Shipping a classic or exotic in Texas means trusting someone with a car you cannot replace. One stone chip on the freeway, and a show-grade repaint runs thousands. Pick the wrong carrier, and a rare car rides next to a leaking work truck. We move collector cars across Texas every week — here is how to protect yours.
The short answer: Ship a valuable Texas classic or exotic in an enclosed trailer, which runs 40% to 60% more than open. Costs range from about $500 to $2,800 by distance. Confirm the insurance limit matches the car's value, and book early around auction season.
A classic or exotic is not a daily driver, and it should not ship like one. The whole goal is to deliver the car in exactly the condition it left — paint, trim, and undercarriage untouched.
Texas makes this its own market. The state has deep car culture: big auctions, oil-money collections, and a thriving restoration scene from Houston to the Hill Country. That means plenty of enclosed carriers work these routes, but it also means the good trucks book up fast around auction dates.
For most collector cars, the answer is enclosed. A covered trailer blocks road debris, rain, sun, and prying eyes for the whole trip. On a rare or original-paint car, that protection is worth every dollar.
The exception is a driver-quality classic — a car you already take to weekend meets and do not baby. That one can ship open to save money. Be honest about which kind you own. Our open vs enclosed car shipping in Texas guide draws the line in detail.
Enclosed pricing scales with distance, just like open, but it starts higher. Here is a rough 2026 guide.
| Move type | Enclosed range |
|---|---|
| Within Texas (Triangle) | $500–$900 |
| Texas to nearby states | $900–$1,600 |
| Long-haul / coast-to-coast | $1,400–$2,800 |
That is roughly 40% to 60% above an open carrier. The honest caveat: a dedicated single-car trailer for a top exotic costs more than these ranges. For the broader price picture, see the cost to ship a car to Texas guide, or the classic car shipping cost breakdown.
Texas is an auction state. Mecum runs major sales in Houston, Dallas hosts regular collector auctions, and dealers move cars in and out of the region constantly. A lot of our enclosed bookings start or end at an auction house.
We can arrange pickup right from the auction. The key is paperwork: confirm the sale has closed, payment has cleared, and the release form is ready before the driver shows up. The common snag we see is a car that is not yet cleared for release, which strands the truck and racks up wait time.
Book the carrier as soon as you know the auction date, not after the hammer falls. Enclosed trucks get pulled into the region for big sales, so they fill faster that week.
Not all enclosed trailers are equal. There are two main types, and the difference matters for a valuable car.
Soft-side uses a strong fabric cover over a frame. It fully covers the car and costs a little less. For most collector cars, it is plenty.
Hard-side has solid metal walls. It gives the most protection and shields against the rare road hazard that could dent a soft cover. We point the highest-value and irreplaceable cars toward hard-side. The caveat: hard-side trailers are fewer, so book earlier.
Enclosed trailers come in single-car and multi-car versions. The choice shapes both price and handling.
A multi-car enclosed trailer shares space among several vehicles, which keeps the cost down. A single-car or low-count trailer gives your car dedicated room and the most careful handling. For a true six-figure car, we usually recommend the dedicated option. For a nice-but-not-irreplaceable car, multi-car enclosed is a fine middle ground.
This is where collector-car owners get burned, so read carefully. Every carrier carries cargo insurance, but the limit may fall well short of a six-figure car's value.
Ask for the coverage amount in writing before you book, and confirm it matches an agreed or appraised value. For a truly rare car, consider your own transport-period coverage on top. We tell our clients to treat the insurance conversation as seriously as the price — a cheap quote with thin coverage is no bargain on an irreplaceable car.
For the few days your car is on a trailer, heat is not a real concern. An enclosed trailer blocks direct sun, and a short trip does no harm even in a Texas summer.
The long-term story is different. Texas sun is hard on original paint, vinyl, and rubber over years of ownership. That is a garaging issue, not a shipping one. If your car is genuinely heat-sensitive — say, a freshly restored interior — ask whether climate-controlled enclosed transport is available. For most classics, standard enclosed is plenty.
Plenty of Texas classics are mid-restoration and do not run. You can still ship them, but the equipment matters. A non-runner needs a winch to load and a lift gate, which not every trailer carries.
Declare it as non-running when you book. There is usually a small extra fee, and an honest carrier plans for the winch ahead of time. Spring it on the driver at pickup, and the load may be refused. Our non-running car shipping in Texas guide covers project cars in full.
A little prep protects both the car and your peace of mind. Run through this before the driver arrives.
One nuance we stress with collector cars: write down the exact ground clearance and any wide body. That tells the carrier whether they need a lift gate and how to strap the car without touching the paint.
The Texas-to-California corridor is one of the busiest collector-car routes in the country, with cars moving both ways for auctions, sales, and relocations. Enclosed trucks run it constantly.
If your classic is making that trip, our classic car shipping from Texas to California guide covers the corridor specifics — timing, the I-10 route, and what to expect at each end. Booking around the major West Coast auction calendar helps you lock a truck before demand spikes.
Because you are paying a premium for a valuable car, make sure you get premium service. A few steps protect you.
A good enclosed carrier answers all of these without hesitation. Vague replies about insurance or equipment are a reason to keep looking.
Shipping a classic or exotic in Texas comes down to matching the service to the car. Ship show-grade and rare cars enclosed, confirm the insurance covers their real value, and book early around auction season. For a driver-quality classic, open transport saves money without much risk. For the playbook behind every state, see our classic car shipping service and our guide on muscle car shipping. Price your exact move on the calculator, compare the enclosed transport options, or start at our Texas auto transport hub.
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For a valuable or original-paint classic, yes. Enclosed transport shields the finish from road debris, sun, and weather. A driver-quality car you take to cars-and-coffee can ship open to save money, but anything show-grade or rare belongs in a covered trailer.
Enclosed runs 40% to 60% more than open. In-state moves start around $500 to $900, and long-haul enclosed routes reach $1,400 to $2,800. A dedicated single-car trailer for a top exotic costs more still.
A few days in an enclosed trailer poses no real heat risk. The bigger concern is the long term — Texas sun is hard on original paint and interiors over years. For transit, ask about climate control only for truly sensitive cars.
Yes, and it is common. Texas hosts major sales like Mecum in Houston and Dallas auctions. We coordinate enclosed pickup right from the auction house, but confirm release paperwork and payment have cleared before the driver arrives.
Not automatically. Standard cargo insurance may fall short of a six-figure car. Ask for the coverage limit in writing and confirm it matches an agreed or appraised value. For rare cars, consider your own transport-period coverage too.
Yes, but say so upfront. A non-runner needs a winch and a lift gate, which not every trailer carries, and there is usually a small extra fee. Declaring it early avoids a refusal at pickup. See our non-running guide for the details.
Hard-side gives the most protection, with solid metal walls against any road hazard. Soft-side costs a little less and suits most collector cars. We steer the rarest and highest-value cars toward hard-side, single-car trailers.
Use an enclosed trailer with a hydraulic lift gate, which loads low cars at a gentle angle instead of a steep ramp. Tell the carrier the exact ground clearance and any wide body so they bring the right equipment.
Earlier than open transport — a week or two at least, more around major auction dates and in summer. Enclosed trucks are fewer, and auction weeks pull them into the region, so they fill fast. Last-minute bookings cost more and wait longer.
Usually not. The carrier needs the car to roll, brake, and steer, so a charged battery helps loading. Leave about a quarter tank of fuel and skip draining fluids unless the car is a long-term non-runner. Tell the driver about any battery cutoff or hidden kill switch so loading stays smooth.
Tell us where you're shipping — we'll handle the rest. No obligation, no hidden fees.