MoveCentral
MoveCentral is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at MoveCentral.
MoveCentral is a company.
Key people at MoveCentral.
Move Central is a California-based moving and storage company providing local and long-distance relocation services, packing, and storage across the state and beyond.[1][3] It positions itself as a trusted provider with competitive pricing—averaging $1,397 for local moves based on 97 reviews, about 50% below the $2,805 market average—and emphasizes stress-free experiences with free boxes and a month of storage.[1][2] However, it faces significant criticism, including an F rating from the Better Business Bureau (BBB) due to 25 unresolved complaints and reports of overcharging and poor service.[4]
The company serves residential and commercial clients needing intra-state or out-of-state moves, aiming to solve relocation hassles through professional handling and transparent pricing, though customer reviews highlight inconsistencies like surprise fees.[1][2][4]
Move Central operates from locations including Los Angeles (2466 E 16th St) and San Diego, with state licenses (CAL-T# 191020) and federal credentials (USDOT 2365576, ICC MC 811063) enabling interstate operations.[2][4] Its backstory lacks detailed public records on founders or founding year, but it has built a presence as "California's trusted movers" with over 1,000 positive Google reviews claimed on its site, contrasted by 119 mixed reviews on platforms like MoveAdvisor and severe BBB complaints filed since at least 2023.[1][2][4] Early traction appears tied to competitive local pricing, though pivotal negative moments include scam allegations and unresolved disputes, humanizing it as a volume-driven operator in a high-complaint industry.[2][4]
Move Central does not participate in the tech landscape; it is a traditional service business in the moving industry, unrelated to technology companies, startups, investment firms, or ecosystems like software, AI, or venture capital.[1][2][3][4][5] It rides no tech trends—such as logistics automation or proptech—and market forces like rising relocation demand in California favor it only peripherally amid labor shortages and competition. Its influence is negligible in tech, confined to physical moves that might indirectly support tech workers relocating to hubs like Silicon Valley, but complaints suggest it burdens rather than enables the ecosystem.[4]
Move Central's low pricing could sustain volume in California's mobile population, but persistent BBB complaints, scam accusations, and non-accreditation signal high risk for customers, potentially capping growth without reforms like better dispute resolution.[2][4] Trends like on-demand apps (e.g., Uber for moving) and automated quoting tools may erode its model if it doesn't digitize, while regulatory scrutiny on licensed movers could force improvements. Its influence may evolve toward consolidation or decline unless it addresses trust gaps, tying back to its core promise of "stress-free" moves that reviews contradict—investors or tech firms eyeing logistics should prioritize verified alternatives.
Key people at MoveCentral.