Long Island’s professional 5 star moving service
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Most people don’t realize how much can go wrong until something does. A canvas that got leaned against the wrong wall. A wide-plank floor that got scratched before the truck even left the driveway. A piece of mid-century furniture that arrived with a dent nobody wants to claim. When you’re moving in Springs where homes along Gerard Drive and Accabonac Harbor hold original artwork, generational antiques, and objects that can’t be replaced at any price that kind of carelessness isn’t just frustrating. It’s a real loss.
White glove moving service means our crew treats your home like the asset it is, from the first item wrapped to the last one placed. Floor protection goes down before anything moves. Specialty items get handled with materials and methods that match what they actually are. Every step is deliberate. Nothing gets rushed because the crew is behind schedule or understaffed.
Springs is primarily a year-round community, and a lot of the moves here aren’t simple. They’re seasonal-to-permanent transitions, estate relocations, or decades-in-the-making decisions to finally make the East End home full-time. That kind of move deserves more than a standard residential crew showing up with blankets and a clipboard. It deserves people who understand what’s at stake and act like it.
All Terrain Moving and Junk Removal Inc. is a family-owned company out of Islandia, Suffolk County, run by brothers Matt and Scott Young. We’ve been doing this for 20 years not as a side operation, not with a rotating cast of day laborers, but with a fully employed, English-speaking crew that’s on the books and accountable to named owners every single job.
That matters more than it might sound. In Springs and across the East End, it’s not hard to find a moving crew. It’s hard to find one where someone’s reputation is actually on the line. Our names are in the reviews. Our number is on the estimate. When something needs to be right, there’s a real person to make it right not a call center, not a policy.
With 207-plus verified five-star reviews and documented experience in sprawling East End homes the kind with narrow driveways off Springs-Fireplace Road, waterfront access points, and rooms full of things that can’t be replaced we bring the kind of track record that speaks louder than any tagline.
It starts with an in-person estimate. Not a phone call, not a virtual walkthrough someone actually comes to your home, walks every room, and sees what’s there. For a Springs home that might include original artwork, custom furniture, a piano, or a studio full of irreplaceable pieces, there’s no other honest way to quote the job. A number pulled from a conversation over the phone isn’t a real estimate. It’s a guess that becomes your problem later.
Once the walkthrough is done, you get a binding quote based on what was actually seen. No line items that appear at delivery. No charges for things that were implied to be included. From there, we schedule the crew around your timeline and if you’re working around the East End’s summer traffic patterns on Route 27, that planning matters. An early start, a back-road route, a crew that knows the difference between Springs-Fireplace Road in April and Springs-Fireplace Road in July that’s operational knowledge that saves real time.
On move day, floor protection goes down first. Specialty items are wrapped and staged before anything is loaded. If the job involves fine art, antiques, or fragile pieces, those get handled with the specific materials and methods they require not the same blanket-and-tape approach used on a flat-screen. When everything arrives, it gets placed where you want it, and nothing is left for you to sort out.
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Springs isn’t a cookie-cutter market, and our service isn’t cookie-cutter either. We handle the full scope of what a high-value East End move actually requires packing and unpacking, specialty item handling for fine art and antiques, furniture disassembly and reassembly, piano moving, and climate-controlled storage for transitions that don’t wrap up in a single day. If you’re converting a seasonal home to a year-round residence, or managing an estate that needs to be cleared and relocated at the same time, our dual-service model covers both: premium white glove moving and full junk removal or estate cleanout under one roof, one crew, one point of contact.
For Springs specifically, that estate cleanout capability is more relevant than it might be in other parts of Suffolk County. The community has a significant number of properties in transition generational homes being passed down, longtime residents downsizing, and seasonal owners finally making the permanent move. Handling both sides of that transition through a single company means fewer vendors, fewer scheduling conflicts, and nobody pointing fingers when something doesn’t line up.
We hold DOT# 3706838 and MC# 1340650 both publicly verifiable through the FMCSA SAFER System. We’re fully licensed for intrastate New York moves and interstate relocations, fully insured, and fully bonded. In a market where unlicensed movers are more common than they should be, those credentials aren’t a formality. They’re the difference between a company that’s accountable under state law and one that isn’t.
White glove moving service means the entire process is handled with a level of care that goes well beyond standard residential moving. That includes floor protection laid down before anything is moved, padded wrapping for furniture and fragile items, specialty handling for fine art and antiques, careful disassembly and reassembly of complex pieces, and deliberate placement at the destination not just unloading and leaving.
For Springs specifically, that level of care extends to the property itself. Homes here range from historic 17th and 18th century structures to contemporary waterfront builds near Accabonac Harbor, and many contain original artwork, mid-century furniture, ceramics, and other objects that can’t be sourced or replaced. We treat the walls, the floors, the doorframes, and the landscaping with the same attention as the contents. The goal isn’t just to get everything from point A to point B it’s to make sure nothing looks like it was moved when you’re done.
For a move in Springs, earlier is almost always better and the reason is the East End’s seasonal calendar. If your move falls anywhere between Memorial Day and Labor Day, you’re working in the most logistically compressed window of the year on the South Fork. Route 27 can add hours to any service provider’s arrival time, and the better moving companies in this market fill their summer schedules quickly. Booking four to six weeks out is a reasonable minimum for a summer move in Springs or anywhere else in the East Hampton area.
For spring or fall moves, two to three weeks of lead time is usually workable, though more complex jobs estates, homes with significant art or antique collections, or moves that include both relocation and cleanout benefit from more runway. The in-person estimate itself takes time to schedule and complete, and a binding quote can’t be issued until that walkthrough happens. Starting that conversation early gives you the most flexibility on timing and crew availability.
Yes but not every mover handles it the same way, and the difference matters. Fine art moving requires acid-free wrapping materials, proper support for canvases, custom padding for framed works, and careful staging so nothing is leaned, stacked, or stored in a way that puts pressure on the surface. Sculptures and three-dimensional pieces need individual attention based on their material, weight, and fragility. Condition documentation before and after the move is standard practice for any serious specialty mover.
Springs has a deeper connection to original art than virtually any other community on Long Island. The Abstract Expressionist movement took root here when Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner settled in the hamlet in 1945, and the artistic community that followed has never fully left. Today, Springs homes are more likely than most to contain significant original works not just prints or decorative pieces, but canvases and sculptures with real cultural and monetary value. If that’s what you’re moving, the crew handling it should understand what they’re looking at and treat it accordingly. Our specialty item experience is built for exactly that.
Start with the basics that a surprising number of people skip: verify the mover’s DOT and MC numbers through the FMCSA SAFER System. In New York, operating without NYSDOT licensure is illegal, and unlicensed movers have no accountability under state law if something goes wrong. A licensed mover is required to provide written estimates and itemized billing protections that matter a lot when you’re moving high-value items.
Beyond credentials, look at how the company handles the estimate process. A mover who quotes over the phone without seeing your home is giving you a number that may not survive contact with reality. For a home in Springs or anywhere in the East Hampton area where the scope of a move can range from a straightforward seasonal transition to a multi-room estate with fine art and custom furniture an in-person walkthrough is the only honest starting point. Also look at whether the crew is directly employed or subcontracted. W-2 employees are accountable to the company. Day laborers sourced from a gig app are not.
Most don’t and that’s a real gap for Springs residents managing a full property transition. Standard luxury movers focus on relocating what you’re keeping. What happens to everything else typically requires a separate vendor, a separate schedule, and a separate conversation about what goes where.
We’re built differently. We handle both premium white glove moving and full estate cleanout and junk removal under the same roof, with the same crew and the same point of contact. For Springs, where a significant number of homes are in some form of transition generational estates being settled, seasonal properties being converted to year-round use, longtime residents downsizing that dual capability isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the practical difference between managing one trusted relationship through a complicated process and juggling two vendors who don’t communicate with each other. One call covers both sides of the move.
Springs presents real logistical challenges that a mover unfamiliar with the area won’t anticipate until they’re already on-site. The roads here Springs-Fireplace Road, Old Stone Highway, the lanes off Gerard Drive near Accabonac Harbor are not designed for large commercial vehicles. Driveways on waterfront properties are often long, narrow, and landscaped in ways that make a wrong turn expensive. The low-lying terrain near the harbor means soft ground conditions are a factor in spring and after heavy rain. And during summer months, the approach from the west via Route 27 can add hours to any crew’s arrival time if the scheduling isn’t built around it.
A crew that knows this area shows up with the right size vehicle, plans the route before the day of the move, and accounts for seasonal traffic patterns in the schedule. That’s not a small thing it’s the difference between a move that runs on time and one that doesn’t start until the afternoon because someone underestimated the drive from outside Suffolk County. Our East End experience means these aren’t surprises. They’re just part of the plan.
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