1. The Water Problem β€” Why Moving to an Island Is Different

If you've ever moved within a city or between cities on the same landmass, you know the drill: rent a truck, load it up, drive it to the new place, unload. Maybe hire movers. Simple logistics.

Moving to Vancouver Island is fundamentally different because of the Strait of Georgia. That 30–50 kilometre stretch of open water between the Lower Mainland and the Island means:

None of this is insurmountable. Thousands of people move to Vancouver Island every year. But if you're budgeting based on mainland moving costs, you're going to be surprised. This guide will help you not be surprised.

πŸ“Œ The fundamental question Before diving into logistics, read our comprehensive moving to Vancouver Island guide to make sure this is the right move for you. And check the cost of living breakdown so you know what you're walking into financially.

2. Your Moving Options at a Glance

Here's a quick comparison of the main ways to get your belongings across the water. We'll go deep on each one in the sections that follow.

Method Best For Approximate Cost (2-Bedroom) You Do the Loading?
Full-service moving company Families, large homes, those who want hands-off $2,000–$5,000 (from Lower Mainland)
$5,000–$12,000+ (from Alberta/Ontario)
No β€” they do everything
DIY rental truck + ferry Budget-conscious, smaller moves, strong backs $800–$2,000 (from Lower Mainland) Yes β€” all of it
Portable container (BigSteelBox, PODS) Long-distance moves, flexible timeline, need storage $2,500–$5,000 (from Alberta)
$4,000–$8,000 (from Ontario)
Yes β€” you load, they ship
Freight/barge shipping Oversized items, vehicles, heavy equipment $500–$3,000+ per item Varies
Your own vehicle + trailer Small moves, towing-capable vehicle $300–$700 (ferry + trailer rental) Yes
Ship nothing β€” buy on arrival Minimalists, cross-country moves, downsizers $0 moving cost (but furniture budget needed) N/A
πŸ’‘ The hybrid approach works best for most people Many people moving to Vancouver Island use a combination: ship the big stuff (or most of it) via a moving company or container, drive over with a carload of essentials, and buy some things new on the Island. The "move absolutely everything including the broken treadmill in the basement" approach often costs more than the stuff is worth.

3. Option 1: Professional Moving Companies

Hiring professional movers is the least stressful option β€” and the most expensive. For a move to Vancouver Island, you want a company that specifically handles Island moves and understands the ferry logistics. Not every mainland moving company does this well.

How It Works

A full-service moving company will:

  1. Send an estimator to your home (or do a virtual walkthrough) to assess volume and weight
  2. Provide a quote β€” ideally a binding or not-to-exceed quote, not just an estimate
  3. Show up on moving day with a crew (typically 2–4 movers) and a truck
  4. Pack everything (if you've paid for packing service) or load your pre-packed boxes
  5. Drive to the ferry terminal, cross to the Island, and deliver to your new home
  6. Unload and place furniture where you want it

Cost Breakdown β€” From the Lower Mainland

For a move from Metro Vancouver (Burnaby, Surrey, Vancouver, etc.) to Victoria or Nanaimo:

Home SizeTypical WeightEstimated CostTypical Duration
Studio / 1-Bedroom2,000–3,500 lbs$1,200–$2,5001 day
2-Bedroom Apartment3,500–5,000 lbs$2,000–$4,0001 day
3-Bedroom House5,000–8,000 lbs$3,000–$5,5001–2 days
4-Bedroom House8,000–12,000 lbs$4,500–$8,0001–2 days
Large Home (5+ bedrooms or lots of stuff)12,000+ lbs$7,000–$12,000+2–3 days

These costs typically include loading, transportation, ferry crossing, unloading, and basic insurance. They usually do not include packing (add $500–$2,000+), packing materials ($150–$500), storage, or specialty item handling (pianos, hot tubs, etc.).

Local Hourly Rates (2026)

Vancouver-area movers charge $45–$80 per mover per hour, plus a truck fee of $20–$40 per trip. For a Vancouver-to-Victoria move, most companies quote a flat rate rather than hourly because the ferry crossing makes hourly pricing unpredictable.

Moving Companies That Handle Vancouver Island Moves

These companies are known for regularly doing mainland-to-Island moves:

CompanyTypeNotes
Two Small Men with Big HeartsLocal & long-distanceWell-known BC mover, handles Island moves frequently. Good reviews. Mid-range pricing.
That Guy Van LinesVancouver Island specialistSpecifically serves Island moves. Weekly trips. Smaller operation, competitive rates.
Minute Men Moving & StorageNanaimo-basedLocal Island mover that also does mainland-to-Island. Container storage available.
Ferguson Moving & StorageFull-service, establishedLarger company, handles complex moves. Higher-end pricing but comprehensive service.
Simple Moves & StorageVancouver-basedTransparent pricing, good reviews. Handles Island routes.
AMJ CampbellNational carrierCanada-wide network. Good for cross-country moves ending on the Island.
United Van Lines / Atlas Van LinesNational carriersMajor national companies with Island delivery capability. Pricier but reliable for long-distance.
⚠️ Get at least 3 quotes β€” and get them in writing Moving company pricing varies enormously. We've seen quotes for the same 2-bedroom Vancouver-to-Victoria move range from $1,800 to $4,500. Always get a binding or not-to-exceed written estimate. "Estimates" that can change on moving day are a red flag. Ask specifically: does the quote include the ferry fare? Some companies list it as an extra.

What to Ask Every Moving Company

The Hidden Costs

Beyond the base quote, watch for these add-ons that can inflate your bill:

4. Option 2: DIY with a Rental Truck + Ferry

The classic budget move: rent a truck, recruit friends with pizza and beer, and drive it onto the ferry yourself. This is the cheapest option for a Lower Mainland to Island move β€” but it comes with complications that don't exist for a normal ground-based move.

Rental Truck Costs

U-Haul, Budget, Penske, and Enterprise all rent trucks in Metro Vancouver. Typical one-way rental costs for Vancouver to Victoria or Nanaimo:

Truck SizeFitsOne-Way RentalFuel Cost (Approx.)
10-foot cargo vanStudio / small 1-bedroom$80–$150$40–$60
12-foot truck1-bedroom apartment$100–$200$50–$80
17-foot truck2-bedroom apartment$150–$300$70–$100
20-foot truck2–3 bedroom house$200–$400$80–$120
26-foot truck3–4 bedroom house$300–$500$100–$150

Important notes on rental trucks:

Getting the Truck on the Ferry

This is where DIY moves to Vancouver Island get complicated and expensive. Here's the critical information:

Size Classification Matters

BC Ferries classifies vehicles by height and length:

What a Rental Truck Actually Costs on the Ferry

VehicleTypical DimensionsApproximate Ferry Fare (One-Way)
Cargo van (10-foot)Under 7ft high, under 20ft long$95 (standard car rate)
12-foot truckOver 7ft high, under 20ft long$115–$140
17-foot truckOver 7ft high, under 20ft long$115–$140
20-foot truckOver 7ft high, ~24ft total length$140–$175
26-foot truckOver 7ft high, ~33ft total length$200–$300
26-foot truck + car trailerOver 7ft high, ~50ft total$300–$500

Note: These are approximate 2026 fares for major routes (Tsawwassen–Swartz Bay, Tsawwassen–Duke Point, Horseshoe Bay–Departure Bay). Exact fares depend on specific dimensions, route, and fare type. Use the BC Ferries fare calculator with your exact vehicle measurements.

⚠️ Commercial vehicle classification BC Ferries may classify rental trucks as commercial vehicles, which can mean higher fares and different boarding priority. A 26-foot U-Haul is not treated the same as a family SUV. Some rental companies β€” U-Haul in particular β€” register their trucks at a higher gross vehicle weight than you'd expect, which can bump you into a more expensive fare category. Always check the vehicle's GVW (gross vehicle weight) registration before you get to the terminal. Vehicles registered over 5,500 kg face significantly higher rates.

DIY Move Total Cost Estimate

Here's what a realistic DIY move from Metro Vancouver to Victoria looks like for a 2-bedroom apartment:

ExpenseCost
17-foot truck rental (one-way)$200–$300
Fuel$70–$100
Ferry fare (over-height truck)$115–$175
Insurance/damage waiver (1 day)$15–$30
Packing materials$100–$200
Dollies/equipment rental$15–$30
Pizza and beer for friends$50–$100
Total$565–$935

Compare that to $2,000–$4,000 for professional movers. The savings are real β€” but so is the physical labour, the stress, and the risk of damaging your stuff (or your back). And you still need to get your personal vehicle across separately, which adds another $95+ ferry fare.

Reservations Are Non-Negotiable

If you're taking a rental truck on the ferry, book your reservation as early as possible β€” ideally 2–4 weeks ahead for summer moves, at least a week ahead for off-season. Over-height vehicle space is limited, and a fully loaded moving truck sitting in a ferry parking lot for 6 hours is nobody's idea of a good time.

For more on navigating the ferry system, see our ferries & transportation guide.

5. Option 3: Portable Shipping Containers (BigSteelBox, PODS, etc.)

Portable storage containers have become one of the most popular ways to move to Vancouver Island, especially for long-distance moves. The concept is simple: a company drops a steel shipping container (usually 8 feet wide by 8 feet tall by 20 feet long) at your current home, you load it at your own pace, and they pick it up and ship it to your new location.

How It Works

  1. Container delivered to your driveway or street (you may need a parking permit)
  2. You load it over several days or weeks β€” no rushing
  3. Company picks it up and trucks it to the Island via barge (not the car ferry)
  4. Container delivered to your new address
  5. You unload at your own pace
  6. Company picks up the empty container

Key Players

BigSteelBox

Canadian company with locations in Victoria, Nanaimo, and across BC/Alberta. Uses 20-foot steel shipping containers. They handle barge transport to the Island so you don't deal with ferry reservations. This is the most commonly recommended option for moving to Vancouver Island.

PODS

US-based with Canadian operations. Uses proprietary containers (7-foot, 12-foot, and 16-foot). More expensive than BigSteelBox for cross-country moves but competitive for shorter distances.

Why Containers Are Popular for Island Moves

πŸ’‘ Container loading tips A 20-foot container is big but not infinite. Load heavy items (furniture, appliances) first, against the back wall. Stack boxes to the ceiling β€” use every cubic foot. Wrap furniture in moving blankets. Tie everything down with ratchet straps β€” the container will be on a truck and possibly a barge, and things shift. A well-packed 20-foot container fits a 2–3 bedroom home. A 4-bedroom house may need two containers.
⚠️ Container delivery requirements A 20-foot container needs a flat, firm surface for delivery β€” ideally a driveway. It can't go on steep grades or soft ground. In some municipalities you need a street parking permit to place a container on the road. Check with your city before booking. Vancouver Island's many rural properties with gravel driveways can usually accommodate a container, but narrow driveways may not work for the delivery truck.

6. BC Ferries β€” Vehicle & Trailer Fare Breakdown

Whether you're driving your car, towing a trailer, or bringing a truck, you need to understand BC Ferries' fare structure. This section covers the major mainland-to-Island routes.

Major Routes to Vancouver Island

RouteDurationBest For
Tsawwassen β†’ Swartz Bay (Victoria)~1 hr 35 minMoving to South Island (Victoria, Sidney, Sooke)
Tsawwassen β†’ Duke Point (Nanaimo)~2 hrMoving to Central/North Island (Nanaimo, Parksville, Courtenay)
Horseshoe Bay β†’ Departure Bay (Nanaimo)~1 hr 40 minMoving from North Shore/Whistler corridor

2026 Fare Summary β€” Major Routes

All fares are one-way, in Canadian dollars. Effective through early 2026 (fares increase ~3% annually).

Vehicle TypeSaver FarePrepaid FareAt Terminal
Standard car + driver (under 7ft, under 20ft)$49–$89$105$95
Additional adult passenger$15 (with Saver vehicle)$19.60$19.60
Standard over-height vehicle + driver (over 7ft)From $59~$130–$145~$130–$145
Each additional foot over 20ft length$3.50/ft$7.05/ft$7.05/ft
Motorcycle + riderβ€”~$55~$55
Bicycle + riderβ€”~$4 + passenger fare~$4 + passenger fare
Foot passenger (adult)$15$19.60$19.60

What Moving Vehicles Actually Cost on the Ferry

Let's work through some real scenarios:

Scenario 1: Driving your car over

Standard car + driver at the terminal: $95 one-way. Book a Saver fare online for as low as $49 on off-peak sailings. Add $15–$19.60 per additional passenger.

Scenario 2: Car towing a small U-Haul trailer

If the combined vehicle + trailer exceeds 20 feet total length (most do) and/or 7 feet in height, you'll pay the over-height rate plus per-foot charges. Typical cost for a car + 6x12 trailer (total length ~30 feet, over 7 feet high): $160–$220 one-way.

Scenario 3: Pickup truck with a loaded utility trailer

Similar to above β€” your total length determines the surcharge. A full-size pickup + 16-foot trailer (~35 feet total): $180–$250 one-way.

Scenario 4: 17-foot rental truck (no trailer)

Over 7 feet high but under 20 feet long: $115–$145 one-way. Book a Saver fare when available for ~$59–$89.

Scenario 5: 26-foot U-Haul

Over 7 feet high. Total length approximately 33 feet (the truck itself is longer than the cargo box). That's about 13 feet over the 20-foot threshold at $7.05/foot: $230–$330 one-way at regular fare. Could be $150–$200 on a Saver sailing.

Scenario 6: 26-foot truck towing a car on a trailer

Total length approximately 48–53 feet. Over-height + significant length surcharge: $350–$500+ one-way. This is where DIY moves start to lose their cost advantage. Also note: some ferry sailings have very limited space for vehicles this long.

πŸ“Œ Saver fares are your friend Saver fares can cut your ferry cost nearly in half, and the per-foot length surcharge drops from $7.05 to $3.50. The catch: they're only available on less-popular sailings (early morning, late evening, midweek). For a moving truck, this is usually fine β€” you probably don't want to fight Friday afternoon traffic anyway. Book online in advance; Saver fares aren't available at the terminal.

Reservation Tips for Large Vehicles

For the full ferry experience breakdown, see our ferries & transportation guide.

7. Barge & Freight Shipping for Large Items

Some things are too big, too heavy, or too awkward for the car ferry. That's where barge and freight shipping comes in. This is also how most commercial goods reach Vancouver Island β€” and how moving containers (BigSteelBox, etc.) get across.

When You Need Barge Shipping

Barge Operators

The main barge operators serving Vancouver Island:

OperatorRoutesNotes
Seaspan FerriesTilbury (Delta) ↔ Duke Point (Nanaimo), Swartz BayLargest coastal barge operator in BC. Handles most container and freight traffic to the Island. Not direct-to-consumer β€” you'd book through a freight company or your moving container provider uses them.
Island Tug & BargeVarious BC coastal routesHandles oversized cargo, heavy equipment, construction materials. Call for quotes on individual items.
Saam Smit (formerly SMIT)VariousHeavy-lift and specialized cargo.

Cost Estimates for Barge Shipping

Barge shipping is priced by the linear foot of deck space your cargo occupies, plus handling. Rough estimates:

For most people moving to the Island, you won't deal with barge operators directly. Your moving container company handles the barge logistics. But if you have unusual items β€” a workshop full of heavy equipment, a boat, or construction materials β€” call Seaspan or Island Tug for a direct quote.

8. Getting Your Vehicle to the Island

If you're hiring movers or using a shipping container for your belongings, you still need to get your car(s) to the Island. Here are your options:

Option A: Drive It Onto the Ferry Yourself

The simplest and cheapest option. Drive to the ferry terminal, get on the boat, drive off on the Island.

If you have two vehicles and two drivers, this is straightforward β€” both drive on. If you're solo with two vehicles, you'll need to make two trips or have someone help.

Option B: Auto Transport / Car Shipping

Vehicle transport companies can ship your car to the Island. This makes sense if you're flying to Victoria or can't make the drive (e.g., moving from Ontario and shipping everything).

Companies like ShipMyRide, RoadRunners Auto Transport, and MVS Canada handle vehicle shipping to the Island. Get multiple quotes β€” prices vary a lot depending on season and vehicle size.

Option C: Tow It Behind the Moving Truck

If you're doing a DIY truck move, you can rent a car-towing dolly or flatbed trailer from U-Haul and tow your car behind the truck. This saves a separate ferry crossing but significantly increases your total vehicle length β€” and therefore your ferry fare.

⚠️ Towing + ferry = stress Driving a 26-foot loaded truck towing a car on a trailer into a cramped ferry terminal, backing into a narrow lane, and then navigating out at the other end is not a relaxing experience. If you're not comfortable towing, don't add this variable to an already complex moving day. Pay for the separate ferry crossing.

Don't forget: once your vehicle arrives on the Island, you'll need to register and insure it through ICBC. See our BC services checklist for the full process.

9. What to Sell vs. What to Move β€” The Island Math

This is the section nobody wants to read but everybody should. Moving to an island means every pound and cubic foot of stuff you transport costs real money. The math often works out in favour of selling things and replacing them on the Island.

The "Replacement Cost vs. Shipping Cost" Test

For every major item, ask yourself: Does it cost more to move this than to replace it?

ItemCost to Move (Approximate Share of Moving Bill)Cost to Replace (Used, on Island)Verdict
IKEA bookshelf$50–$100$30–$80 (Facebook Marketplace)Sell it
Washer & dryer set$150–$300$300–$800 used, $1,000–$2,000 newMove if good quality; sell if old
Couch / sofa$100–$250$200–$800 usedMove if you love it; sell if it's "fine"
Dining table + chairs$75–$150$100–$500 usedDepends on sentimental value
King-size bed + mattress$100–$200$500–$2,000 newMove it
Old desk$50–$100$30–$150 usedSell it
Grand piano$500–$1,500 (specialty move)$1,000–$10,000+Move it (if you play it)
Boxes of "stuff" you haven't opened since last move$20–$50 per box$0 (you don't need it)Donate or trash
Lawn tractor / ride-on mower$200–$500$800–$2,500 usedMove it if Island property needs one
Treadmill / home gym$150–$400$200–$800 usedSell it β€” you're moving to an island with unlimited outdoor exercise

The "Will I Need This on the Island?" Test

Some things that made sense in your previous home don't make sense on Vancouver Island:

Where to Sell Before You Move

πŸ’‘ The 5,000-lb rule of thumb A typical 2-bedroom home contains about 5,000 lbs of stuff. Moving all of it from the Lower Mainland to the Island costs roughly $2,000–$4,000 with a moving company. If you can pare down to 3,000 lbs, you might fit in a smaller truck or container and save $500–$1,500. Every box of books you donate is money in your pocket. For more on simplifying your move, see our downsizing for island life guide.

10. Timing Your Move β€” When (and When Not) to Go

When you move to Vancouver Island matters almost as much as how you move. The wrong timing can cost you hundreds of dollars more and hours of wasted time. Here's the breakdown by season:

🟒 Best Time to Move: September–November and February–April

🟑 Okay Time: May and Early June

πŸ”΄ Worst Time to Move: Late June through August

🟑 December–January

Day of Week Matters Too

πŸ“Œ The timing sweet spot If you can choose your timing freely: a Tuesday or Wednesday in October. Cheap moving rates, easy ferry bookings, decent weather (cool and possibly rainy, but manageable), and housing inventory on the Island is usually reasonable. If you're tied to a school schedule, early September right after Labour Day is the next best option.

11. Moving from Far Away β€” Ontario, Alberta, Prairies

If you're moving to Vancouver Island from another province, the logistics are more complex because you're combining a long-distance overland move with a water crossing. Here's how to approach it by origin.

From Alberta (Calgary, Edmonton)

This is the most common long-distance move to Vancouver Island. Distance: ~1,000–1,200 km plus the ferry.

MethodEstimated Cost (2-Bedroom)Timeline
Full-service moving company$3,500–$7,0003–7 days
BigSteelBox / container$3,500–$6,0007–14 days
DIY (drive U-Haul through the Rockies + ferry)$1,500–$3,0002–3 days
Sell everything, fly, buy new$0 moving + $5,000–$15,000 to refurnish1 day
⚠️ Driving a U-Haul through the Rockies The Trans-Canada Highway through the Rocky Mountains (Highway 1 through Rogers Pass, or Highway 5 through Yellowhead/Kamloops) involves steep grades, tight curves, and potentially terrible weather from October through April. Driving a loaded 20- or 26-foot truck through this in winter is genuinely dangerous. If you're moving between October and April, seriously consider a professional mover or a container β€” let someone experienced handle the mountain driving.

For Alberta-specific tips, see our Alberta to Vancouver Island moving guide.

From Ontario (Toronto, Ottawa, GTA)

The big one. Distance: ~4,400 km. This is a cross-country move.

MethodEstimated Cost (2-Bedroom)Timeline
Full-service national mover (AMJ Campbell, Atlas, United)$6,000–$12,000+7–14 days
BigSteelBox / container$5,000–$8,50014–21 days
DIY drive (U-Haul across Canada + ferry)$3,000–$5,0005–7 days driving
Ship essentials only + buy new$1,000–$3,000 shipping + refurnishingVaries

For cross-country moves, the container option is often the best value-for-money. You load at your Ontario home, the container travels by truck across Canada (takes 10–14 days), barges to the Island, and shows up at your door. You don't drive anything through the Prairies. For Ontario-specific tips, see our Ontario to Vancouver Island moving guide.

From the Prairies (Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina)

MethodEstimated Cost (2-Bedroom)Timeline
Full-service mover$4,000–$8,0005–10 days
Container (BigSteelBox)$3,000–$5,50010–14 days
DIY drive + ferry$2,000–$3,5003–4 days driving

From the US (Washington State, California, etc.)

International moves add customs considerations. Your household goods enter Canada duty-free if you've owned them for at least 6 months and you're becoming a permanent resident or returning citizen. You'll need a detailed inventory list (the "Goods to Follow" declaration, BSF186). Don't try to wing this at the border with a loaded truck.

12. Local Island Movers β€” After You Arrive

Once you're on the Island, you may need local movers for the final leg β€” especially if your shipping container was delivered to a storage yard and you need help getting things to your home, or if you need to move between temporary and permanent housing.

Island-Based Moving Companies

CompanyBased InCoverageNotes
Handy HaulersVictoriaSouth IslandSmall local company, competitive hourly rates
Mint MoversVictoriaSouth IslandGood reviews, transparent pricing
Minute Men MovingNanaimoCentral Island + mainland routesEstablished company, container storage available
Nice Guys MoversNanaimoCentral IslandLocal moves, reasonable rates
Island MoversVictoriaSouth/Central IslandMultiple truck sizes, packing service available
You Move MeVictoriaSouth IslandFranchise operation, consistent service

Local Moving Rates on the Island (2026)

Island movers typically charge:

A local move within Victoria typically runs $400–$1,200 depending on home size. Nanaimo and smaller towns are similar or slightly cheaper.

Labour-Only Options

If you have a truck (or a container to unload) but need muscle, you can hire labour-only:

13. Storage Options on Vancouver Island

If your move timeline doesn't perfectly align β€” your new place isn't ready, you're renting temporarily while house-hunting, or you need to stage a gradual move β€” you'll need storage.

Types of Storage

Self-Storage Units

Traditional self-storage facilities are available in every major Island community.

Unit SizeFitsMonthly Cost (Victoria)Monthly Cost (Nanaimo/Courtenay)
5Γ—5 (25 sq ft)Boxes, small items$75–$120$60–$100
5Γ—10 (50 sq ft)Studio apartment contents$120–$200$90–$160
10Γ—10 (100 sq ft)1–2 bedroom apartment$180–$300$140–$250
10Γ—15 (150 sq ft)2–3 bedroom house$220–$380$180–$300
10Γ—20 (200 sq ft)3–4 bedroom house$280–$450$220–$380

Major facilities: Public Storage, Storage Vault, Access Storage (Victoria), various independents. Climate-controlled units cost 15–25% more but protect against humidity and temperature swings β€” worth it for electronics, artwork, and leather furniture.

Portable Container Storage

BigSteelBox and others will store your loaded container in their yard for $100–$200/month. This is convenient if your stuff is already in a container from the move β€” just leave it in storage until you're ready, rather than unloading into a self-storage unit and loading again later.

Warehouse Storage (Through Your Moving Company)

Many moving companies offer warehouse storage for $100–$300/month. Your stuff stays on their truck or in their warehouse. Convenient, but you can't access it easily.

πŸ’‘ Storage strategy If you're buying property on the Island and closing dates don't line up with your move, a portable container is ideal: load it at your old place, have it stored on the Island for a few weeks, then deliver to your new home when it closes. Beats unloading into self-storage and hiring movers again.

14. Total Cost Summary β€” What to Budget

Here's the full picture of what a move to Vancouver Island costs, depending on your situation. These are realistic 2026 estimates for a typical 2–3 bedroom household.

From the Lower Mainland (Vancouver/Surrey/Burnaby)

ApproachMoving CostVehicle FerryTotal
Full-service movers$2,000–$5,000$95–$190 (1-2 cars)$2,100–$5,200
DIY truck + ferry$400–$700 (truck + fuel + materials)$115–$300 (truck) + $95 (car)$610–$1,100
Container (BigSteelBox)$2,500–$4,500$95–$190 (1-2 cars)$2,600–$4,700
Minimal move (car loads only)$0$95–$190$95–$190 (+ refurnishing)

From Alberta (Calgary/Edmonton)

ApproachMoving CostVehicle TransportTotal
Full-service movers$3,500–$7,000Included or $800–$1,500 separate$3,500–$8,500
Container$3,500–$6,000$95–$190 (drive + ferry)$3,600–$6,200
DIY drive + ferry$1,000–$2,000 (truck + fuel)$200–$400 (truck ferry) + $95 (car)$1,300–$2,500

From Ontario (Toronto/Ottawa/GTA)

ApproachMoving CostVehicle TransportTotal
Full-service national mover$6,000–$12,000Included or $1,500–$2,500 separate$6,000–$14,500
Container$5,000–$8,500$95–$190 (fly + ferry) or $1,500–$2,500 (ship car)$5,100–$11,000
Sell everything, fly, start fresh$0$300–$600 (flights)$300–$600 (+ $5,000–$15,000 refurnishing)

Additional Costs to Budget (All Origins)

ItemCost
Packing materials (boxes, tape, wrap)$100–$500
Professional packing service$500–$2,000+
Moving insurance (full-value)$200–$600
Storage (if needed, per month)$100–$400
Cleaning old home / damage deposit recovery$150–$400
Temporary accommodation on arrival$100–$250/night (Airbnb/hotel)
Meals and incidentals during move$100–$300
BC admin setup costs (licence, registration, etc.)$450–$1,200
Total "hidden" costs$1,200–$5,000+
πŸ“Œ The real total When people say "our move to the Island cost about $X," they usually mean just the moving company bill. The actual all-in cost β€” including materials, insurance, ferry fares, gas, food, temporary housing, and admin β€” is typically 30–50% higher. For a Lower Mainland move, budget $3,000–$7,000 total. From Alberta, $5,000–$12,000. From Ontario, $8,000–$18,000. These numbers aren't meant to scare you β€” they're meant to prevent unpleasant surprises.

15. Hard-Won Tips from People Who've Done It

These tips come from real people who've moved to Vancouver Island β€” the things they wish they'd known beforehand.

Before the Move

On Moving Day

After Arrival

πŸ’‘ The one-year rule Don't try to recreate your mainland life on the Island. Give yourself a year to figure out what Island life looks like for you. You might discover you don't need the second car. You might start kayaking instead of going to the gym. You might find that the dining table you shipped doesn't fit the lifestyle you're building. Be open to it.

Moving with Pets

Moving with Kids

Quick Reference: Useful Contacts

ServiceContactWebsite
BC Ferries (reservations & fares)1-888-223-3779bcferries.com
BC Ferries Fare Calculatorβ€”bcferries.com/fare-calculator
BigSteelBox (Victoria)250-590-1313bigsteelbox.com
BigSteelBox (Nanaimo)250-756-2226bigsteelbox.com
U-Haul (Vancouver Island locations)1-800-468-4285uhaul.com
Two Small Men with Big Hearts1-866-878-2636twosmallmen.com
Canadian Association of Movers1-866-860-0065mover.net
Consumer Protection BC1-888-564-9963consumerprotectionbc.ca
πŸ“Œ The bottom line Moving to an island is more expensive and more complicated than moving between cities on the mainland. That's just the reality of living somewhere beautiful and slightly isolated. But with planning β€” getting quotes early, booking ferry reservations, decluttering beforehand, and choosing the right time of year β€” you can keep costs manageable and sanity intact. Thousands of people make this move every year. You'll figure it out. And once you're unpacking boxes while looking out at the ocean or the mountains, you'll know it was worth the hassle. Now go read the BC services checklist so you know what paperwork to tackle once you arrive.