator on moving day can stop everything.
- Set up Canada Post mail forwarding so anything you miss below still finds you.
- Update internet, phone, banks and insurance. Home or tenant insurance especially — you want coverage active at the new address from day one.
Get a clear, no-obligation quote from a local Kelowna crew — summer dates book out early, so grab yours now.
2 weeks out: pack like you mean it
With the admin handled, the last fortnight is about boxes. Pack the rooms you use least first — storage, guest room, garage — and label every box with its destination room. Fast unloading is cheap unloading.
- Confirm details with your movers — addresses, parking at both ends, stairs or elevators, and any awkward items like pianos or gym equipment.
- Use up the freezer and pantry. Frozen food travels badly, especially across the valley in July heat.
- Arrange kids and pets for moving day. A quiet house makes for a faster, safer move.
- Book a final junk pickup for whatever the packing process shakes loose — there’s always more than you think.
Moving week: confirm everything
The last few days are about removing surprises, not adding tasks.
- Pack an essentials box: kettle, chargers, medications, toilet paper, a change of clothes, kids’ and pets’ necessities, and the paperwork folder. It rides with you, not in the truck.
- Defrost and dry the freezer at least 24 hours ahead.
- Reconfirm the strata elevator booking at both buildings, and reconfirm your movers’ arrival window.
- Transfer prescriptions to a pharmacy near the new place.
- Do a final walk-through — crawl space, shed, above the cabinets. Renters: photograph the empty unit for the deposit inspection.
Moving day — and the first 10 days after
On the day itself, your job is access and decisions: doors open, parking clear, someone to answer “which room?” A good crew handles the rest. Once the boxes are in, BC gives you a short window to make it official:
- ICBC — within 10 days. BC law requires you to update the address on your driver’s licence and vehicle registration within 10 days of moving. It’s free and takes minutes — see ICBC’s moving to or within BC page for how.
- BC Services Card and MSP. Keep your health coverage pointed at the right address — the province explains what the card covers and how to keep it current on the BC Services Card page.
- CRA and employer — so tax documents and pay stubs land where you do.
- Meter check. Note the electricity and gas meter readings at both properties on day one, in case a billing question comes up later.
What a checklist-perfect move costs
Planning ahead lowers the bill, because an organized home moves faster. MoveOn’s rates are hourly and straightforward: $175/hour for two movers and a truck, $235/hour for three movers, and $295/hour for four, with a 3-hour minimum — you pay only for actual time worked. Apartment and condo moves typically run about 20% longer thanks to elevators and carries, one more reason that elevator booking matters. Every estimate is approved on arrival once we confirm the actual volume and scope, so there are no surprises before we start. We move families across the whole valley, from Peachland to West Kelowna to Lake Country — see how those moves went on our reviews page.
Frequently asked questions
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