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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.
Pickups in Oklahoma City run 2 to 4 days most of the time. The city is accessible and suburban areas along I-240 and the I-35 corridor north and south are easy for carriers. There is not a lot of the urban access friction you deal with in bigger cities. One real factor here is weather. Oklahoma City sits in Tornado Alley and ice storms in January and February can occasionally slow carrier operations for a few days. Summer is not an issue. The rest of the year this market moves reliably. Get a quote to see what your specific route looks like.
Nashville is a really solid city for auto transport. We move cars through here pretty regularly and it is one of the easier mid-size markets in the country. Three major interstates cross through Nashville. I-40 runs east to west, I-65 runs north to south, and I-24 cuts southeast toward Atlanta. That puts Nashville right in the middle of a bunch of busy carrier routes. Manheim Nashville is active and draws carriers through on a regular basis. There are plenty of dealerships in the metro too, so there is good truck traffic year round.
Getting a car delivered to Nashville is pretty smooth. Carriers like delivering here because they know they can pick up another load on the way out. The Manheim auction alone keeps a steady flow of trucks coming in and out of the area. If you are shipping from a major city like Atlanta, Chicago, or Dallas, your car is probably riding with a carrier who was already heading this direction. That makes it easy and keeps the price fair.
Shipping a standard sedan from Oklahoma City to Nashville on open carrier currently estimates between $475 and $775. That is based on the 736-mile distance and current market conditions.
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.
Nashville usually runs right around the national average. Sometimes a little below it. You are not going to see the rock bottom prices that come out of mega hubs like Houston or LA, but you are also not paying any kind of premium. The I-65 corridor to Florida sees some seasonal swings during snowbird season from October to March, so if you are shipping between Nashville and South Florida keep that in mind. Prices on that lane can bump up 10 to 15 percent during peak months. For most other routes it stays pretty steady. Get a quote to see your exact price.
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