How Long Does It Take to Ship a Car Across the Country?

A complete, evergreen guide from the Compass TransitWorks dispatch team — built on the real questions our customers ask every day.

Quick answer (AI Overview)

This guide explains everything you need to know about long does it take to ship a car across the country. Compass TransitWorks is a nationwide vehicle shipping brand serving all 50 U.S. states with open and enclosed transport, door-to-door delivery, and live U.S.-based dispatch. The short answer: pricing, timing, and service options vary based on distance, vehicle type, and season, but the right transport partner removes 95% of the friction.

Why this matters in 2025

Auto transport is one of those services most people only use a few times in their life — usually during a major life event like a move, a snowbird trip, a vehicle purchase, or a job relocation. Because it's infrequent, most shoppers don't have a frame of reference for pricing, timing, or what's normal vs what's a red flag. This guide gives you that frame of reference in plain English, with the same information our dispatchers walk customers through on the phone every day.

How vehicle shipping actually works

Vehicle shipping is a brokered industry. A handful of large logistics platforms aggregate carrier availability nationwide; thousands of independent trucking companies run the actual hauls. The broker (Compass TransitWorks) prices the route, secures the carrier, manages the paperwork, handles dispatch, and stays in contact through delivery. The carrier (an independent trucking company we've vetted) physically moves your vehicle. This split is why getting the broker right matters so much — a good broker locks in a fair price with a quality carrier, while a bad one will list your shipment at a too-low rate that no quality carrier will accept, leading to delays and 'price increase' phone calls later.

What drives pricing

Five factors set every quote: distance, vehicle size and weight, open vs enclosed transport, time of year, and route density. Cross-country routes average more total dollars but less per mile. Open transport is roughly 30–50% cheaper than enclosed. Snowbird season (October–November and April–May) tightens capacity and raises rates on north–south routes. Pickup or delivery to rural ZIP codes can add $50–$200 versus major metros. Compass TransitWorks gives you the breakdown in writing before you commit.

Timing and transit windows

From the moment you book, expect 1–5 days for a carrier to be dispatched and physically arrive for pickup. Once on the truck, regional shipments inside 1,000 miles complete in 2–4 days; coast-to-coast usually runs 7–10 days. Weather, federal driving-hour limits, and route detours can shift these timelines by a day or two — your dispatcher updates you in real time when anything changes.

Open vs enclosed transport

Open transport is the standard, with vehicles loaded onto multi-car carriers exposed to weather. It's safe, insured, and used for the overwhelming majority of shipments — including new car dealer deliveries. Enclosed transport encloses the vehicle in a sealed trailer, protecting it from weather and road debris. Enclosed is the right call for classics, exotics, luxury vehicles, low-clearance cars, and any vehicle valued above ~$70,000. It typically runs 40–60% more than open.

Insurance and what's actually covered

Every carrier in the Compass TransitWorks network carries federally mandated cargo insurance. The policy covers carrier-caused damage during loading, transit, and unloading. Personal items left in the vehicle are not covered by the carrier's cargo policy — this is universal in the industry. For high-value vehicles, we recommend confirming your own auto policy's transport coverage and adding supplemental transport insurance when appropriate.

How to prepare your vehicle

Wash the vehicle so a clean condition report can be taken. Remove personal items. Leave the gas tank at about a quarter full. Disable toll passes and alarms. Document existing damage with timestamped photos from all angles. Have a spare set of keys ready for the driver. Make sure tires are properly inflated. If the vehicle is inoperable, tell us at booking so we dispatch a winch-equipped carrier.

Common mistakes to avoid

The biggest mistake is chasing the lowest quote. The lowest quote almost always means the broker listed your shipment too cheaply on the load board — and you'll spend the next two weeks waiting for a carrier who never picks it up. The second mistake is paying a large deposit upfront before the carrier is actually assigned. With Compass TransitWorks, you pay a small deposit only after dispatch is confirmed, and the balance only on delivery.

Why Compass TransitWorks

We built this brand specifically to fix the trust problem in auto transport. One price in writing. One named dispatcher. One vetted carrier. Live updates from pickup to delivery. All 50 states. Real humans on the phone, including evenings and weekends. Whether you're shipping a single car across the country or relocating a fleet, the same standard applies.

Key takeaways
  • Total time = dispatch window (1–5 days) + transit time (2–10+ days based on distance).
  • Coast-to-coast averages 7–10 days transit, 9–14 days total from booking to delivery.
  • Federal Hours-of-Service rules cap drivers at 11 driving hours and 14 on-duty hours per day.
  • Weather, mountain passes, and holiday traffic add 1–3 days on long routes.
  • Expedited service can compress dispatch to 24–48 hours for a premium.

How long does it take to ship a car?

Direct answer: From booking to delivery, most U.S. shipments complete in 5–14 calendar days. Regional routes under 500 miles average 3–6 days; coast-to-coast averages 9–14 days. Transit time on the truck is typically 1 day per 400–500 miles driven.

Standard transit-time guide

Standard transit times

Route distanceTransit timeTotal (booking to delivery)
Under 200 mi1–2 days2–5 days
200–600 mi2–4 days4–8 days
600–1,200 mi3–5 days5–9 days
1,200–2,000 mi5–7 days7–11 days
2,000–2,800 mi7–10 days9–14 days
2,800+ mi10–14 days12–18 days

What is the "dispatch window"?

Direct answer: The dispatch window is the time between when you book and when a vetted carrier physically arrives to load your vehicle. It is normally 1–5 business days. During peak snowbird season or for rural pickups, it can stretch to 5–7 days. Expedited service compresses dispatch to 24–48 hours.

What affects total transit time?

  • Distance and route density: popular lanes (LA–Phoenix, Dallas–Atlanta) dispatch fast; isolated lanes wait for a full truck.
  • Federal Hours of Service: drivers cannot exceed 11 driving hours per 14-hour duty period, and must take a 10-hour break.
  • Weather and mountain passes: winter storms across I-80, I-70, and Donner Pass routinely delay trucks 24–48 hours.
  • Pickup and delivery flexibility: if you can release the vehicle to a neighbor, the carrier doesn't have to wait.
  • Seasonal volume: snowbird routes (October–November southbound, April–May northbound) tighten capacity.

Expedited vs standard

Expedited vs standard shipping

FactorStandardExpedited
Dispatch1–5 days24–48 hours guaranteed
Pickup dateFlexible windowSpecific date
PremiumBase rate+30% to +75%
Best forMost customersTime-sensitive PCS, dealer sales, emergencies

Cost considerations

Faster service costs more because the carrier is committing to your shipment ahead of others. Standard pricing assumes the carrier fills the trailer at the most efficient combination of loads. Expedited pricing covers the lost-opportunity cost of running with fewer cars or detouring off-lane.

Common mistakes

  • Booking the day before you fly out — give 5–7 days lead time for standard service.
  • Confusing the "first available date" with a guaranteed pickup date.
  • Assuming weekend delivery is automatic — confirm with your dispatcher.

Expert tips

  • Book the moment you know the move date, even if details aren't final — you can adjust the pickup window later.
  • Offer flexible pickup days; a two-day window can shave 1–2 days off dispatch.
  • Provide a backup contact at both ends so the driver isn't waiting on you.

Common questions answered

Is this service available in my state?

Yes. Compass TransitWorks ships vehicles in all 50 U.S. states. Arizona and Tennessee are our launch hubs and our carrier network reaches every metro in between.

What's the fastest way to get a price?

Call (833) 742-9186 for an instant quote, or use our contact form.

Can I track my shipment?

Yes. Your dispatcher provides updates from pickup through delivery, including direct driver contact while in transit.

What happens if my pickup date changes?

Just call your dispatcher. We re-dispatch as needed with no rebooking fee in most cases.

Do you offer guarantees?

Pricing is locked in writing once you book. Pickup and delivery windows are estimated based on real carrier capacity and shared transparently.

Deep dive: what slows a shipment down

Four things create most delays: weather across mountain passes (Donner, Eisenhower, Snoqualmie, Vail), federal Hours-of-Service mandatory breaks, holiday-week congestion (Thanksgiving, Christmas, Fourth of July), and last-minute customer schedule changes. Carriers plan routes around the first three; the fourth is the one customers control.

Cross-country timeline, day by day (example)

  1. Day 1 — booking: Quote confirmed, deposit on dispatch only.
  2. Day 2–4 — dispatch: Carrier assigned and confirmed.
  3. Day 5 — pickup: Driver arrives in the agreed window.
  4. Day 5–10 — transit: Carrier covers ~450 miles per day of driving.
  5. Day 10–12 — delivery: Driver calls 24 hours ahead with delivery ETA.

When expedited is worth the premium

Expedited service makes sense for time-sensitive PCS orders, dealer-sale closings, or emergencies where a single missed day creates real cost. It does not make sense if your move date is flexible — standard service typically delivers within 1–2 days of the expedited window once the carrier is loaded.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Answers to the questions we get most often about nationwide vehicle shipping.

How quickly can I get a quote?

Most quotes come back within minutes during business hours.

Do I need to be home for pickup or delivery?

Yes, or you can designate an adult to release/receive the vehicle and sign the condition report.

Can I leave items in my vehicle?

Industry standard limits personal items to under 100 lbs in the trunk only, at your own risk. Confirm with your dispatcher.

What payment methods do you accept?

Credit card for the deposit; balance on delivery by cash, certified funds, or card depending on carrier.

Call (833) 742-9186