New York to Florida Car Shipping
New York to Florida Car Shipping
The original instant car shipping calculator — trusted since 2004. Door-to-door New York to Florida transport with no surprises, no hidden fees, and three options to ship your vehicle on your schedule.
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Car Shipping from New York to Florida — See How It Works
New York to Florida Car Shipping Rates by City
Every New York to Florida 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 (New York) | To (Florida) | Distance | Standard | Expedited | Rush | Transit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manhattan | Tampa | 1,195 mi | $900 | $1,080 | $1,260 | 3–4 days |
| Brooklyn | Jacksonville | 1,025 mi | $850 | $1,020 | $1,190 | 2–4 days |
| Queens | Miami | 1,285 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 3–5 days |
| The Bronx | Fort Lauderdale | 1,250 mi | $925 | $1,110 | $1,295 | 3–5 days |
| Staten Island | Orlando | 1,095 mi | $875 | $1,050 | $1,225 | 3–4 days |
| Yonkers | Hialeah | 1,290 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 3–5 days |
| Hempstead | St. Petersburg | 1,260 mi | $950 | $1,140 | $1,330 | 3–5 days |
| Buffalo | Cape Coral | 1,385 mi | $1,025 | $1,230 | $1,435 | 4–5 days |
| Huntington | Tallahassee | 1,115 mi | $875 | $1,050 | $1,225 | 3–4 days |
| Islip | West Palm Beach | 1,240 mi | $925 | $1,110 | $1,295 | 3–5 days |
| Babylon | Fort Myers | 1,285 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 3–5 days |
| Smithtown | Hollywood | 1,280 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 3–5 days |
| Brookhaven | Pembroke Pines | 1,290 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 3–5 days |
| Oyster Bay | Port St. Lucie | 1,210 mi | $900 | $1,080 | $1,260 | 3–4 days |
| New York City | Sarasota | 1,250 mi | $925 | $1,110 | $1,295 | 3–5 days |
| Albany | Clearwater | 1,315 mi | $975 | $1,170 | $1,365 | 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 pioneered online instant pricing for the auto transport industry in 2004. Before we built the first car shipping cost calculator, getting a quote from a broker meant phone calls, callbacks, and waiting — sometimes days. We changed that. Today you know your exact cost in 30 seconds, before committing to anything. No phone tag, no hassle. Just a real number, instantly.
Three Service Tiers for Every Florida to New York Shipment
Every shipment on this Florida to New York 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 moves your vehicle to the front of the dispatch queue for faster pickup. Rush gets your car picked up as fast as humanly possible — for moves where every day counts. All three tiers include full door-to-door service and carrier insurance.
What customers say about shipping a car from New York to Florida with Direct Express Auto Transport
And their carrier Speedstar did an exceptional job.. everyone was
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: Florida to New York
Florida to New York is the snowbird return corridor — demand peaks March–April as retirees and seasonal residents head north for summer. October–November, when carriers are heading south into Florida, is the best value window.
| Period | Season | What to Expect | Booking Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan – Feb | Quietest FL→NY Period / Value Window | January and February are the quietest months for the Florida-to-New York direction. Snowbirds are settled in Florida; almost no one is voluntarily shipping a car from warm Florida to cold New York in January. This creates an extended value window: the NY→FL carrier wave from October–November has settled, and carriers running the I-95 corridor northbound are available at competitive rates. | Best Standard tier pricing of the year. Book with a 5–7 day flexible pickup window. Carrier availability is strong, pricing is soft. Military: book Expedited if report date is firm — Fort Drum transfers in January are weather-sensitive for delivery. |
| Mar – May | Snowbird Return Peak — Highest Demand | March through May is peak season for the FL→NY direction — the highest-demand window of the year. New York and New Jersey snowbirds return home in March and April, creating a sharp surge in northbound carrier demand on I-95. This is the most concentrated annual demand event on the East Coast auto transport corridor. South Florida (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach counties) generates the heaviest volume: the tri-county area has the country’s densest snowbird population. | Book 14–21 days ahead for March and April. May requires 2–3 weeks ahead minimum. Use Expedited for any firm NYC or Long Island arrival date. The South Florida snowbird return is the most compressed booking window of the year — don’t book Standard with a tight delivery date in March or April. |
| Jun – Aug | Summer Moving Peak | Summer is the peak relocation season nationally. Florida families permanently moving to New York — to the NYC metro, Long Island, and Upstate — concentrate their moves in June and July for school-year transitions. College students finishing Florida school years ship their vehicles back to New York in May and June. The military PCS summer cycle is the busiest of the year. Florida’s heat drives some households to plan their NY move for the summer. | Book 2–3 weeks ahead. Expedited for any firm NYC or New York delivery date. July is peak summer pricing. Monitor the Atlantic hurricane forecast when booking August pickups. |
| Sep – Oct | Best Value Window / Hurricane Watch | September and October are the best value window on the FL→NY direction. Summer relocation demand has cleared; the snowbird wave is moving south (NY→FL) rather than north, meaning carriers heading into Florida are abundant — but the northbound FL→NY direction is quiet. This counter-flow dynamic creates the lowest FL→NY pricing of the year in September and October. College students who shipped south in August are settled; the spring snowbird return is 5–6 months away. | Best value window for FL→NY. Book Standard with a 5–7 day flexible pickup window. Monitor hurricane forecast. October is the single best value month for this direction — low demand, good carrier availability due to inbound snowbird flow creating return-load dynamics. |
| Nov – Dec | Snowbird Season / Off-Peak Northbound | November and December are the height of the snowbird migration — but on the NY→FL direction, not FL→NY. Carriers are flooding southbound (into Florida) to serve the arriving snowbird wave. This continues to provide some counter-flow value on the FL→NY direction in November. Very few people choose to ship a car from Florida to New York in December — which means January-style quiet conditions begin to set in after Thanksgiving. Holiday-period carrier availability tightens industry-wide after December 10th. | November has reasonable availability due to snowbird counter-flow. December: book before December 5 for pre-holiday delivery. After December 10th, use Expedited and plan for holiday gap. January is a better option than forcing a December delivery if your timeline allows. |
Who Ships a Car from Florida to New York — and Why
Florida-to-New York is the original snowbird corridor — the route that defined the seasonal auto transport industry and remains the highest-volume bilateral state pair in the eastern United States. New York has more Florida snowbirds than any other state. The people who ship vehicles northbound represent a broad cross-section: South Florida retirees returning to Long Island, military families heading to Fort Drum or West Point, and college students returning to New York schools.
New York Snowbirds Returning Home: The Spring FL→NY Volume Driver
New York snowbirds returning from Florida are the defining seasonal force on the FL→NY direction. New York’s retiree and senior population winters in Florida in numbers that dwarf every other northeastern state. The concentration is heaviest in South Florida: the tri-county area of Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties serves as the primary winter home for a massive New York and New Jersey snowbird population.
Long Island, Westchester, and North Jersey Snowbird Concentration
Within that area, specific communities have near-legendary concentrations of New York and New Jersey winter residents — Century Village communities in Boca Raton, Delray Beach, and West Palm Beach; Pompano Beach; Deerfield Beach; Hollywood; Hallandale Beach; and the entire corridor between Fort Lauderdale and Miami. The Naples and Fort Myers area serves Gulf Coast snowbirds from the New York metro, and Sarasota attracts a similar affluent NY population.
Permanent Relocation from Florida to New York: New Yorkers Who Came Back
Permanent relocation from Florida to New York — while less common than the reverse flow — is a real and steady segment. New Yorkers who tried Florida retirement and are returning to be closer to family represent a meaningful slice of FL→NY volume.
Military PCS: NAS Jacksonville / MacDill AFB → West Point / Fort Drum / Fort Hamilton
Military PCS transfers between Florida and New York installations generate consistent, deadline-driven volume. Florida’s major installations — NAS Jacksonville, MacDill AFB, Eglin AFB, Hurlburt Field, Patrick Space Force Base, and NAS Pensacola — regularly transfer personnel to West Point, Fort Drum near Watertown, Stewart Army Sub-Post, and Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn. Military members on PCS orders have firm report dates and typically book Expedited or Rush service.
New York and Florida Students Shipping Cars Between Universities
College students moving between Florida and New York represent growing year-round volume. New York students at Florida schools — University of Florida, Florida State, University of Miami, UCF, FAU, FIU — ship their vehicles south at fall semester start and north at spring semester end. Florida-origin students at New York schools — NYU, Columbia, Fordham, SUNY system — make the reverse trip.
What Makes the Florida–New York Auto Shipping Run Different
The Route: I-95 North — Start to Finish
Florida-to-New York is an I-95 route, start to finish. I-95 begins in Miami, runs north through Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, Jacksonville, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, the Washington DC metro, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and enters New York at the George Washington Bridge. Miami to the GWB is approximately 1,280 miles; Jacksonville to the GWB approximately 975 miles — the shortest major FL origin to NYC pairing on this table.
George Washington Bridge: The Entry Point for All FL→NYC Carriers
The George Washington Bridge (Lower Level for commercial vehicles) is the entry point for virtually all Florida-to-NYC carrier runs. From the GWB, carriers can reach Upper Manhattan directly, or transition to the Cross Bronx Expressway for the Bronx and New England, the Lincoln Tunnel for Midtown, or the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge approach for Brooklyn and Staten Island via New Jersey’s I-278.
The I-95 Waypoints: What Carriers Pass Through
The six-state run from Florida to New York passes through a series of significant metro relay points. Savannah, Georgia (approximately 140 miles north of Jacksonville) is the first major relay point — a significant port city with active auto transport traffic. Charleston, South Carolina (approximately 375 miles north of Jacksonville) is the second, sitting at the heart of I-95’s South Carolina corridor with its own inbound and outbound carrier volume.
Raleigh–Durham to Richmond: The Mid-Corridor Relay Zone
The Raleigh–Durham area (~600 miles from Jacksonville) is reached via I-95 east or US-17/US-74 through the Carolinas. Richmond, VA (~750 miles from Jacksonville) is the last major southern relay before the DC metro. The Washington–Baltimore corridor (~875 miles from Jacksonville) is dense with traffic but well-supplied with carriers. After Baltimore, I-95 runs through Delaware, the New Jersey Turnpike, and into New York via the Lincoln Tunnel or George Washington Bridge.
New York City and Long Island Delivery
NYC and Long Island delivery requires navigating one of the most complex carrier environments in the country. Manhattan is served via the George Washington Bridge (upper Manhattan) or the Lincoln Tunnel (Midtown). Brooklyn and Queens are reached via the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge or through the Queens–Midtown Tunnel and Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel. The Bronx is directly accessible from I-95 via the Cross Bronx Expressway, making it the most straightforward NYC borough for carrier access.
Long Island Access: LIE (I-495) and Bridge Routing for Multi-Car Haulers
Long Island is reached via the Throgs Neck Bridge, Whitestone Bridge, or Queensboro Bridge into Queens, then east on the Long Island Expressway (I-495) or the Southern State Parkway where it permits commercial vehicles. Delivery to Long Island addresses requires a confirmed accessible pickup/delivery point — a street-level staging area or parking lot rather than an exact residential address for multi-car haulers.
Upstate New York: A Different Route
Buffalo and other upstate New York destinations require a routing extension after reaching the NYC area. Carriers delivering to NYC area destinations first, then upstate, typically exit I-95 in New Jersey or the Bronx and take I-87 north (New York State Thruway) to Albany (approximately 150 miles north of NYC). From Albany, I-90 west reaches Syracuse (approximately 90 miles), Rochester (approximately 185 miles), and Buffalo (approximately 290 miles from Albany). Tallahassee to Buffalo in the pricing table reflects this full routing — I-95 north to NJ/NY, then I-87 to Albany, then I-90 west to Buffalo.
Albany to Buffalo: I-87 North to I-90 West Extension
From Albany, I-90 west reaches Syracuse (~90 miles), Rochester (~185 miles), and Buffalo (~290 miles). Tallahassee to Buffalo pricing reflects this full routing: I-95 north to NJ/NY, then I-87 to Albany, then I-90 west to Buffalo. The Albany–Buffalo leg adds approximately 290 miles and 1–2 transit days beyond standard NYC-area deliveries.
Other New York to Florida Cities We Serve
Direct Express ships vehicles between hundreds of city pairs on this route. Below is a broader look at additional New York origins and Florida destinations we regularly serve.
| From (New York) | To (Florida) | Distance | Transit |
|---|---|---|---|
| White Plains | Coral Springs | 1,270 mi | 3–5 days |
| New Rochelle | Pompano Beach | 1,260 mi | 3–5 days |
| Garden City | Miramar | 1,290 mi | 3–5 days |
| Levittown | Boca Raton | 1,275 mi | 3–5 days |
| Rochester | Lakeland | 1,345 mi | 3–5 days |
| Syracuse | Kissimmee | 1,245 mi | 3–5 days |
| Utica | Palm Coast | 1,155 mi | 3–4 days |
| Massapequa | Melbourne | 1,195 mi | 3–4 days |
| Valley Stream | Gainesville | 1,135 mi | 3–4 days |
| Niagara Falls | Naples | 1,445 mi | 4–5 days |
| Freeport | Ocala | 1,175 mi | 3–4 days |
| Mineola | Pensacola | 1,285 mi | 3–5 days |
| Patchogue | Fort Pierce | 1,230 mi | 3–5 days |
| Amityville | Daytona Beach | 1,175 mi | 3–4 days |
| Brentwood | Deltona | 1,195 mi | 3–4 days |
| Ronkonkoma | Bradenton | 1,250 mi | 3–5 days |
Hub Cities Along the New York–Florida Car Shipping Corridor
The New York-to-Florida run follows I-95 through seven states over approximately 1,025–1,385 miles depending on the New York origin and Florida destination. The corridor passes through or near some of the most active auto transport relay points on the entire East Coast.
Major Origin Hubs in New York
I-95 Corridor Relay Points
Major Florida Delivery Points
The Long Island Factor: Long Island is the single highest-originating sub-region for southbound Florida shipments in the country. Nassau County (closest to NYC: Hempstead, Garden City, Valley Stream, Levittown, Massapequa, Mineola, Freeport) routes via the Long Island Expressway through Queens, then south toward the NJ Turnpike and I-95. Suffolk County (farther east: Huntington, Smithtown, Islip, Babylon, Brookhaven, Amityville, Brentwood, Patchogue, Ronkonkoma) travels further on I-495 before merging to the same southbound I-95 corridor. Carriers pick up on Long Island daily — contact your coordinator 24–48 hours before pickup to confirm a carrier-accessible staging location, particularly for residential addresses on narrow streets.
Open vs. Enclosed Car Transport on the New York–Florida Route
The New York-to-Florida corridor is primarily an open transport route year-round, with enclosed transport a regular choice for luxury vehicles, collector cars, and high-value vehicles heading to South Florida’s affluent market — particularly during the fall snowbird season when high-end vehicles make their annual southbound trip.
Open Transport Recommended for Most
- Standard open-air trailer carrying 7–10 vehicles — the correct choice for the vast majority of NY→FL shipments year-round
- The I-95 corridor is one of the most well-traveled and carrier-active auto transport lanes in the country — open transport availability and pickup timing are consistently strong
- New York winter weather consideration: vehicles picked up in November or December may experience cold temperatures during the northbound portion of the run, but this has no meaningful effect on the vehicle; enclosed transport is not necessary to protect against cold temperatures alone
- Road salt and winter debris are present on I-95 in the northeast during November–March; for standard vehicles, this is a normal and acceptable condition. For high-value vehicles where paint condition is paramount, see Enclosed below
- Appropriate for all standard vehicles: sedans, SUVs, pickup trucks, minivans, and vehicles under approximately $60,000
Enclosed Transport
- Vehicle travels in a fully enclosed, weatherproof trailer from New York to Florida
- Typically 40–60% more expensive than open transport
- Recommended for luxury vehicles, exotics, collector cars, and any vehicle over approximately $75,000
- South Florida (Palm Beach, Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, Miami Beach) is the country’s largest luxury and exotic vehicle market outside of Los Angeles — the annual fall movement of high-end vehicles from New York and Long Island to South Florida generates significant enclosed carrier demand in October and November
- Vehicles with low ground clearance (sports cars, exotics) should use enclosed transport to avoid loading-ramp angle exposure on open carriers
- Book 3–4 weeks ahead for October enclosed transport to South Florida — this is peak enclosed carrier demand on the corridor
Our honest recommendation: Open transport for everyday vehicles — the I-95 corridor is well-maintained, well-traveled, and carrier-rich in both directions. Enclosed for luxury, exotic, and high-value vehicles heading to South Florida, particularly during the October–November snowbird season when enclosed demand concentrates sharply.
Door-to-Door Car Shipping: What to Expect in Florida and New York
Pickup in Florida
South Florida: Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach
Standard door-to-door pickup throughout South Florida. Miami-Dade addresses: standard residential pickup throughout; very dense downtown Miami, Brickell, and Midtown high-rise buildings require carrier staging on a nearby wide commercial street — confirm your specific address at booking. Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Pompano Beach, and Boca Raton: standard residential, no staging concerns. West Palm Beach, Boynton Beach, and Delray Beach: standard residential throughout. South Florida is among the most carrier-active pickup zones in the country — strong dispatch availability in all service tiers year-round. No weather protocol at pickup in South Florida in any season.
Tampa Bay and Central Florida: Tampa, St. Petersburg, Clearwater, and Orlando
Standard door-to-door pickup throughout Tampa Bay and Central Florida. Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater: standard residential throughout the Tampa Bay metro, no staging concerns. Sarasota, Bradenton, and Fort Myers: standard residential, Gulf Coast carrier access. Orlando and the I-4 corridor (Kissimmee, Sanford, Lakeland): standard residential throughout; high carrier volume driven by the Orlando metro’s active relocation market. No weather protocol at pickup in this zone in any season.
Northeast and North Florida: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, and the Space Coast
Standard door-to-door pickup throughout Northeast and North Florida. Jacksonville: Florida’s largest city by land area and the state’s primary I-95 northbound and I-10 westbound departure hub — standard residential throughout, strong carrier staging. Daytona Beach and the Space Coast (Melbourne, Titusville, Cape Canaveral): standard residential, I-95 access. North Florida markets (Tallahassee, Gainesville, Ocala): standard residential; allow additional dispatch lead time relative to South Florida and Tampa Bay due to lower carrier density in the northern tier. Florida Panhandle (Pensacola, Panama City): standard residential, good westbound carrier access.
Delivery in New York
New York City: Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, and Staten Island
Standard door-to-door delivery throughout New York City. Manhattan: carrier staging required for virtually all addresses — multi-car haulers cannot park for delivery on most Manhattan streets; your carrier will stage at a nearby accessible wide commercial street. Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx: standard residential delivery on wider blocks; dense high-rise addresses require nearby staging. Staten Island: standard residential, no staging concerns. Allow extra lead time for NYC deliveries — urban logistics add 1–2 business days to delivery windows regardless of service tier. Confirm your staging location with your carrier 24–48 hours before delivery.
Long Island and Westchester
Standard door-to-door delivery throughout Long Island and Westchester. Nassau and Suffolk counties: standard residential throughout, no staging concerns. Eastern Long Island (The Hamptons, Montauk, Shelter Island): standard residential; some narrow village streets require nearby staging — confirm at booking. Westchester County (White Plains, Yonkers, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, Tarrytown): standard residential throughout. Long Island and Westchester are the most operationally straightforward New York delivery zones.
Upstate New York: Albany, Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse
Standard door-to-door delivery throughout Upstate New York. Albany and the Capital Region: standard residential, I-87/I-90 corridor access. Buffalo and Western New York: standard residential; winter protocol November through April — add 1–2 day delivery buffer for heavy lake-effect snow on I-90 and local streets. Rochester and Syracuse: standard residential, I-90 access; same winter snow-belt protocol. Binghamton and Southern Tier: standard residential. Allow additional transit lead time for Upstate markets relative to NYC due to lower inbound carrier density outside the metro zone.
New York Vehicle Registration for New Florida Arrivals
New York requires registration within 30 days of establishing residency. Visit a New York DMV office with your out-of-state title, proof of New York insurance, and proof of New York address; no emissions inspection is required for most out-of-state vehicles. Cancel your Florida registration once your New York plates arrive.
Preparing Your Vehicle
Before pickup in Florida: remove all personal items from the interior, leave no more than a quarter tank of fuel, disable your car alarm, and remove any exterior accessories. Photograph your vehicle thoroughly from all angles with date-stamped images. Florida vehicles with beach equipment or exterior racks should have these removed. At delivery in New York, inspect your vehicle carefully before signing the Bill of Lading — your signature without notation constitutes acceptance of the vehicle’s condition. If delivery is to a NYC street address, ensure the receiving party is reachable at the time of delivery to sign and receive the vehicle.
New York & Florida Auto Transport Resources
New York Helpful Government Links
- New York State Department of Motor Vehicles (NY DMV) — Primary agency for New York vehicle titles and registration. Surrender your New York registration and title when registering in Florida.
- NY DMV — Cancel Your Registration — If permanently relocating to Florida, cancel your New York registration to avoid continued fees. Return your plates to the NY DMV to stop insurance requirements.
- NY DMV — Registration Fees — New York registration fees vary by vehicle weight and county. Nassau and Suffolk counties (Long Island) have county-level surcharges; confirm any refund eligibility when canceling.
- NY DMV — Duplicate Title — If your New York title has been misplaced, obtain a duplicate before your Florida registration appointment.
Florida Helpful Government Links
- Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (FLHSMV) — Florida’s vehicle title and registration agency. New York residents establishing Florida residency must register within 30 days.
- FLHSMV — New to Florida — Step-by-step guide for registering an out-of-state vehicle in Florida, including title transfer from New York.
- FLHSMV — Registration Fees — Florida registration fees by vehicle weight and type. Review current fee schedules before your registration appointment.
- FLHSMV — New Florida Driver License — Surrender your New York license and obtain a Florida driver’s license upon establishing Florida residency.
Federal Auto Transport Resources
- FMCSA — Verify a Carrier’s License (SAFER System) — Verify that any auto transport company you consider is federally licensed and insured before booking.
- FMCSA — Protect Your Move — Federal consumer guidance about hiring vehicle shippers, including red flags for broker scams and your rights as a shipper.
New York to Florida Car Shipping — FAQ
How much does it cost to ship a car from New York to Florida?
Brooklyn to Jacksonville is the most affordable main-table pairing at $850 — the shortest New York origin-to-Florida destination combination on this route. Staten Island to Orlando and Huntington to Tallahassee both run $875. Manhattan to Tampa and Oyster Bay to Port St. Lucie run $900. The Bronx to Fort Lauderdale, Islip to West Palm Beach, and New York City to Sarasota run $925. Hempstead to St. Petersburg runs $950. Queens to Miami, Yonkers to Hialeah, Babylon to Fort Myers, Smithtown to Hollywood, Brookhaven to Pembroke Pines, and Albany to Clearwater all run $975. Buffalo to Cape Coral at $1,025 is the highest rate on the table. Use the instant calculator for your exact zip codes and vehicle.
How long does it take to ship a car from New York to Florida?
Brooklyn to Jacksonville is 2–4 days — the shortest transit on this route. Staten Island to Orlando and Huntington to Tallahassee run 3–4 days. Most NYC, Westchester, and Long Island origins to central or South Florida destinations run 3–5 days. Buffalo to Cape Coral is 4–5 days due to the western routing via I-90 east and I-87 south before reaching I-95. Plan 7–10 days total from booking to delivery, with the lower end possible during the spring counter-flow window when southbound carrier availability is at its annual peak.
What route do carriers take from New York to Florida?
I-95 south, the entire way for NYC, Long Island, and Westchester origins. From the GWB (commercial vehicles use the Lower Level), carriers travel through New Jersey via the NJ Turnpike, Delaware, Maryland, the Washington DC/Baltimore metro, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and enter Florida at Jacksonville. Gulf Coast deliveries exit I-95 at Daytona Beach and take I-4 west to I-75 south, or route down I-75 from the Georgia border. Buffalo and upstate origins route east on I-90 to Albany, then south on I-87 to the NJ border before joining I-95.
When is the best time to ship a car from New York to Florida?
April and May are the best value window — snowbirds are returning north from Florida, meaning carriers heading southbound are available at excellent rates as they complete return loads. August and September are a second value window. Avoid October — the peak of the southbound snowbird departure from Long Island and the NYC metro to South Florida. October requires 14–21 days advance booking and is the single highest-demand month on this corridor. November is still elevated. December and January are active but softer than October.
Why is New York to Florida such a high-demand route in October?
Long Island is the single highest-originating sub-region for Florida snowbirds in the United States. Nassau and Suffolk counties together send more vehicles to South Florida each October than almost any other geographic area in the country. The concentration of retirees and seasonal residents in communities like Hempstead, Garden City, Levittown, Huntington, Smithtown, Babylon, Islip, and Brookhaven — all of whom have winter addresses in South Florida — creates a massive, concentrated demand spike every October. This is the single most predictable demand event in East Coast auto transport.
Can I ship a car from Long Island to Florida?
Yes — Long Island is among the most carrier-active pickup zones in the country during October and November. Carriers operate on Long Island daily. Nassau County (Hempstead, Garden City, Levittown, Massapequa, Mineola, Valley Stream, Freeport) and Suffolk County (Huntington, Smithtown, Islip, Babylon, Brookhaven, Amityville, Brentwood, Patchogue, Ronkonkoma) are all regularly served. Confirm a staging location with your carrier 24–48 hours before pickup — multi-car haulers need accessible street-level or parking lot access.
Do I need to be present at pickup and delivery?
Yes — or a designated adult you trust must be present at both pickup in New York and delivery in Florida to inspect the vehicle and sign the Bill of Lading. For NYC staging-area pickups, ensure the designated person is at the agreed location at the scheduled time. For Florida delivery, confirm the receiving party’s availability with your carrier 24 hours before delivery.
Is my car insured during transport?
Yes. Every carrier in our network is required to carry a minimum of $750,000 in liability insurance. Your vehicle is covered from the moment it is loaded in New York to the moment it is unloaded in Florida. Document your vehicle with photographs before pickup and inspect carefully before signing at delivery in Florida.