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The Bay Area is a high volume auto transport market but it has some quirks worth knowing about. San Francisco proper is tough for carriers because of the hills, narrow streets, and parking situation. Most carriers prefer to pick up and drop off in Oakland, the East Bay, San Jose, or the Peninsula rather than inside the city limits. The Port of Oakland handles significant vehicle import traffic and there is a Manheim location in the Bay Area that keeps carrier activity flowing. The dealer market across the metro is solid, especially in the South Bay. This is a strong market overall, just not always easy to access in SF proper.
Pickups in the Bay Area run 2 to 4 days typically. If your car is in Oakland, Fremont, San Jose, or anywhere in the East Bay or South Bay it is smooth and often faster. If it is in San Francisco itself, be ready to coordinate a meetup at a more accessible location. We can usually arrange this easily and it is not a big hurdle. The carrier volume heading out of the Bay Area on I-80 toward the East, I-5 toward LA and the Pacific Northwest, and Highway 50 toward Sacramento is strong. There is always a truck heading your direction.
Minneapolis is a functional market but it takes a little more patience than you might expect from a metro of 3.6 million people. Manheim Minneapolis is in Maple Grove, northwest of the city. Manheim Northstar Minnesota is in Shakopee, to the southwest. ADESA Minneapolis adds more wholesale volume. IAA operates in the south metro area. The auction infrastructure is there. I-94 runs east to Milwaukee and Chicago and west toward Fargo. I-35 is the main north-south route, splitting into I-35W and I-35E through the Twin Cities and connecting the metro south to Des Moines, Kansas City, and eventually Texas. The market issue is that Minneapolis is not a destination that keeps carriers coming back. Carriers going north past Chicago or north past Des Moines eventually hit Minneapolis and then there is nothing above them. They have to deadhead back south to get their next load.
Delivering to Minneapolis follows the same pattern. Carriers coming up from Chicago on I-90 and I-94 or up from Des Moines on I-35 serve the metro reasonably well. The Maple Grove and Shakopee suburbs are the cleanest access points for big haulers. Downtown Minneapolis and the warehouse district are manageable but have the typical urban street access considerations. In winter, plan for your carrier to potentially hold a day or two if a major storm system moves through. This is honest and normal for this market.
Shipping a standard sedan from San Francisco to Minneapolis on open carrier currently estimates between $1050 and $1350. That is based on the 1,929-mile distance and current market conditions.
The Bay Area runs slightly above the national average. The street access challenge adds a small premium, and the cost of operating in California generally pushes prices up a little versus comparable distances in other states. Popular lanes like Bay Area to LA, Bay Area to Portland, and Bay Area to Las Vegas are very competitive. Long haul routes to the Midwest and East Coast are solid but expect to pay market rate or slightly above. Get a quote for your exact route.
Minneapolis runs slightly above the national average on most routes, especially anything north or east. Southbound routes to Texas, Arizona, and Florida can be competitive during snowbird season because carriers are actively filling loads heading that direction. Routes east to Chicago and the Northeast are solid. Where pricing noticeably goes up is in winter, when carriers add weather premiums, and on any route that requires a carrier to deadhead back to a major hub after delivery. Routes to the West Coast or Mountain West are efficient in summer but less predictable in winter. Get a quote to see your exact price.
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