A truck packed well fits more, rides safer, and unloads faster. A truck packed badly shifts, crushes boxes, and sometimes means a second trip. Whether you're loading a rental yourself or supervising a labor-only crew, here's the order the pros use.
Load the heaviest, largest items first and put them at the front of the trailer, flush against the wall behind the cab. That means the refrigerator, washer, dryer, dressers and sofas. Keeping the weight forward and low keeps the truck balanced and stops heavy pieces from sliding into everything else when you brake.
Work in vertical "walls" from front to back, floor to ceiling, finishing each tier before starting the next. Stand mattresses, table tops, headboards and mirrors on their edges along the side walls — they're stronger that way and take less floor space. Disassemble bed frames and table legs to save room.
Stack boxes heaviest on the bottom, lightest on top, with the heaviest boxes resting on the furniture base layer. Fill every gap — soft items, pillows, bags of linens — so nothing has room to shift in transit. A packed-tight truck barely moves on the freeway; a loose one rattles your belongings to pieces.
Keep weight even side to side so the truck doesn't lean, and use the truck's built-in tie-down rails: strap each tier before building the next, especially the heavy front wall and anything tall. Ratchet straps beat rope. A few minutes of strapping is what separates an intact move from a broken one.
Load last what you want first: a clearly-marked essentials box, fragile items, and anything you need immediately at the new place. Put fragile boxes on top of tiers, never under heavy ones, and never let glassware ride loose. If loading a truck yourself sounds like a lot, our labor-only crews load rentals, PODS and containers from $80/hr — see also truck rental vs. movers.
The heaviest, largest items — fridge, washer, dryer, dressers and sofas — loaded against the wall behind the cab to keep weight forward and balanced.
Load in tight floor-to-ceiling tiers, fill every gap with soft items, and strap each tier to the truck's tie-down rails with ratchet straps before building the next.
Yes — always on top of a tier, never under heavy boxes, and ideally loaded last so they come off first. Pack glassware in dish boxes, never loose.
Yes. Use the truck's tie-down rails with ratchet straps to secure each tier, especially the heavy front wall and tall items. Rope alone tends to loosen on the freeway.
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