PCS orders to California start a clock, and your car is one more thing to move. Drive it cross-country and you burn leave days you may not have. Worse, scammers target military moves with lowball quotes. We ship POVs for service members every season, so here is how to do it right.
The short answer: Military car shipping in California works like any move, timed to your orders. Costs run about $400 to $1,650 open by distance, summer is peak PCS season, and the handoff happens just off base. Book early and verify the carrier first.
Let us define the terms first. A PCS — permanent change of station — is a military move to a new duty post. Your POV, or privately owned vehicle, is simply your personal car.
Military car shipping puts that POV on a carrier so you do not have to drive it. The process mirrors any auto transport move: a driver picks up the car, inspects it with you, and delivers it near your new base. The one difference is timing — everything bends around your orders and report date.
In our experience, the service members who plan early have the smoothest moves. The ones who wait until the week of often scramble for a truck.
This is the question we hear most, and the honest answer is: it depends on your orders. For most stateside moves, you arrange and pay for POV shipping yourself, sometimes with reimbursement afterward.
For overseas orders, the government usually ships one vehicle for you. Rules shift by branch and by entitlement, so do not treat this guide as policy. Check with your transportation office, your finance office, or Move.mil for the exact coverage on your orders.
The caveat worth stating plainly: entitlements change, and a buddy's last move may not match yours. Verify before you spend a dollar.
Pricing follows distance, just like any move. A short hop from Arizona runs a few hundred dollars. A coast-to-coast haul to a California base sits higher. Here is the rough 2026 open-carrier picture.
| Shipping from | Open transport | Transit time |
|---|---|---|
| Arizona / Nevada | $400–$700 | 1–3 days |
| Texas | $900–$1,300 | 3–5 days |
| Southeast bases | $1,100–$1,650 | 5–8 days |
Many carriers offer a military discount, and you should ask for it. But here is the insider caveat: a discount off an inflated quote is not a deal. Compare two or three honest prices first, then apply the cut. For the full price logic, see our cost to ship a car to California guide.
Summer is PCS season, and it is the busiest stretch of the year. From May through August, service members move all at once, trucks fill, and rates climb. Book two to four weeks ahead if your dates allow.
Orders slip, though — we know that. Ask each carrier how they handle a changed report date before you commit. A company that adjusts your window without a penalty is worth more than one that is five dollars cheaper.
For how long the trip itself takes once booked, see our how long to ship a car to California guide.
California holds one of the densest military footprints in the country, so carriers know these regions well. Demand clusters in a few areas.
Down south, Naval Base San Diego, Coronado, and Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton anchor a huge PCS market. Our San Diego car shipping guide covers that region's access in detail.
Elsewhere, Travis Air Force Base and Beale sit up north, while Lemoore, Fort Irwin, Edwards, Twentynine Palms, and Vandenberg spread across central and inland California. Each one ships smoothly, because the routes serving them stay busy year-round.
Overseas orders add a step. For an OCONUS move, the government often ships one vehicle by sea to or from a US port. California's ports handle a steady flow of these vehicles.
The catch is the domestic leg. Your POV may land at a port hours from your base, and moving it that last stretch can fall on you. We help service members bring a car from the port to their California duty station once it clears customs.
Confirm which legs your orders cover before you book anything. The ocean leg and the domestic leg are often handled by different parties. Assuming one covers both is a common and costly mistake.
Driving to a new base earns mileage and per-diem on most orders, which tempts plenty of service members. Weigh it honestly against your leave and your timeline, though.
A long cross-country drive eats days you may need for in-processing, house-hunting, or family. Fuel, hotels, and wear pile on too. We tell clients that for moves over about 1,000 miles, shipping the car and flying often beats driving once you count the lost time.
The honest exception: a short PCS, or one where you genuinely want the road trip, can favor driving. Run both numbers against your own situation. Our moving to California guide walks through the ship-versus-drive math.
Here is a relief for first-time movers: the driver rarely needs to enter the base. A full-size car hauler cannot navigate an installation's gates and roads anyway.
Instead, you meet the driver at a nearby lot with room to load — often a shopping center just outside the gate. Bring your ID and a copy of your orders in case the spot sits near a checkpoint. The handoff still feels like door-to-door; you just drive the final stretch onto post yourself.
Military moves draw scammers, so guard against them. The classic trap is a quote far below the rest. It wins your booking, then no driver accepts the load, and you are pressured to pay more later.
Watch for big upfront deposits and sites that lean hard on "military specialist" branding without credentials. Always confirm a carrier's USDOT and MC numbers with our FMCSA carrier lookup before paying. Our scam-watch guide covers the rest of the red flags.
A little prep keeps pickup quick and protects you later. Run this short list before the driver arrives.
One nuance we stress: note any lift, aftermarket parts, or low clearance when you book. A surprise at pickup can change the price or the equipment needed.
Military car shipping in California turns a stressful PCS into one less drive, as long as you plan around your orders. Book early for summer moves, meet the driver off base, verify the carrier, and confirm your entitlement through official channels. Price your exact route on the calculator, see the full military car shipping service for entitlements, the discount, and OCONUS, or start at the California auto transport hub.
Skip the averages. Our calculator pulls live diesel prices and real Google Maps distance for an actual price range on your exact route and vehicle — no spam, no obligation.
Calculate My Costor talk to a dispatcher: 1-888-706-8784
For most stateside (CONUS) PCS moves, you arrange and pay for car shipping yourself, sometimes with reimbursement. The government usually ships a vehicle only for overseas orders. Confirm your exact entitlement with your transportation office or Move.mil — it depends on your orders, not on us.
You can get quotes and hold a rough window, but do not lock a firm date until orders cut. We tell service members to line up a carrier early, then confirm the pickup day once the report date is set. Most companies expect that timing.
Tell your carrier the moment it shifts. PCS dates move often, and good companies adjust the pickup window with notice. Ask about their change policy before you book, so a slipped date does not cost you a fee.
Yes, and it is common during a PCS. Name a trusted adult to release or receive the vehicle and sign the inspection form at both ends. Give them the driver's contact and a copy of the paperwork ahead of time.
Sometimes, depending on your orders and travel entitlements. Keep every receipt and the signed bill of lading, then file through your finance or transportation office. We cannot promise a payout — your branch sets the rules, so ask before you move.
Absolutely. Many families ship a second vehicle on their own dime when the entitlement covers only one. Booking both cars to the same base at once can earn a lower per-car rate, so ask the dispatcher.
Usually nothing — the handoff happens off-base. A full car hauler cannot roam an installation, so you meet at a nearby lot. Bring your ID and orders in case the meeting point sits near a gate with access checks.
Real discounts exist, but read them carefully. A cut off an inflated quote is not a deal. Compare two or three honest prices first, then apply the discount — that is how you tell a genuine offer from a sales hook.
Your POV usually arrives at a US port, and the government often handles the ocean leg. From the port to your California base, you may arrange domestic transport yourself. Confirm which legs your orders cover before booking the final stretch.
Waiting until summer PCS season to book. May through August is the busiest window of the year, and late bookers pay a premium for whatever truck is left. A few weeks of lead time saves real money and stress.
Tell us where you're shipping — we'll handle the rest. No obligation, no hidden fees.