Mobile Home Movers inFayetteville, NC
Triple has something for you whether you are a first-time buyer, a seasoned investor, or an industry professionalState-licensed transporters with full cargo insurance. Compare single-wide, double-wide, and modular home transport services.
TRUSTED TRANSPORTERS
Licensed, insured, and transparently priced
Explore 0 movers in Fayetteville.
Mobile home moving guide
Costs, permits, logistics — in one place.
Fayetteville · Cumberland County · 2025–2026
Fayetteville NC: Mobile Home Moving Costs
Manufactured home transport & relocation pricing grounded in Fayetteville market data.
Snapshot
Most full‑service local moves land between $5,000–$13,000 depending on home size and setup complexity.
Swipe to see all tabs
Component Cost Breakdown
Itemized specialty fees often excluded from baseline "full-service" quotes.
Ready to Move
Your Mobile Home?
Free quotes from licensed, vetted movers — we'll match you with the right one.
Mobile Home Moving Resources
Expert guides to help you plan your move
Need a hand choosing a mover?
We'll get you free quotes from vetted movers — call anytime.
Frequently Asked Questions
Immediate clarity on complex logistics, costs, and local permits for Fayetteville, NC relocation.
Full-service includes teardown (utility disconnect, skirting removal, hitch/axle prep), transport with escorts, and setup (blocking, leveling, basic anchoring, reconnection). It costs 2×–3× more but removes the logistical burden.
Full-service double-wide moves in Fayetteville typically run $8,000–$15,000 for local moves under 50 miles, with the national average around $11,500. Older double-wides (pre-1990s) may cost more due to structural fragility during separation.
1. County Tax Moving Permit — all property taxes on the home must be paid in full before the county will issue this. Historical liens on the VIN must be cleared, even from previous owners.
2. NCDOT Oversize/Overweight Permit — $36–$48 base fee for single-trip (10-day validity), processed digitally through the PIMS system. Homes 16 feet wide also require a Route Survey Form (PF-16A).
3. Cumberland County Building Placement Permit — $200 (single-wide), $300 (double-wide), or $500 (modular), plus a $150 Tie-Down Permit. Additional trade permits ($75–$200 each) are needed for electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work.
• 12'1"–14' wide: 1 escort
• 14'1"–15' wide (two-lane roads): 2 escorts (front + rear)
• 16' wide (controlled-access highways): 2 escorts
• 16' wide (all other roads): 3 escorts + NC State Highway Patrol officer, restricted to 9 AM–2:30 PM only
Escort services cost $1.50–$3.50 per mile per vehicle. For a 16-foot double-wide on a 100-mile move, escort costs alone can reach $700–$1,050.
This means any manufactured home placed in the area must meet enhanced anchoring standards: double-helix auger anchors ($45–$60 each), stabilizer plates ($50–$150/set), and hurricane straps ($400–$700). A complete Wind Zone II anchoring package costs $1,500–$2,500, compared to $800–$1,200 for basic Zone I.
The effect is amplified by the DoD's troubled Global Household Goods Contract (GHC), which has pushed thousands of military families into Personally Procured Moves (PPMs) subsidized at 130% of government estimates. These subsidized consumers outbid civilians for the limited pool of heavy-haul rigs and drivers, turning the usual 15%–20% summer premium into an aggressive seller's market.
Full-service single-wide: 2–3 days (teardown → transport → setup)
Full-service double-wide: 3–5 days minimum (marriage-line split, dual transport, precision re-assembly)
Triple-wide: Up to a full week
Long-distance moves add time due to NCDOT restrictions: homes wider than 16 feet can only travel between 9 AM and 2:30 PM (~220 miles/day maximum). All oversize loads are banned on Sundays and holidays. Factor in 2–4 weeks for permit processing and scheduling, especially during May–August peak season.
• NCDOT oversize/overweight permit
• Certified escort vehicles with EVO Handbook-trained drivers
• County tax moving permit
• Commercial towing rig capable of hauling 10,000–30,000+ lbs
• Liability insurance
• EPA-regulated refrigerant recovery for HVAC disconnect
At the destination, Cumberland County requires OSFM-licensed installers for setup and tie-down — you cannot legally perform your own setup without this license. The permitting and equipment costs alone typically make DIY moves impractical.
Standard and premium movers typically refuse pre-1976 units due to structural risk during transport. Only budget-tier operators may attempt it, but they often carry just the minimum $50,000 cargo insurance — far less than the cost of damage or total loss.
Always ask your mover for their actual cargo coverage limit and whether they carry Actual Cash Value (ACV) or Full Value Protection (FVP) policies. If their coverage falls short, you can purchase supplemental trip collision insurance through the NC Rate Bureau (NCRB) starting around $15 for 30 days.
• Wind Zone II anchoring upgrade: $1,500–$2,500
• Municipal water tap fee: $763–$2,620 (paid to Fayetteville PWC)
• Sewer tap fee: $1,406–$1,660
• New skirting: $630–$4,480
• Steps or deck: $800–$7,500
• HVAC disconnect/reconnect: $350–$800
• Electrical hookup: $300–$800+
• Vapor barrier: $1,215–$4,010
• Permits (placement + tie-down): $350–$450
NCDOT restricts 16-foot-wide homes to a 5.5-hour daily travel window (9 AM–2:30 PM), capping realistic daily distance at ~220 miles. Interstate moves require permits from each state crossed, multiplying regulatory costs and processing time.