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Charlotte is the strongest auto transport market in the Carolinas and it has gotten meaningfully better over the last decade as the city has grown. ADESA Charlotte is on Fruehauf Drive in southwest Charlotte. Manheim Charlotte is in Concord, about 25 miles northeast. Manheim also has locations in Statesville and Kenly within the broader state network. IAA Charlotte operates in the metro as well. I-77 runs north-south through the city, connecting Charlotte to Columbia, South Carolina to the south and straight up to Charlotte Douglas International and eventually to I-81 in Virginia. I-85 runs northeast to southwest, connecting Charlotte to Atlanta in one direction and Richmond and the DC corridor in the other. That combination puts Charlotte at a natural crossroads for carriers running the Southeast.
Pickups in Charlotte run 2 to 3 days most of the time. This is a genuinely efficient market. The city's rapid growth, its role as the second largest banking center in the US, and the steady corporate relocation activity mean there is consistent demand that keeps carriers coming back. The suburbs, Ballantyne, Huntersville, Concord, and Gastonia, are all clean access for carriers. Uptown Charlotte itself is manageable. Summer relocation season is the one window where things can tighten, as it does in most markets. Book with two weeks of lead time in June and July to make sure you get your preferred window. Get a quote to see what your specific route looks like.
Raleigh is a solid and growing auto transport market. The Research Triangle is one of the fastest-growing relocation destinations in the country right now. Companies like IBM, Cisco, SAS, and a wave of biotech and pharma firms have been pulling professionals in from California, New York, and the Northeast for years. That means a steady stream of cars moving in and out. I-40 is the main artery connecting Raleigh west to Durham, Chapel Hill, and all the way to Asheville. I-85 gives carriers a direct shot up to Charlotte and the Virginia border. ADESA Raleigh services the market and Manheim North Carolina operates out of Kenly, about 50 miles east. The auction density is not Dallas-level but it is enough to keep carriers moving through consistently.
Receiving a car in Raleigh is straightforward. Carriers coming up from Charlotte on I-85, down from the DC area on I-95 and US-1, and in from the west on I-40 all pass through the Triangle naturally. The suburbs are easy for carrier access. If you need delivery to a dense neighborhood near downtown Raleigh, your carrier may want to hand off at a nearby parking lot. It is a quick and easy coordination, not a barrier.
Shipping a standard sedan from Charlotte to Raleigh on open carrier currently estimates between $250 and $550. That is based on the 158-mile distance and current market conditions.
Charlotte runs right at the national average or slightly below on most routes. The I-85 corridor to Atlanta is one of the most competitive lanes we work because carriers travel it constantly in both directions. Routes to and from the DC and Richmond corridor are very active. Routes to Florida are solid during snowbird season. Where pricing goes up slightly is on routes to the Midwest or West Coast because Charlotte is not naturally on those carrier loops and carriers have to make a detour to serve the market. Get a quote to see your exact price.
Raleigh runs right around the national average on most routes, sometimes slightly above on lanes that do not have heavy carrier traffic in both directions. Routes to and from Charlotte, Atlanta, and the DC area are well-serviced and competitive. Long haul routes to Texas, the Midwest, or the West Coast cost a bit more simply because Raleigh is not a major hub. The relocation market helps keep prices fair though because there is consistent two-way demand. Get a quote to see your exact price.
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