A moving truck interior on a summer LA day reaches 130°F within an hour of parking. Most houseplants experience cell damage above 90°F and are dead within 2 hours at moving-truck temperatures. The solution is simple: small and medium plants travel in your personal vehicle with the AC on.
Outdoor potted citrus, olive trees, and large tropicals that won't fit in a car are the hardest to move. Options: (1) Move them the day before in a rented van with the side door open — evening temps in LA are far more forgiving. (2) Drench them the night before, cover the pot with a tied garbage bag to retain moisture, and load them last/unload first on the main truck. (3) Give them to a neighbor and replace at destination — sometimes the honest answer.
Stop watering 2 days before. Wrap pots in paper to prevent soil spills. Place in boxes cut to size — open top, not closed. Never use sealed boxes (CO2 buildup). Brace with crumpled paper around the pot to prevent shifting. Stake tall plants with bamboo and tape.
Moving into California from another state: California's Department of Food and Agriculture inspects plants at agricultural border checkpoints. Common houseplants in commercial potting soil are generally approved; field soil is not. Citrus from Arizona, tropical palms from Florida soil, and some succulents from specific regions require inspection or certification. cdfa.ca.gov has the current approved plant list.
Moving within California: no agricultural restrictions.
Moving out of California: check the destination state's agricultural department — Hawaii and Arizona have their own import rules.
California requires that most plants brought from out of state pass an agricultural inspection at the border. Houseplants from approved states are generally fine; plants from certain regions (Arizona citrus, Florida tropical soil) may be inspected or restricted. Check cdfa.ca.gov for current restrictions.
Use your vehicle for small plants — trucks get too hot in LA summer (130°F+ interior temps). For necessary truck transport: no water 2 days before; wrap pots in paper; punch air holes in boxes; never seal plant boxes completely. Ride time over 3 hours risks significant plant stress.
Succulents and cacti are the most move-tolerant — they handle dry conditions, heat, and stress well. Tropical plants (monstera, fiddle-leaf) need to be the last thing loaded and first thing off. Outdoor container trees (citrus, olive) need secure staking and can't go in sealed boxes.
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