Texas to Georgia Car Shipping
Texas to Georgia Car Shipping
The original instant car shipping calculator — trusted since 2004. Door-to-door Texas to Georgia transport with no surprises, no hidden fees, and three options to ship your vehicle on your schedule.
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Car Shipping from Texas to Georgia — See How It Works
Texas to Georgia Car Shipping Rates by City
Every Texas to Georgia vehicle shipment is available at three service levels:
Standard, Expedited, & Rush Options
Choose the one that fits your timeline and budget. All three include full door-to-door service and carrier insurance.
Prices below are for a standard sedan via open carrier. Calculating your particular instant quote will reflect your exact vehicle, zip codes, and dates, which is even more precise.
| From (Texas) | To (Georgia) | Distance | Standard | Expedited | Rush | Transit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houston | Atlanta | ~790 mi | $700 | $840 | $980 | 3–4 days |
| Dallas | Savannah | ~1,045 mi | $875 | $1,050 | $1,225 | 3–5 days |
| San Antonio | Augusta | ~1,185 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 4–6 days |
| Fort Worth | Marietta | ~800 mi | $700 | $840 | $980 | 3–4 days |
| Beaumont | Columbus | ~720 mi | $625 | $750 | $875 | 2–4 days |
| Austin | Macon | ~975 mi | $825 | $990 | $1,155 | 3–5 days |
| Tyler | Atlanta | ~720 mi | $625 | $750 | $875 | 2–3 days |
| Corpus Christi | Warner Robins | ~1,085 mi | $900 | $1,080 | $1,260 | 4–5 days |
| Laredo | Albany | ~1,295 mi | $1,075 | $1,290 | $1,505 | 4–6 days |
| Waco | Athens | ~875 mi | $750 | $900 | $1,050 | 3–5 days |
| Killeen | Roswell | ~935 mi | $800 | $960 | $1,120 | 3–5 days |
| Plano | Sandy Springs | ~790 mi | $700 | $840 | $980 | 3–4 days |
| Irving | Alpharetta | ~810 mi | $700 | $840 | $980 | 3–4 days |
| Garland | Gainesville | ~780 mi | $675 | $810 | $945 | 3–4 days |
| Frisco | Valdosta | ~1,005 mi | $850 | $1,020 | $1,190 | 3–5 days |
| Arlington | Brunswick | ~890 mi | $775 | $930 | $1,085 | 3–5 days |
* Prices shown for a standard sedan via open carrier. Trucks, SUVs, and vans are priced higher. Enclosed transport available at an additional premium. Use the instant quote calculator above for your exact vehicle, dates, and zip codes.
The Company That Invented Instant Auto Transport Pricing
Direct Express Auto Transport built the auto transport industry’s first instant online pricing calculator in 2004. Before that, getting a car shipping quote meant phone calls, callbacks, and days of waiting. We changed all of that. Today you know exactly what it costs to ship your vehicle before you commit to anything — in 30 seconds, online, any time of day.
Three Service Tiers for Every Texas to Georgia Shipment
Every shipment on this Texas to Georgia route is available at three service tiers so you can match your budget to your timeline. Standard delivers at the best available rate — ideal when your schedule has a few days of flexibility. Expedited puts your vehicle at the front of the dispatch queue for faster carrier assignment. Rush gets your car picked up as fast as possible — for moves where every day counts, including military PCS report dates and urgent corporate start dates.
All three tiers include full door-to-door service and carrier insurance. No callbacks, no pressure, no guesswork.
What customers say about shipping a car from Texas to Georgia with Direct Express Auto Transport
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Courteous and the driver was extremely competent. They transported or car in 30 hrs from TX to MA. I would definitely use them again.
Seasonal Pricing Guide: Texas to Georgia
Military PCS from Texas installations to Georgia’s Fort Moore, Robins AFB, and Fort Stewart complex is the primary seasonal driver, creating a sharp June–August peak. January–February is the best value window.
| Period | Season | What to Expect | Booking Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan – Feb | Best Value Window | January and February are the corridor’s lowest-demand period. Military PCS from Fort Cavazos and JBSA to Georgia installations is months away. Corporate Q4 moves have concluded. The I-20E corridor — the main Texas-to-Georgia artery — runs at its most available carrier capacity of the year. East Texas origins benefit most: Tyler to Atlanta at ~720 miles and $625 Standard represents one of the best-value long-haul open carrier pricing points in the Direct Express Texas network. |
Best value. Book 5–7 days ahead. DFW winter pickup: cleared staging and 1-day weather buffer for January ice events on I-20/I-30. Houston and Southeast TX: mild, minimal winter restrictions. Central TX and South TX: excellent year-round. GA delivery January–February: generally excellent; Atlanta metro may see brief ice — delivery is typically unaffected. Corporate moves with Q1 GA employment start dates: Expedited. PCS movers with February GA report dates: Expedited or Rush. |
| Mar – May | Spring Ramp / Pre-PCS Season | March through May brings rising demand. Corporate moves tied to Q2 Georgia employment start dates, Houston and DFW professionals accepting Atlanta Fortune 500 positions (Coca-Cola, Delta, Home Depot, UPS, Cox), and early PCS movers with May or June Georgia report dates all contribute. |
Rising demand. Book 7–10 days ahead. TX spring pickup: excellent statewide; DFW April–May severe weather season may cause minor staging delays. GA spring delivery: excellent statewide. Early PCS movers from Fort Cavazos or JBSA with May–June GA report dates: Expedited or Rush. Houston or DFW corporate moves to Atlanta with Q2 employment start: Expedited for fixed start dates. |
| Jun – Aug | Military PCS Peak / Highest Demand | June through August is peak demand, driven by military PCS from Texas installations to Georgia’s installation cluster. Fort Cavazos (Killeen) — home of the 1st Cavalry Division — sends soldiers east to Fort Moore (Columbus, formerly Fort Benning), the Army Maneuver Center of Excellence. JBSA sends Air Force and Army personnel to Robins AFB (Warner Robins), Fort Eisenhower (Augusta, formerly Fort Gordon, now the US Army Cyber Center of Excellence), and Fort Stewart (Hinesville). |
Peak PCS demand. Book 10–14 days ahead. Fort Cavazos (Killeen) to Fort Moore (Columbus): Killeen → Roswell is the table pair — for Fort Moore deliveries use Expedited or Rush for firm Columbus report dates. JBSA to Robins AFB (Warner Robins): Corpus Christi → Warner Robins is the direct pair at $900 Standard. JBSA/Fort Cavazos to Fort Eisenhower (Augusta): San Antonio → Augusta pair at $975 Standard. TX summer pickup June–September: quarter tank, no personal items, no electronics. |
| Sep – Oct | Post-PCS / Fall Corporate | September and October see declining military PCS volume as the summer surge ends and the corridor shifts to corporate and professional relocations. Houston energy professionals accepting Atlanta positions with Atlanta’s Fortune 500 anchor companies, DFW corporate professionals transferring to Georgia’s growing automotive and technology manufacturing sector, and Texas professionals accepting Q4 employment start dates at Atlanta’s headquarters cluster (Delta, Home Depot, UPS, Coca-Cola, CNN) make up the September–October market. |
Moderate demand, good value. Book 5–7 days ahead. TX pickup September: heat protocol still applies — quarter tank, no personal items or electronics. TX pickup October: no restrictions. GA fall delivery: excellent statewide. Houston or DFW corporate moves to Atlanta with Q4 employment start: Standard for flexible dates; Expedited for fixed October or November GA start. |
| Nov – Dec | Declining / Holiday Gap | November and December see declining demand with the holiday carrier gap running December 15 through January 5. Late PCS movers with November Georgia report dates are the main military segment. Texas professionals accepting Q1 Georgia employment start dates sometimes ship vehicles in late November or December to arrive ahead of the new year. DFW winter weather risk resumes in November — ice events on the I-20E corridor east of Dallas are possible from mid-November onward. |
Declining demand. November: book 5–7 days ahead. DFW winter pickup resumes November: cleared staging and weather buffer for ice events on I-20/I-30. Houston and South TX: mild year-round. December holiday gap December 15–January 5: Expedited for firm GA holiday delivery. GA delivery November–December: excellent statewide; North GA mountains December: possible winter weather. Year-end TX-to-GA corporate moves: Expedited for January GA start requiring December delivery. |
Who Ships a Car from Texas to Georgia — and Why
Military PCS: Fort Cavazos and JBSA to Fort Moore, Robins AFB, Fort Stewart, and Fort Eisenhower
Fort Cavazos in Killeen — home of the 1st Cavalry Division and III Corps — generates consistent PCS moves to Fort Moore (Columbus), Robins AFB (Warner Robins), Fort Eisenhower (Augusta), and Moody AFB (Valdosta). These four Georgia installations receive the majority of Texas Army and Air Force PCS orders on this corridor.
Joint Base San Antonio: Army PCS to Georgia Installations
Fort Eisenhower — formerly Fort Gordon and now the US Army Cyber Center of Excellence — draws Army Signal Corps, Military Intelligence, and Cyber Branch personnel from Fort Cavazos and JBSA. The Augusta, Georgia installation is a consistent destination for Texas soldiers with cyber and technical MOS assignments.
Houston Energy Professionals Moving to Atlanta’s Corporate Headquarters Cluster
Delta Air Lines, Home Depot, UPS, Coca-Cola, Cox Enterprises, Genuine Parts, and Anthem are among the anchor employers in the metro. Houston energy professionals who accept positions at Atlanta-headquartered companies, or who transfer from Houston’s energy sector to Atlanta’s financial and corporate services complex, ship vehicles eastward via the I-10/I-59 corridor.
Houston Energy Professionals Moving to Atlanta: Pipeline, Grid, and Corporate Transfers
The Manheim Atlanta auto auction in the greater Atlanta area is the largest wholesale vehicle auction in the world, operated by Cox Automotive. Texas car dealers regularly ship vehicles eastbound to the Manheim Atlanta market — and the corresponding high volume of return loads from Atlanta westbound to Texas helps keep eastbound Texas-to-Georgia prices competitive year-round. This return-load dynamic is one reason the TX→GA corridor prices below the TX→VA and TX→NC corridors of similar mileage.
DFW Professionals Moving to Atlanta’s Technology and Film Industry
Georgia has become the nation’s leading film and television production state, with Tyler Perry Studios, Netflix production facilities, and major studio operations all based in or near Atlanta — also draws DFW media and entertainment professionals eastward.
Texas University Graduates Moving to Georgia’s Automotive Manufacturing Sector
Texas university graduates — particularly mechanical, electrical, and industrial engineers — accepting positions at Kia’s West Point facility, Hyundai’s Metaplant in Savannah, or Rivian’s Normal plant regularly ship vehicles on this corridor. Georgia’s automotive manufacturing sector has expanded to make it one of the top engineering relocation destinations from Texas.
Texans Retiring to Coastal Georgia and the North Georgia Mountains
Savannah, Brunswick, St. Simons Island, Sea Island, Jekyll Island — draws Texas retirees seeking a mild four-season climate, coastal access, and a cost of living lower than the Texas Gulf Coast without the hurricane exposure of Galveston or Corpus Christi. Savannah’s historic district and walkable lifestyle appeal to Houston and DFW retirees who want urban access without major-metro density.
What Makes the Texas–Georgia Auto Shipping Run Different
The Main Corridor: I-20E from Dallas All the Way to Atlanta — No Relay Required
Texas to Georgia via I-20E is among the most direct interstate auto transport runs in the South. I-20 begins in the DFW metroplex (near Weatherford, TX) and runs 1,535 miles continuously east to Florence, SC — passing directly through Atlanta. DFW to Atlanta on I-20E is approximately 780–800 miles, traversing Shreveport (215 miles from Dallas), Monroe (260 miles), Jackson, MS (450 miles), Meridian (535 miles), and Birmingham (640 miles) before reaching Atlanta (780–800 miles). A carrier loading in Dallas on Monday morning can deliver in Atlanta by Tuesday evening — no relay hub required.
Houston’s I-10/I-12/I-59 Approach — Joining the Corridor at Birmingham
Houston does not connect to Atlanta via I-20E directly; instead, carriers from Houston take I-10E to Baton Rouge (270 miles), connect to I-12E across the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain (85 miles), then I-59N from Slidell through Hattiesburg (100 miles) and Birmingham (195 miles) before reaching Atlanta on I-20E (150 miles). Houston to Atlanta via this route is approximately 790–810 miles — virtually identical in effective distance to Dallas-to-Atlanta despite Houston being 240 miles southeast of Dallas.
Beaumont Origins: I-10 Position and the Columbus Approach Advantage
This is the primary carrier route for all Southeast Texas and Houston metro origins (Houston, Beaumont, Port Arthur, Pasadena, Sugar Land, Conroe, League City). The Beaumont → Columbus pairing at $625 Standard is slightly cheaper than Houston → Atlanta at $700 because Beaumont’s I-10 position and Columbus’s I-185/I-85 position are directly on efficient carrier approach paths, while Houston and Atlanta proper add modest urban approach mileage.
Tyler → Atlanta: The Table’s Cheapest Pair at $625 Standard
Tyler to Atlanta at approximately 720 miles and $625 Standard is one of the most efficient city pairs in the Direct Express Texas portfolio. Tyler sits on I-20 in East Texas, approximately 100 miles east of Dallas — meaning a Tyler carrier is already 100 miles closer to Atlanta than a Dallas carrier before the run begins. The I-20E run from Tyler to Atlanta crosses Shreveport (115 miles), Jackson MS (350 miles), Meridian (435 miles), and Birmingham (545 miles) before reaching Atlanta (~720 miles).
Beaumont to Columbus: Same $625 Tier via the Houston I-10/I-59 Approach
Tyler’s geographic position — East Texas, already within the I-20 eastern approach zone — produces the table’s cheapest pair by combining minimal Dallas bypass with the shortest effective run to the Atlanta metro. Beaumont → Columbus at the same $625 Standard is the table’s other cheapest pair, using the Houston I-10/I-59 approach to reach Columbus (100 miles southwest of Atlanta via I-85S) without the Dallas bypass.
Laredo → Albany: The Table’s Most Expensive Pair at $1,075 Standard
Laredo to Albany (GA) at approximately 1,295 miles and $1,075 Standard is the table’s most expensive pair for compounding reasons. Laredo is in South Texas on the Mexico border, 155 miles south of San Antonio on I-35 — a carrier picking up in Laredo must travel I-35N to San Antonio before reaching the I-10E approach to Atlanta. Albany, GA is in southwest Georgia, approximately 175 miles south of Atlanta on US-19/US-82, off the main I-20/I-85 corridor — carriers arriving in Atlanta must continue south on I-75S to Macon then SW on US-19 to reach Albany, adding significant delivery approach mileage.
Atlanta as Destination Hub — Not Just a Relay Point
On routes like Texas-to-North Carolina or Texas-to-Virginia, Atlanta is a mid-corridor relay hub that carriers pass through. On the Texas-to-Georgia route, Atlanta is the destination — the point from which carriers distribute to Marietta, Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, Roswell, and the broader metro, and the staging city from which Georgia delivery legs to Savannah, Columbus, Macon, Augusta, and other Georgia cities depart. This means the Atlanta carrier hub’s inbound and outbound capacity directly shapes pricing and availability on TX→GA.
Georgia Delivery Zones: Metro Atlanta vs. Outbound Destinations
From Atlanta, Georgia delivery destinations divide into five zones with different carrier approach requirements. Metro Atlanta (Marietta, Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, Roswell, Gainesville, Dunwoody) receives direct door-to-door with excellent carrier access. Athens (75 miles east on US-78/US-29) and Augusta (150 miles east on I-20E) are efficient eastward extensions of the I-20 corridor. Columbus (100 miles southwest via I-185) and Warner Robins (100 miles southeast via I-75S) are accessible with moderate approach mileage. Savannah (250 miles east via I-16E from Macon) and Brunswick (265 miles via I-95S from Savannah approach) are the corridor’s longest Georgia delivery approaches.
Other Texas to Georgia Cities We Serve
Direct Express ships vehicles between hundreds of city pairs on this route. Below is a broader look at additional Texas origins and Georgia destinations we regularly serve.
| From (Texas) | To (Georgia) | Distance | Transit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conroe | Smyrna | ~780 mi | 3–4 days |
| Pasadena | Kennesaw | ~795 mi | 3–4 days |
| Sugar Land | Newnan | ~790 mi | 3–4 days |
| Port Arthur | Peachtree City | ~755 mi | 3–4 days |
| Texarkana | Rome | ~600 mi | 2–3 days |
| Longview | Dalton | ~585 mi | 2–3 days |
| Lufkin | Carrollton (GA) | ~695 mi | 2–3 days |
| Temple | Griffin | ~855 mi | 3–5 days |
| College Station | Hinesville | ~1,005 mi | 3–5 days |
| Harlingen | Thomasville | ~1,250 mi | 4–6 days |
| McAllen | Americus | ~1,275 mi | 4–6 days |
| Brownsville | Statesboro | ~1,345 mi | 5–7 days |
| League City | Milledgeville | ~870 mi | 3–5 days |
| Mission | Tifton | ~1,165 mi | 4–5 days |
| Nacogdoches | Calhoun | ~685 mi | 2–3 days |
| Denton | Dunwoody | ~800 mi | 3–4 days |
Texas and Georgia Auto Shipping Zones Along the I-20 Corridor
Texas to Georgia runs 580–1,350 miles depending on origin and destination. The I-20E corridor from DFW to Atlanta is the defining interstate of this route — one of the most continuously served auto transport lanes in the South, carrying heavy bidirectional volume between Texas’s energy corridor and Georgia’s corporate and military headquarters cluster. East Texas origins are already on I-20 and can reach Atlanta in under 750 miles. South Texas origins (Corpus Christi, Laredo, South TX Valley) add significant approach mileage via I-10E and I-35N. Deep south Georgia destinations (Albany, Valdosta, Thomasville) add delivery approach from the Atlanta hub.
Texas Origin Zones
Mid-Corridor Points
Georgia Delivery Zones
Open vs. Enclosed Car Transport on the Texas–Georgia Route
Open Transport: The Standard for All Military PCS, Corporate, and Routine Moves
Open transport is appropriate for virtually all Texas-to-Georgia vehicle shipments. Military PCS moves from Fort Cavazos, JBSA, Dyess AFB, and other Texas installations to Fort Moore, Robins AFB, Fort Stewart, Fort Eisenhower, and Hunter AAF all ship open. Houston and DFW corporate relocations to Atlanta, Texas university graduates entering Georgia’s automotive manufacturing sector, and retirement moves to coastal Georgia and the North Georgia mountains all ship open. The I-20E corridor is one of the most carrier-dense auto transport lanes in the South, with strong availability throughout the year. Open is the correct choice for every daily driver, SUV, pickup truck, and standard vehicle on this route.
Texas Summer Pickup on Open Carriers
Texas summer (June through September) pickup on open carriers requires the standard heat protocol at the Texas pickup end: no more than a quarter tank of fuel, remove all personal items and electronics before the carrier arrives, and ensure the Texas pickup staging area allows the carrier to load safely. This applies to ALL Texas pickup addresses June through September. Georgia delivery does not require the same extreme-heat protocol — Georgia summer is warm and humid but vehicle-interior heat risk during transit is lower than at a Texas pickup staging location.
Open Transport Recommended for Most
- All military PCS from Fort Cavazos (Killeen) or JBSA (San Antonio) to Fort Moore, Robins AFB, Fort Stewart, Fort Eisenhower, or Hunter AAF
- Houston energy and DFW corporate relocations to Atlanta’s Fortune 500 headquarters cluster
- Texas university graduates entering Georgia’s automotive manufacturing or technology sectors
- Retirement moves to coastal Georgia or the North Georgia mountains
- TX summer pickup June–September: quarter tank, no personal items, no electronics
Enclosed Transport
- Collector vehicles and exotics moving to Atlanta-area private collections or storage
- High-value vehicles consigned to Atlanta-area dealerships or auctions
- Vehicles bound for Concours d’Elegance events or Road Atlanta motorsport events
- Typically 40–60% more expensive than open transport
Our honest recommendation: Open for every PCS, corporate, retirement, and standard vehicle move on this corridor. Enclosed only for collector vehicles, exotics, or auction consignments where carrier deck exposure is a concern.
Door-to-Door Car Shipping: What to Expect in Texas and Georgia
Pickup in Texas
DFW Metro and East Texas
Standard door-to-door pickup throughout DFW (Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Plano, Irving, Garland, Frisco, Denton) and East Texas (Tyler, Longview, Nacogdoches, Lufkin, Texarkana). Texas summer pickup June through September: heat protocol applies — quarter tank, no personal items, no electronics, do not stage vehicle in direct outdoor sun at pickup. DFW winter pickup January–February: cleared driveway or commercial staging area required; 1-day weather buffer for I-20/I-30 ice events. East Texas I-20 corridor origins (Tyler, Longview) are among the most efficient Texas pickup locations for GA-bound carriers — expect good availability year-round.
Houston Metro and Southeast Texas
Standard door-to-door pickup throughout the Houston metro (Houston, Pasadena, Sugar Land, Conroe, League City), Greater Beaumont (Beaumont, Port Arthur), and Southeast Texas. Texas summer heat protocol applies June through September at all Southeast Texas pickup addresses. Houston high-rise and dense Midtown/Montrose addresses: may require commercial staging for large carriers; confirm at booking. Port Arthur and Beaumont industrial areas: standard residential addresses receive door-to-door; confirm accessible driveway at booking.
Central and South Texas
Standard door-to-door pickup throughout Central Texas (Austin, Waco, Killeen, Temple, College Station, San Antonio) and South Texas (Corpus Christi, Laredo, McAllen, Mission, Harlingen, Brownsville). Fort Cavazos (Killeen) on-post housing: confirm on-post pickup protocol at booking and provide housing address and access credentials. JBSA on-post pickup (Lackland, Randolph, Fort Sam Houston): provide access information at booking. Texas summer heat protocol applies June through September at all Central and South Texas pickup addresses — this is especially important for Laredo, McAllen, and the Rio Grande Valley where summer temperatures are among the highest in the country.
Delivery in Georgia
Metro Atlanta and North Georgia
Standard door-to-door delivery throughout metro Atlanta (Atlanta, Marietta, Sandy Springs, Smyrna, Kennesaw, Roswell, Alpharetta, Gainesville, Dunwoody, Johns Creek, Peachtree City, Newnan, Carrollton) and North Georgia (Dalton, Rome, Calhoun). Dense Buckhead, Midtown Atlanta, and Virginia-Highland residential addresses may require commercial staging for large carriers — confirm at booking for any dense in-town Atlanta address. Georgia Tech campus-adjacent deliveries: commercial staging may be required on Northside Drive and surrounding streets; confirm at booking. Suburban metro Atlanta addresses receive standard door-to-door throughout.
Middle Georgia, Augusta, and Military Installations
Standard door-to-door delivery throughout Middle Georgia (Macon, Warner Robins, Athens, Griffin, Milledgeville) and Augusta. Robins AFB (Warner Robins) on-post housing: confirm on-post delivery protocol at booking, provide housing area and access credentials. Off-post civilian addresses in Warner Robins receive standard door-to-door. Fort Eisenhower (Augusta) on-post housing: provide on-post access at booking. Off-post Augusta addresses: standard door-to-door throughout the Augusta metro. Athens campus-adjacent (University of Georgia) addresses: standard door-to-door; confirm parking-restriction-free staging availability for campus-zone pickup.
Savannah, Coastal Georgia, and South Georgia
Standard door-to-door delivery throughout the Savannah metro, coastal Georgia (Brunswick, St. Simons Island, Jekyll Island approach), and South Georgia (Albany, Valdosta, Tifton, Thomasville, Americus, Statesboro). Fort Stewart (Hinesville) on-post housing: provide on-post access credentials at booking. Hunter Army Airfield (Savannah) on-post: confirm at booking. Savannah Historic District addresses: large carrier staging requires commercial areas adjacent to the Historic District — confirm at booking for addresses in the downtown squares zone. South Georgia delivery (Albany, Valdosta, Thomasville): extended delivery approach from Atlanta; allow additional 1 day beyond the metro Atlanta transit estimate for these destinations.
Georgia Vehicle Registration for Texas Arrivals
Georgia requires registration within 30 days of establishing residency. Visit your county tag office with your out-of-state title, proof of Georgia insurance, and proof of Georgia address; an emissions check is required in the metro Atlanta area. Cancel your Texas registration once your Georgia plates arrive.
Preparing Your Vehicle
Before Texas pickup: remove all personal items from the passenger compartment, disable car alarms, remove Texas TxTag transponders, and leave no more than a quarter tank of fuel. Photograph your vehicle from all angles with date-stamped images before the carrier arrives. Texas summer pickup June–September: do not leave any electronics or personal items in the vehicle — heat damage during open carrier transit and outdoor staging is the primary risk. Georgia delivery is generally excellent year-round; covered staging is preferred for Columbus, Warner Robins, and Albany deliveries in July and August.
Texas & Georgia Auto Transport Resources
Texas Helpful Government Links
- Texas Department of Motor Vehicles (TxDMV) — Obtain your Texas title before shipping to Georgia. New Texas residents register within 90 days; those departing Texas should have a clear title in hand before the vehicle ships.
- TxDMV — Title and Registration — Title release and transfer procedures for Texas vehicles being re-registered in Georgia on arrival.
- TxDMV — Military Provisions — Active duty provisions for personnel at Fort Cavazos, JBSA, and Texas Air Force installations receiving PCS orders to Georgia installations.
- Texas DPS — Driver License — Texas driver’s license procedures. Surrendered at Georgia DDS within 30 days of establishing GA residency.
- TCEQ — Texas Emissions Testing Counties — Verify emissions testing requirements for your Texas origin county before final inspection prior to shipping.
Georgia Helpful Government Links
- Georgia Department of Revenue — Motor Vehicles — Georgia vehicle title and registration. New residents must register within 30 days. Georgia assesses a one-time Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT) of 7% of the vehicle’s fair market value at title transfer.
- Georgia DOR — Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT) — TAVT is Georgia’s one-time vehicle tax assessed at title transfer, replacing both sales tax and annual ad valorem tax. Calculated on FMV; paid at your county tag office with Texas title and GA insurance.
- Georgia DOR — Military Exemptions — Active duty military provisions for PCS arrivals at Fort Moore, Robins AFB, Fort Stewart, Fort Eisenhower, and Hunter AAF from Texas installations.
- Georgia DDS — Driver’s License — Georgia driver’s license requirements. Texas license surrendered within 30 days of establishing Georgia residency.
- Georgia EPD — Vehicle Emissions Testing — Emissions testing required in metro Atlanta non-attainment counties including Fulton, Cobb, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Cherokee, Clayton, and others. Verify whether your Georgia destination county requires testing before registering.
Federal Auto Transport Resources
- FMCSA — Verify a Carrier’s License (SAFER System) — Verify that any auto transport company is federally licensed and insured before booking.
- FMCSA — Protect Your Move — Federal consumer guidance on hiring vehicle shippers and understanding your rights on a cross-country move.
Texas to Georgia Car Shipping — FAQ
How much does it cost to ship a car from Texas to Georgia?
Tyler to Atlanta and Beaumont to Columbus are the cheapest pairs at $625 Standard — approximately 720 miles. Garland to Gainesville runs $675. Houston, Fort Worth, Plano, and Irving to Atlanta-area destinations run $700. Waco to Athens runs $750. Laredo to Albany is the most expensive at $1,075 Standard. The corridor is significantly more affordable than longer TX→VA or TX→NC routes because Atlanta is much closer to Texas than the East Coast destinations. Use the instant calculator for your specific city pair and vehicle.
How long does it take to ship from Texas to Georgia?
Longview and Nacogdoches to Northwest Georgia destinations (Dalton, Calhoun, Rome) run 2–3 days — among the fastest long-haul open carrier times in the Direct Express Texas network. Tyler to Atlanta and Beaumont to Columbus run 2–4 days. Most DFW and Houston metro to Atlanta metro pairings run 3–4 days. Central Texas to Middle Georgia destinations run 3–5 days. South Texas and Rio Grande Valley origins to south Georgia destinations (Harlingen to Thomasville, Brownsville to Statesboro) run 5–7 days.
When is the best time to ship from Texas to Georgia?
January and February are the best value window — military PCS from Texas installations is months away and the I-20E corridor is at its lowest annual demand. June through August is peak demand driven by military PCS from Fort Cavazos and JBSA to Fort Moore, Robins AFB, Fort Stewart, and Fort Eisenhower — book 10–14 days ahead. Holiday carrier gap runs December 15 through January 5.
I’m doing a PCS from Fort Cavazos (Killeen) to Fort Moore (Columbus, GA). How do I book?
Book immediately on receipt of PCS orders. The Beaumont → Columbus pairing in this table at $625 Standard is the most direct distance proxy for the Fort Cavazos to Fort Moore corridor — Columbus is ~100 miles SW of Atlanta via I-185. Use Expedited or Rush for any firm Fort Moore report date. Texas summer heat protocol applies at the Killeen pickup end June–September: quarter tank, no personal items or electronics in the vehicle. Confirm on-post pickup protocol for Fort Cavazos housing at booking.
Why is Tyler to Atlanta the cheapest Texas-to-Georgia pair?
Tyler is located on I-20 in East Texas, approximately 100 miles east of Dallas — meaning a Tyler carrier is already 100 miles closer to Atlanta than a DFW carrier before the run begins. I-20 runs continuously from the DFW/Tyler area to Atlanta with no route changes needed, making it one of the most direct city-to-city carrier runs in the South at approximately 720 miles. The combination of Tyler’s I-20 starting position and Atlanta’s I-20 destination produces the table’s most efficiently served pairing at $625 Standard — comparable to Beaumont → Columbus via the Houston/I-59 approach.
Does shipping to Savannah or Brunswick cost more than shipping to Atlanta?
Yes. Savannah and Brunswick are approximately 250–265 miles east of Atlanta, requiring carriers to travel I-16E from Macon or approach via I-95. The Dallas → Savannah pairing prices at $875 Standard versus Houston → Atlanta at $700 Standard — the $175 difference reflects the additional 250-mile Georgia delivery approach to reach Savannah from the Atlanta hub. Brunswick prices similarly to Savannah given its I-95 approach south of Savannah. Albany, Valdosta, and deep south Georgia destinations carry similar delivery approach premiums above the Atlanta-equivalent price.
What do I need to register my Texas car in Georgia after shipping?
Register within 30 days at your county tag office with your Texas title (from TxDMV), Georgia automobile insurance, and payment for Georgia’s 7% Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT) on the vehicle’s fair market value — this one-time payment replaces both sales tax and annual ad valorem tax. Georgia does not require an annual safety inspection statewide, but emissions testing is required in metro Atlanta counties and portions of the Augusta area. Obtain your Georgia driver’s license within 30 days; Texas license is surrendered at Georgia DDS. Military on PCS orders: active duty exemptions from TAVT and registration may apply — confirm with Georgia DOR and your installation legal office.