Shipping a car from Houston to Dallas seems like it should be cheap and instant — it is only 240 miles. Then the quote arrives higher per mile than a cross-country move, and you wonder if you are being overcharged. You are not. Short hauls work differently, and once you see why, the price and the choice to ship or drive both make sense. Here is the honest breakdown of this busy I-45 lane.
The quick answer: Shipping a car from Houston to Dallas costs about $300–$600 open, or $550–$900 enclosed, in 2026. The drive takes 1 to 2 days on I-45. The per-mile rate looks high because short hauls carry a price floor, but the total is one of the lowest in Texas.
| Vehicle Type | Open Transport | Enclosed Transport |
|---|---|---|
| Sedan / Coupe | $300–$600 | $550–$900 |
| SUV / Pickup | $375–$725 | $700–$1,050 |
| Luxury / Classic | Enclosed advised | $800–$1,300 |
Current 2026 market ranges for this corridor — not a quote. Run the calculator for your exact ZIPs, dates, and vehicle.
For a regular car on an open truck, plan on $300 to $600. Houston to Dallas is one of the cheapest lanes in Texas by total price, simply because the two metros sit only 240 miles apart on a straight, busy highway.
A larger vehicle adds about $75 to $150. An enclosed trailer runs $550 to $900. For an everyday car on such a short trip, open is the obvious value. The one thing that surprises people is the cost per mile, which we explain next — it is higher than a long haul, and there is a good reason. Compare the broader picture on our Texas auto transport hub.
This is the question we field most on this lane, so let us answer it plainly. A driver spends a full day on any move — finding you, loading, driving, and unloading. That time costs the same whether the trip is 240 miles or 2,000.
Spread over a short haul, that fixed cost looks expensive per mile. Spread over a cross-country run, it looks cheap. So Houston to Dallas can feel pricey per mile next to a coast-to-coast rate, even though the total stays low. Naming this upfront saves a lot of confused phone calls — you are paying for a driver's day, not for distance.
Houston to Dallas runs straight up I-45, connecting the two largest metros in Texas. It is one of the heaviest in-state corridors in the nation, with well over a thousand vehicles moving between the cities each week by industry estimates.
That volume is good news for you. Heavy truck supply means fast pickups — often within a day, sometimes same-day — and competitive pricing. When so many drivers already run a lane, your car slots in easily rather than waiting for a truck to be routed. The route itself is flat, warm, and direct, with no weather or terrain to slow it.
On a 240-mile lane, this question deserves a straight answer rather than a sales pitch. For a single car you can drive, the trip is only about 3.5 to 4 hours, so driving it yourself is often the simplest choice.
Shipping wins in specific situations: you are moving a second car while you drive the first, the car cannot be driven, you are flying for the move, or you are shipping a dealer, auction, or fleet vehicle. It also wins when your time is genuinely worth more than the modest cost. We would rather give you the real math than talk you into a shipment you do not need.
Despite the easy drive, this lane stays packed. Dealers and auctions move inventory between the metros constantly — wholesale traffic is a huge share of the volume. Add corporate fleets, students at the many universities in both cities, and people relocating across the state.
Multi-car households moving between Houston and Dallas often ship one and drive the other. And anyone who just bought a car in one metro and lives in the other turns to shipping rather than making a round trip. The mix keeps trucks busy in both directions.
The wholesale trade defines this corridor as much as personal moves do. Dealers restocking inventory and auction houses moving lots between Houston and Dallas keep a steady stream of cars flowing each way.
If you are shipping a dealer or auction car, the keys are paperwork and timing. Have the release documents, gate code, and access hours ready, and confirm who can authorize the release. The honest caveat: auctions run on tight windows, so a carrier that books and moves quickly matters far more than the cheapest quote, which may sit unbooked and blow your release deadline.
Both metros have the same access pattern. Tight blocks near downtown Houston, the Medical Center, downtown Dallas, or the urban cores can stop a full 75-foot hauler, so the driver meets you at a nearby lot off the freeway. It is quick and free.
The suburbs are the easy case on both ends. Katy, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, and Cypress around Houston, and Plano, Frisco, Arlington, and Garland around Dallas, all have open roads where a hauler loads at your door. Our Houston car shipping and Dallas car shipping guides cover each metro's access in detail.
For a normal car, the open truck is the clear choice on such a short trip — the car spends barely a day on the road, so there is little to protect against. Choose an enclosed trailer only for a classic, exotic, or high-value car headed to a collector or a show. On a 240-mile hop, open is both the cheaper and the sensible option. Compare both on the cost calculator.
Non-running cars move on this lane all the time, since dealers and individuals ship project and salvage cars between the metros. A non-running car needs a winch, declared upfront so the right truck is dispatched — a surprise at pickup means a failed load and a wasted trip. Classics headed to a Dallas or Houston show ship enclosed, and the short distance keeps even enclosed affordable. Whatever the vehicle, describe its exact condition when you book so the carrier brings the proper equipment.
Once your car is loaded, the drive is a few hours, and most shipments deliver within 1 to 2 days of pickup. Because the lane is so busy, a driver is often already running your way, so pickup can happen within a day of your ready date and sometimes the same day. There is no weather or terrain on this flat, warm route to slow it down.
This lane handles a lot of multi-vehicle work, and that is where shipping clearly beats driving. A household moving between the metros can ship one car and drive the other, arriving together without a second driver. Companies relocating staff or repositioning pool cars ship several at once.
If you are moving more than one car the same way, ask about a multi-car rate. Carriers often trim the per-car price when a pair loads on the same trailer to the same address. On a short, affordable lane like this, a two-car booking is an easy way to make an already cheap move even more economical.
Because the lane is so busy, quotes cluster in a tight band. A normal sedan should land in the $300 to $600 open range, and anything far below that deserves a second look. On short hauls especially, a rock-bottom price often means the load sits unbooked while the broker hunts for a driver who will take it.
We tell clients that a realistic quote which books a truck quickly beats a cheap number that strands the car — and on a tight dealer or auction deadline, that difference can cost you. Verify any carrier with our FMCSA lookup before paying, and compare against the real market range rather than chasing the lowest number.
A little prep keeps a fast lane moving. Wash the car so the inspection photos clearly show its condition, leave about a quarter tank of fuel, and pull your TxTag so you are not billed for tolls in transit. Remove personal items, since loose belongings are not covered by the carrier's insurance.
Have the car ready on your first available date, and on a lane this busy a passing truck can grab it sooner. Photograph the car from every angle right before it loads — even on a short hop, that record is your friend in the rare event of a dispute.
Because Houston to Dallas runs so heavily year-round, the seasonal swings are small compared with long-haul routes. You will find trucks in any month, and prices stay in a tight band. The bigger lever here is your pickup flexibility, not the calendar.
Give a window of a day or two rather than demanding a single fixed hour, and a passing truck can grab your car at a better rate. Mid-week pickups sometimes match a touch faster than a busy Monday or Friday. On a lane this active, a little flexibility beats trying to time the season.
Plenty of cars run this corridor the other way too. Our Dallas to Houston car shipping page covers that direction, with the same pricing logic and I-45 trucks. For the bigger picture on moving cars inside the state, see our Texas intrastate car shipping guide, which explains the short-haul price floor across every in-state lane.
The drive is short — under four hours — so for a single car you can drive, driving is a fair call. For a second car, a car you cannot drive, a dealer or auction vehicle, or a multi-car move, the modest shipping cost buys real convenience. Run your exact numbers on the calculator, or start at our Texas auto transport hub for the full statewide picture.
Shipping elsewhere in or out of Texas? These lanes share the same trucks:
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About $300–$600 open and $550–$900 enclosed in 2026 for a normal car over roughly 240 miles on I-45. It is one of the cheapest lanes in Texas by total price, though the cost per mile is high because short hauls carry a price floor. Bigger vehicles add $75 to $150.
Usually 1 to 2 days once loaded. The lane is a straight 240-mile run up I-45, one of the busiest in-state corridors in the country. Because so many trucks run it, pickup often happens within a day of your ready date, sometimes same-day on this high-volume route.
Short hauls carry a price floor. A driver spends a full day on pickup, loading, and delivery no matter the distance, and that fixed time costs the same on 240 miles as on 2,000. Spread over a short trip, it looks expensive per mile, even though the total stays low. We always explain this upfront.
Often, for a single car you can drive — it is about a 3.5 to 4 hour trip. Shipping wins when you are moving a second car, a car you cannot drive, a dealer or auction vehicle, or several at once, or when your time is worth more than the modest cost. We give clients the honest math rather than a sales pitch.
It connects the two largest metros in Texas, just 240 miles apart, with constant business, dealer, and personal traffic. Industry estimates put well over a thousand vehicles a week moving between them. That heavy volume means deep truck supply, fast pickups, and competitive pricing on this lane.
Yes, and it is a huge part of this lane. Dealers and auctions move inventory between the two metros constantly. Have the release paperwork, gate code, and access hours ready, and confirm who can authorize the release. Wholesale moves run on tight windows, so a fast-booking carrier matters more than a rock-bottom quote.
Often with a quick meet-up. Tight blocks near downtown Houston, the Medical Center, or the Dallas core can stop a full hauler, so the driver meets you at a nearby lot off the freeway. The suburbs on both ends — Katy, Sugar Land, Plano, Frisco — allow easy door-to-door loading.
Open is the obvious choice for a normal car on such a short trip — the car spends barely a day on the road. Save enclosed for a classic, exotic, or high-value car headed to a collector or a show. On a 240-mile hop, the open carrier is both the cheaper and the sensible option.
Yes, with a winch, declared upfront so the right truck is dispatched. Non-running cars move on this lane often, since dealers and individuals ship project and salvage cars between the metros. A surprise at pickup means a failed load, so describe exactly what the car can do — start, roll, brake, steer.
Expecting a cross-country per-mile rate on a 240-mile hop. People see cheap long-haul per-mile numbers and assume this lane should be almost free, then the price floor surprises them. The second mistake is demanding a single fixed pickup hour when a flexible window lands a better rate on this busy lane.
Tell us where you're shipping — we'll handle the rest. No obligation, no hidden fees.