Every spring, our dispatch board fills up faster than any other time of year. By mid-April, our June Saturdays are usually booked. By Memorial Day, July weekends are tight. The reason is simple: St. Louis families schedule moves around school calendars, university leases, and corporate fiscal years, and all of those lines up between May and August.
The other thing that lines up: the weather. June through August in St. Louis routinely brings 90-degree days, 70-percent humidity, and the occasional pop-up thunderstorm that will turn a driveway into a slip hazard in fifteen minutes. After 22,000+ moves, we have learned that a summer move is not a different kind of move. It is the same move with three additional variables to plan around: booking pressure, heat, and traffic.
Book early, but not for the reason you think
The standard advice is “book six weeks out for summer.” That is correct, but the reason most articles give (“movers get busy”) misses the actual constraint. Yes, our trucks book up. But what really runs out is good crews on Saturdays. We staff up for the season, but we also do not put a green crew on a 4-bedroom Ladue move during a 95-degree heat advisory. The senior crews go fastest.
For a peak-summer Saturday move (mid-June through end of July), our recommended booking window is six to eight weeks ahead. For a weekday move in the same window, three to four weeks is usually enough. For an early-May or late-August move, two weeks is often fine. If you are flexible on the date, ask your coordinator which days are still open with senior crews. They will tell you.
Quick rule of thumb: If your move date has “Saturday” and “June” or “July” in it, call by mid-April. Past that, you are picking from leftover slots.
Call 314.736.1101Schedule the morning, not the afternoon
This is the single most important summer-move decision and most St. Louis families get it wrong. They book a 10 AM start because that feels civilized. The problem is that a 10 AM start on a 3-bedroom home means the crew is loading the truck through the hottest two hours of the day (typically 1 to 3 PM in June and July), and unloading at the new place at 4 or 5 PM, which is also when storms tend to roll in.
The fix is to start at 7 AM in summer, not 9 or 10. We arrive at first light, pad and load through the cool morning, and aim to be unloading at the destination by early afternoon. Most of our summer moves wrap by 2 PM. The crew gets to lunch, the family gets to their new house with daylight to unpack, and nobody is moving boxes during the 4 PM heat peak.
If your building has a dock window that forces a later start (some Clayton high-rises do not allow loading before 9), say so when you book. We will bring a larger crew so the second-half of the load goes faster, and we will plan the route to avoid the worst of the afternoon heat.
Hydration is a logistics problem, not a wellness platitude
Every moving company says “our crews stay hydrated.” What we actually do, in case you are curious: every truck heading out on a summer move carries a 5-gallon insulated cooler with ice water and a separate cooler with sports drinks. Crews drink before they feel thirsty (by the time you feel thirsty in 95-degree heat with humidity, you are already a quart down). On the worst days, we rotate crews indoors every 45 minutes for a five-minute cool-down.
What you can do as the homeowner: do not turn off the AC the morning of the move. We have arrived at countless homes where the homeowner shut the AC off at 6 AM “to save energy” before a 7 AM start, and by 9 AM the upstairs is 88 degrees and we are losing efficiency on the most stair-heavy part of the load. Leave the AC running. Open the doors only when the crew is actively moving items through them. Your power bill will absorb it.
If you want to be a hero, leave a stack of bottled water and a bowl of fruit on the kitchen counter when the crew arrives. Watermelon is the gold standard. We have crews who will book your next move just for the watermelon.
“On a 95-degree day, the difference between a 7 AM start and a 10 AM start is about an hour of crew efficiency. That hour shows up either as a faster move or a more careful one. Pick a 7 AM start.”
Protect what the heat actually damages
People worry about the wrong things in summer moves. They think about candles melting (rarely an issue in a moving blanket), and not about vinyl records warping in a hot truck (a real and frequent issue), or electronics that have been sitting in a sealed garage for storage getting condensation when they hit the AC of the new house (a quietly common problem).
Things that need attention during a St. Louis summer move:
- Vinyl records and shellac: Pack them upright (never flat), keep them in the cab of the truck or your car, not the trailer. Never leave them in a closed car at lunch.
- Candles, lipsticks, perishables: Pack them in a cooler with a small ice pack. We will load the cooler last and unload it first.
- Electronics: If they have been in a hot garage or storage unit, let them sit and acclimate in the new house for two hours before powering on. Condensation kills.
- Wood furniture: The bigger risk in summer is humidity, not heat. Solid-wood pieces should be wrapped in moving blankets, not shrink-wrapped (shrink wrap traps moisture against finishes and can leave cloudy marks).
- Plants: Travel separately, in your car with the AC on. Even a 30-minute closed-truck ride in July can wilt anything more sensitive than a pothos.
- Pets: Never the truck cab, never. Even with the AC running, the cab gets up to 90 degrees the moment the engine cycles. Drop pets at a friend or boarder for the day.
Plan around storms, not just heat
St. Louis summer thunderstorms are predictable in pattern (they tend to roll in between 3 and 6 PM) but not in detail (they can soak everything in twenty minutes or skip the metro entirely). We watch the radar all day on summer moves. If a storm cell is tracking toward your address, we will close the truck early, tarp anything left on the porch, and wait it out under cover.
What you can do: have a contingency for a 90-minute weather delay built into your day. Do not schedule the cable installer for 4 PM on move day. Do not promise the family you will be in the new house and unpacked by dinner. If the weather cooperates, you will be early. If it does not, you will not be making frantic phone calls.
Avoid the highways at the wrong times
The St. Louis metro has predictable summer-traffic patterns that change which routes our drivers take:
- I-64 (Highway 40) westbound is brutal between 3 and 6 PM, especially the stretch near Brentwood and the I-170 interchange. Our drivers usually divert to Manchester or Clayton Road if delivering to West County in that window.
- I-70 through downtown St. Louis is unpredictable on summer weekends because of Cardinals games, Soldiers Memorial events, and Grand Center concerts. We check the schedule the morning of every Saturday move.
- I-270 is reliable but takes you the long way around. For a Kirkwood-to-Chesterfield move on a weekday afternoon, the I-270 detour beats the I-64 direct route by about twenty minutes.
- I-44 through Affton and Fenton is fine in summer except during Six Flags weekend traffic. Our coordinators check the Six Flags calendar before quoting a Saturday move in that corridor.
You do not need to know any of this. Your coordinator will route the truck. But it is worth knowing that we are routing around real summer-specific problems, not pulling random-looking detours out of thin air.
The two services that get more popular every summer
1. Full packing
In summer, we see a 30%+ uptick in full-pack bookings. The reason is heat: customers who would happily pack their own kitchen in October realize, around mid-June, that packing thirty boxes in a 90-degree house is not the savings they thought it was. We can usually fit a full or partial pack into the day before your move at a fixed rate. See our local-moving pricing for ranges.
2. Climate-controlled storage
Closing dates do not always line up, and in the summer market they line up even less. Our St. Louis warehouse keeps storage vaults at 65-72°F with low humidity year-round, so a 2-week storage gap between closings does not put your wood furniture or electronics through a Missouri attic-cycle. Worth knowing about before you sign a closing date you cannot quite hit.
The summer-move checklist we send to every customer
One week before move day, our coordinator sends every St. Louis summer customer this list. Steal it.
- Confirm AC will run all day; do not lower the thermostat the night before to “save”
- Set the new home’s AC to 70°F the night before move-in so it is cool when boxes arrive
- Stock the fridge at the new house: water, sports drinks, sandwich fixings, watermelon
- Move plants and pets to a friend’s for the day, or at minimum to a cool, closed room with the door labeled “DO NOT OPEN”
- Pack vinyl records, candles, lipsticks, and electronics in your own car, not the truck
- Have a 90-minute weather buffer in the schedule; do not book the cable installer same-day
- If pollen-sensitive, take an antihistamine the morning of; freshly opened boxes from a basement or garage carry a year of dust
- Tip the crew with cash, not a check — they would rather not deposit a check at 6 PM on a 95-degree day
The takeaway
A summer move in St. Louis is not harder than a winter move. It is a different planning exercise. The heat, the crowds, and the storms are all predictable variables. Treat them like that and your June Saturday move can be just as smooth as a quiet Tuesday in February.
If you are planning a summer move and want to talk through the schedule, the route, or whether your move date is still bookable with a senior crew, our coordinators are picking up the phone right now. 314.736.1101, or request a quote online and we will call you back the same day.
Booking a summer move in St. Louis? Our June and July Saturdays go first. Get on the calendar before mid-April for the best crew availability.
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