Geelong has been pulling people in for years now and the numbers keep going up. Families priced out of Melbourne, retirees after something quieter, younger people who figured out that the commute is manageable and the lifestyle is genuinely better. Whatever the reason, a lot of people are arriving and a lot of people are moving around within the city itself as the place keeps growing.
Which means there are also a lot of removalist companies operating here, ranging from excellent to ones you would genuinely rather not deal with. Finding the right team before your moving day rather than realising your mistake on it — that is kind of the whole game.
Here is what is worth knowing before you book anyone as removalists in Geelong.
Spend some time across different parts of Geelong and you start to realise how much the city varies from one area to the next. A move in Newtown is a completely different job to one out in Armstrong Creek. The older Federation homes around the inner suburbs have narrow driveways, steep front steps, and rooms that look like they were designed before anyone owned anything bigger than a single bed. Out on the newer estates the blocks are bigger but the roads are sometimes still a work in progress — streets that show up on your map but are only half built in reality.
Then there is the waterfront end of the city, the Bellarine Peninsula, the townships that sit just outside Geelong proper. Each area has its own access considerations, its own traffic patterns, its own quirks that an experienced local team will already know about and an out-of-town operator will figure out on the day at your expense.
Good movers in Geelong know the city. Not just the main roads — the side streets, the tricky bits, the areas where a large truck is going to have trouble and where it is not. That knowledge sounds small but it shows up repeatedly throughout a moving day in ways that save time and reduce stress significantly.
Geelong has enough of a community feel that word still gets around. It is big enough that you will not personally know every business in town, but small enough that a removalist company with a bad reputation is going to feel it. People on the local Facebook pages talk. Neighbours compare notes. A business that has been running jobs here for several years and kept people happy has something worth protecting, and that generally shows in how they approach the work.
Compare that to a company based in Melbourne that occasionally sends a crew down to Geelong when they get a booking. They do the job, they drive back, and whatever happens on the day is unlikely to follow them. The accountability is thin. If something goes wrong the process of resolving it gets complicated by distance and by the fact that they do not particularly need your goodwill for future business in the area.
None of this means every local company is perfect and every out-of-town one is dodgy. But it is a factor worth weighing when you are comparing options, particularly when the price difference is not that significant.
Not because you need to quiz them on it but because a company that shows up without proper moving blankets, without the right straps, without floor protection for a new build — that is a company that is not taking the job seriously. The good ones bring what they need without being asked because they do this properly every time, not just when someone is watching.
How the team works together, whether they communicate with each other, whether they are paying attention to what they are carrying and where it is going — these things make a real difference to whether your furniture arrives unscathed or whether you spend the first evening in your new house assessing the damage. Reviews from people who have used the company recently are your best window into this before you commit.
Not a promise to email it later, not a rough verbal figure over the phone — an actual document that shows the price, what it covers, and what costs extra if something comes up on the day. Any removalists in Geelong worth their salt will send that over without you having to chase it. If they are reluctant to commit anything to writing, that is not a company you want handling your furniture.
You get busy with everything else involved in a move and suddenly it is ten days out and you are ringing around hoping someone is free. The better crews in Geelong are not sitting around with open calendars. Weekend dates and end-of-month slots go first, then the rest fills in around them. Ring around at least three weeks before the date, ideally more, and you will actually have some decent options to choose between.
There is something about living surrounded by your own stuff that makes it hard to see how much of it there actually is. A room that feels manageable in your head turns into a surprising number of boxes when you start packing it. When you are talking to a company, err on the side of describing more rather than less — a quote built on an accurate picture of the job is going to be a lot less stressful than a quote that bears no resemblance to what the team finds when they arrive.
Tight driveways, streets where a truck cannot legally stop, a front gate that might be a problem — mention all of that upfront. It is not about making the job sound harder than it is, it is about giving the team what they need to actually prepare for it properly.
Geelong is worth moving to. Just do the legwork before you commit to anyone — written quote, honest description of the job, a look at recent reviews. The right team of movers in Geelong makes the whole thing a lot less painful than it could be, and once it is done you can get on with actually settling in rather than recovering from a moving day that went sideways.
Get in touch today and we will work out what your move needs.
Get in touch today