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Dallas is one of the top five auto transport hubs in the country and it is not close. The DFW metro has Manheim Dallas Fort Worth, ADESA Dallas, and multiple Copart and IAA locations scattered across the region. The dealer density across Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Irving, and the surrounding suburbs is enormous. I-20, I-30, I-35, and I-45 all converge in this region giving carriers four major corridors to move cars in every direction. We move cars in and out of Dallas every single day. This market never really slows down.
Pickups in Dallas are fast. Most loads get a carrier assigned within 1 to 2 days. The DFW metro is big enough that carriers specifically plan routes through it because they know there will always be a load heading back out. If your car is in the suburbs, pickups are smooth. If it is in a busier commercial zone near downtown we might ask for a simple meetup location but that is rare. Be ready to move because Dallas carriers tend to want to pick up quickly when they have an open slot.
Wichita sits at the junction of I-35 and I-135, which gives it more connectivity than most people realize. I-35 runs north through Oklahoma City toward Kansas City and south into Oklahoma. I-135 connects Wichita to Salina and links back to I-70, the main east west transcontinental highway through Kansas. The challenge is that Wichita is not on I-70 itself and it is not a destination carriers prioritize the way they do Kansas City or Oklahoma City. Copart has a location in Wichita. IAA operates here as well. Manheim services this market through its Kansas City operation with periodic sales runs. The dealer market is decent for the city size but not dense enough to create constant carrier traffic.
Delivering to Wichita has the same routing consideration. Carriers delivering here are usually making a specific Wichita run rather than passing through on a transcontinental route. The city itself is very carrier friendly. Flat terrain, good road widths, and no real access issues for large haulers. Once a carrier commits to the delivery, the handoff is simple. The coordination challenge is upstream, getting a carrier to include Wichita in their route plan in the first place.
Shipping a standard sedan from Dallas to Wichita on open carrier currently estimates between $375 and $675. That is based on the 416-mile distance and current market conditions.
Dallas is consistently at or below the national average for auto transport. The high carrier competition in this market keeps prices down. You are not going to pay a premium just to get a car in or out of DFW. The only time prices shift noticeably is during the summer relocation season when demand spikes. Even then it is modest. Routes to Houston, San Antonio, Austin, and Oklahoma City are especially active and efficient. Get a quote to see your exact price.
Wichita runs above the national average on most routes. The regional designation reflects the carrier routing reality. You are paying a small premium to make Wichita worth the stop for a carrier whose natural corridor does not always include it. Routes to Kansas City and Oklahoma City are the most efficient and least expensive. Routes to Dallas, Denver, and Chicago are serviceable but carry more cost than comparable distances in better positioned cities. If you have flexibility on timing, giving us 5 to 7 days of lead time dramatically improves your chances of landing a competitive rate. Get a quote to see your exact price.
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