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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.
Oklahoma City is a solid but secondary auto transport market. The interstate setup is actually quite good. I-40 runs east to west through the city connecting Memphis and Amarillo. I-35 runs north to south connecting Kansas City down to Dallas. I-44 also passes through and connects toward Tulsa and St. Louis. That intersection puts Oklahoma City on real carrier routes, especially for trucks running the I-35 Dallas to Kansas City corridor. IAA has a location here and Copart operates in the Oklahoma City area. The honest truth is there is no Manheim in Oklahoma City, which means auction-driven carrier volume is lower than in comparable cities. The dealer market across the OKC metro is solid for a city its size. There are active franchise and independent dealerships moving inventory along the I-35 auto corridor near the northwest expressway, and that keeps some baseline carrier interest even between auction days. Carriers passing through on I-35 and I-40 keep this market moving. It is not a struggle, just not as deep as Dallas or Kansas City.
Delivering to Oklahoma City works well when your route aligns with the I-35 Dallas to Kansas City corridor or the I-40 east-west run. Carriers already on those routes can include OKC without much extra routing. Deliveries from Dallas or Kansas City are fast and efficient. Deliveries from the coasts or from the Southeast take a bit longer because the city is not always the final stop for a coast-to-coast run. Suburban delivery is clean and easy throughout the metro.
Shipping a standard sedan from Charlotte to Oklahoma City on open carrier currently estimates between $650 and $950. That is based on the 1,145-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.
Oklahoma City runs close to the national average but routes heading east and west require more carrier coordination than pure corridor cities. The I-35 lane between Dallas and Kansas City is well priced because carriers run it frequently. Routes east toward Tulsa and Memphis on I-40 are solid. Routes heading west into rural Oklahoma or New Mexico cost more because carrier density thins out quickly. Winter ice storms are the one seasonal factor that can create short windows of tighter supply and slightly higher prices. Get a quote to see your exact price.
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