The Americans who are moving may be moving shorter distances:

In the first four months of 2026, bookings for help with a partial move were up 37% from the same period last year, while short-distance relocations jumped 29%, according to data shared by Taskrabbit. As well, same-day bookings for moving help jumped 19%.
These stats indicate that more people are moving smaller loads faster across fewer miles. In other words, micro-moves are on the rise…
One impetus for the rapidity of many micro-moves is the lack of affordable housing and the need to “pounce” when the right living situation presents itself.
“We’re seeing a rise in same-day and next-day moving requests where people find an apartment online, get approved quickly, and need to move immediately before someone else rents it,” says Jean St. Felix, owner of JM Moving in Nashville, TN. “Speed has become just as important as price.”…
“A micro-move doesn’t necessarily mean someone is moving into a small space. It means the volume of belongings being moved is smaller and the process is more streamlined,” says Friedman. This is what happens as people do the math and realize it’s cheaper to replace ready-to-assemble furniture than it is to move it.
It sounds like several things are coming together here:
- Fewer long-distance moves.
- People owning or holding on to fewer possessions so there is less to move.
- More concerns about housing costs.
- Websites and platforms that quickly connect people moving and movers.
- The costs of replacing certain household items are relatively low.
- Smaller households.
If all this is correct, people in the United States are moving but doing so in different ways compared to the past. This is hard for me to imagine but could we get to a point where a household in the United States moves and only fills a large van or a large pickup truck with all their belongings?








