Getting a straight answer on the cost to ship a car to Texas feels impossible. One quote says $600, the next says $1,400, and some hide fees until pickup. We price these moves every day — so here is the real 2026 range, and how to read a quote without getting burned.
The short answer: Shipping a car to Texas costs about $500 to $1,600 on an open carrier in 2026. A short hop from Oklahoma or Louisiana runs $400 to $700; a coast-to-coast move from the Northeast runs $1,000 to $1,600. Enclosed transport adds 40% to 60%.
Distance drives your price more than anything else. A car from Oklahoma travels a couple hundred miles. A car from New York crosses two-thirds of the country. That gap alone can triple your quote.
But distance is just one lever. Five things shape what you pay:
Here is the part most quote forms skip. In our experience, two homes can sit 30 miles apart and still price very differently. A house near I-35 is easy for a driver. A ranch off a county road in the Hill Country is not — and that detour shows up in your bill.
We quote specific corridors all the time. Below are typical 2026 open-carrier ranges by where the car starts. Treat them as starting points, not final numbers — your exact ZIP codes and dates move the figure.
| Shipping from | Open transport | Transit time |
|---|---|---|
| Oklahoma / Louisiana / Arkansas | $400–$700 | 1–2 days |
| Colorado / New Mexico | $650–$950 | 2–4 days |
| Florida | $875–$1,200 | 3–6 days |
| California / West Coast | $900–$1,300 | 3–5 days |
| Northeast / Pacific NW | $1,000–$1,600 | 5–8 days |
Want a busy corridor mapped in detail? Our California to Texas car shipping and Florida to Texas pages break down each leg. One caveat: these ranges assume a running car and a standard sedan. A non-runner or an oversized truck costs more, so tell the company upfront to avoid a price bump at pickup.
Open transport is the standard. Your car rides on a two-level trailer, out in the open, the same way it sits in your driveway. It moves about 97% of cars and costs the least.
Enclosed transport seals your car inside a covered trailer. It runs 40% to 60% more. We tell our clients to choose it only for classics, exotics, or low, high-value cars — common around Dallas auctions and Houston's collector scene. For a daily driver, it is money you do not need to spend. The trade-off cuts both ways, though: enclosed trucks are rarer, so they book up faster and can take longer to schedule. Our enclosed car transport in Texas guide has the full comparison.
You will get quotes that swing by hundreds of dollars for the same car. That is normal. Here is why.
Most companies are brokers. They post your car to a national load board, and a carrier decides if the price is worth the trip. A quote that looks too cheap is the trap. The broker wins your booking with a low number. Then no driver takes it, so your car sits. Days later, you are asked to pay more.
We have cleaned up that mess for plenty of customers. Get a few honest quotes, skip the suspicious outlier, and check the carrier with our FMCSA carrier lookup before you pay a cent.
You have more control than you think. A few smart moves keep your auto transport price near the bottom of the range:
The honest downside: the cheapest option is not always the fastest. A flexible window saves money but can add a day or two to pickup. For the full playbook, read the cheapest way to ship a car to Texas.
Moving a car inside the state costs less, but not as little as the short distance suggests. The Houston to Dallas lane runs about $300 to $600, and similar Texas Triangle hops land in that band.
The reason is the price floor. A driver still spends most of a day on a short move, so the per-mile cost looks high. We cover this in detail in our Texas intrastate car shipping guide and on the Houston to Dallas route page.
Yes, and weight is the main reason. A compact sedan sets the baseline. A large SUV or pickup takes more deck space and adds roughly $150 to $250 — and pickups are everywhere in Texas.
EVs weigh more than gas cars, which can nudge a quote on a full trailer. Classics and exotics usually ship enclosed, which costs more by design. For those cars, our classic and exotic shipping and non-running car shipping guides go deeper.
A good quote is all-in, but not every quote is. Ask whether the price is door-to-door and complete before you book. A few charges catch people off guard.
The common ones are a non-running car fee, a surcharge for an oversized vehicle, and terminal fees if you choose terminal-to-terminal. In our experience, an honest company lists these upfront. Vague answers about fees are a reason to keep shopping.
An online estimate is a solid starting point, not a locked price. It assumes a running sedan, easy access, and standard timing. Change any of those, and the number moves.
Give honest details about your car and your two addresses, and the quote will hold at pickup. The lowball quote is the one to distrust — it wins your booking, then climbs when no driver accepts the load. Verify any carrier with our FMCSA carrier lookup first.
It depends on distance and your time. For a short hop from Oklahoma, driving is often cheaper if you ignore your hours. For a long haul from the West Coast or East Coast, shipping usually wins.
A 2,000-mile drive means fuel, two or three hotel nights, meals, and real wear on the car. Add the days behind the wheel, and a shipping quote often looks like a bargain. Most long-distance movers fly and ship. Our ship a car or drive it guide runs the full math.
Skip the phone tag and start with real numbers. Our calculator uses live fuel prices and the real road distance for your exact route. You get an honest range in under a minute, with no inflated middleman markup.
From there, compare two or three quotes and confirm each is door-to-door and complete. In our experience, that simple step — real data plus a couple of honest comparisons — saves more than any haggling trick.
The real cost to ship a car to Texas in 2026 runs about $500 to $1,600 on an open carrier, set mostly by distance, vehicle size, and timing. Skip the lowball, ship open, and stay flexible to land near the low end. For a live figure built on real fuel prices and Google Maps distance, run the calculator — or start at our Texas auto transport hub for routes and city guides.
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
Most open-carrier moves run $500 to $1,600. A short hop from Oklahoma or Louisiana costs about $400 to $700. A coast-to-coast haul from the Northeast runs $1,000 to $1,600. Enclosed transport adds 40% to 60%.
Usually, yes. Summer is Texas's busy relocation season, so rates climb. Late fall and winter are quieter, and prices soften. Shifting a flexible move out of the June-to-August rush can save a few hundred dollars.
Estimates assume a running sedan, easy access, and standard timing. A large truck, a non-running car, a rural Hill Country address, or a rush pickup all push the price up. Give accurate details upfront so your quote holds at pickup.
Open transport, a flexible pickup window, off-season timing, and delivery to a metro hub like Houston or Dallas. Stack those four and you land near the bottom of the range. We break it all down in our cheapest-way guide.
A fair quote should be all-in, but ask to be sure. Watch for surprise charges like a fuel surcharge, a terminal fee, or an extra cost for a non-running car. We tell clients to confirm the quote is door-to-door and complete before they book.
More than people expect. A home near I-35 or I-10 is easy for a driver; one out in the Hill Country or West Texas means a long detour. That extra time and fuel shows up in the quote, even over a short distance.
Usually, yes. Metros like Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio see constant truck traffic, so they price better. For a remote address, shipping to a nearby hub and driving the last leg can save real money.
On short routes the gap looks bigger in percentage terms. Enclosed carries a higher base cost, and fewer trucks run it. On a cheap $500 open move, a $1,000 enclosed quote is normal, even though the dollar gap is modest.
Most companies take a small deposit at booking, with the balance due at delivery, often by cash or certified funds. Be wary of anyone demanding the full amount upfront before a truck is even assigned.
Often it does. Loading a pair onto the same trailer to the same place can earn a lower per-car rate. Ask directly, and book both at once rather than as two separate orders.
Tell us where you're shipping — we'll handle the rest. No obligation, no hidden fees.