Fully insured, door-to-door auto transport. No deposit until your carrier is confirmed. 5-star rated.
Detroit is a unique market in auto transport. It is not as simple as just being a high volume hub, and here is why. The Motor City has enormous carrier activity because of the auto industry itself. Manheim Detroit is in Carleton, south of the city. Manheim Flint is up in Mt. Morris. IAA Detroit handles salvage volume for the metro. I-75 is the spine of the market, running north to Flint and south all the way to Miami. I-94 runs east to Chicago and west toward Port Huron and Canada. I-96 connects Detroit to Grand Rapids. The challenge is timing. When Ford, GM, or Stellantis ship new model year inventory out of Michigan in late summer and early fall, carriers are stacked with OEM loads. Single vehicle transport competes with factory production runs and sometimes loses.
Pickups in Detroit average 2 to 4 days outside of new model year season. In late August and September when the manufacturers are pushing new inventory to dealerships across the country, carriers fill up fast and individual shippers can see that stretch to 5 to 7 days. If you are shipping during that window, book with extra lead time. The rest of the year Detroit is a solid market. I-75 is one of the most traveled carrier routes in the Midwest and carriers moving between Florida and the Great Lakes pass through this metro constantly. The suburbs, Dearborn, Livonia, Troy, Warren, and Royal Oak, are all easy access for carriers.
Arlington sits right between Dallas and Fort Worth and it benefits from both. This is the geographic center of the DFW metro and carrier traffic here is constant. I-20 runs through the south side of Arlington connecting it to Fort Worth on the west and Dallas on the east. I-30 runs through the north side doing the same thing. SH-360 connects north and south. Manheim Dallas Fort Worth is just minutes away near the DFW Airport area. The same ADESA Dallas, Copart, and IAA locations that serve the broader metro are accessible from Arlington in every direction. The Rangers and Cowboys stadiums are here too which means this area has high commercial traffic density. Carriers know this market well.
Delivering to Arlington is simple. Carriers heading east to Dallas or west to Fort Worth regularly drop off cars here because it is a natural midpoint. You are not out of the way for anyone running the DFW corridor. Most areas of the city are accessible. If your delivery address is near the entertainment district, a nearby meetup spot may be easier for the carrier but it is a short distance and a minor detail.
Shipping a standard sedan from Detroit to Arlington on open carrier currently estimates between $725 and $1025. That is based on the 1,237-mile distance and current market conditions.
Detroit runs close to the national average, maybe slightly above on some lanes. Routes south to Florida on I-75 are extremely active and competitively priced because that is a natural back-and-forth carrier loop. Routes west to Chicago are solid. Where pricing goes up is on the cross-country runs to the West Coast or Southwest because those carriers have to come all the way out to Michigan to start their load. The new model year window in late summer is also a time when carrier capacity tightens and prices creep up. Get a quote to see your exact price.
Arlington prices like the rest of DFW, which means at or below the national average. You are surrounded by carrier activity and that competition keeps costs fair. Routes to Dallas, Fort Worth, Austin, Houston, and San Antonio are all well-serviced and efficient. Long haul routes are competitive because DFW is such a strong carrier magnet in both directions. Get a quote to see your exact price.
Get a firm quote in 30 seconds. No deposit until your carrier is confirmed.
Get Your Free Quote