Long Island’s professional 5 star moving service
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Most of Nesconset’s housing stock was built in the 1970s. That means split-level entries, narrower hallways, and traditional floor plans that were never designed with a nine-foot sectional sofa in mind. A crew that shows up without a plan or without floor protection can do real damage to original hardwood floors and freshly painted walls before the first piece of furniture even makes it to the truck. That’s not a risk worth taking in a home you’ve maintained for decades.
When you book a luxury move in Nesconset, you should expect the crew to protect the property as carefully as they protect the contents. We pad and wrap everything, lay floor protection throughout, and plan the move in advance not on the fly. For homes in the newer Nottingham Acres developments off Smithtown Boulevard, where custom finishes and high-end millwork are standard, that level of care isn’t optional. It’s the baseline.
The other thing that changes is accountability. You’re not dealing with a subcontracted crew assembled the morning of your move. Every person on the job is a W-2 employee, trained and answerable to the same owners Matt and Scott Young who built this company from the ground up in Suffolk County. When something matters, there’s a person responsible for it. That’s a different experience than most movers in this market can offer.
We’re based in Islandia, NY about 10 to 12 miles from Nesconset via the Nesconset Highway corridor. That’s not a technicality. It means we know this part of Suffolk County, the residential streets off Smithtown Boulevard, the access considerations around the Hauppauge Innovation Park corridor, and the kind of homes that make up Nesconset. We’re not learning your neighborhood on the morning of your move.
Brothers Matt and Scott Young have been running this operation for 20 years, and our names show up in customer reviews not because it’s a marketing line, but because we’re actually reachable. We carry DOT# 3706838 and MC# 1340650, both publicly verifiable through the FMCSA. Fully licensed, bonded, insured, and carrying cargo coverage. Every mover on our crew is on the books, English-speaking, and accountable.
With 207-plus verified five-star reviews across Google and Birdeye, the record speaks for itself. Clients describe the same experience consistently: on time, careful with belongings, protective of the property, no surprises on the invoice.
It starts with an in-person estimate. Not a number pulled from a phone call, not an online form that spits out a ballpark figure an actual walkthrough of your home. Someone comes to you, sees the layout, notes the specialty items, understands the access, and gives you a written quote you can rely on. New York State law requires licensed movers to provide written estimates anyway, so if a company is offering you only a verbal quote, that’s a signal worth paying attention to.
Once the estimate is confirmed and the date is set, our crew arrives with everything needed to protect your home from the first step inside to the last piece loaded. Floor protection goes down before anything moves. Furniture is padded and wrapped on-site. High-value items pianos, safes, antiques, fine art, oversized mirrors are handled with specialty wrapping and advance planning, not improvised on the day. For families in Nesconset booking around the Smithtown Central School District calendar, early summer dates fill up fast, so four to six weeks of lead time is a reasonable target during peak season.
After the move, if there’s anything left behind furniture that didn’t make the cut, decades of accumulated belongings, an estate cleanout that needs to happen before the home goes to market we handle that too. One company, one point of contact, start to finish.
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A luxury move in Nesconset isn’t just about getting boxes from one address to another. It’s about protecting a home that’s appreciated significantly in recent years, contents that have been collected and maintained for decades, and a property where the finishing details hardwood floors, custom millwork, marble entryways reflect years of investment. Our service is built around that reality.
Every move we handle includes full pad-and-wrap of all belongings, floor and wall protection throughout the home, disassembly and reassembly of furniture, and specialty handling for high-value items including pianos, safes, fine art, antiques, and large custom pieces. If your move involves climate-controlled storage whether you’re between closings, staging a home for sale, or managing a phased transition that’s available as part of the same service relationship. No need to coordinate a separate vendor.
For clients managing an estate transition a parent’s longtime home in Nesconset, a property that’s been in the family for 30 years, a house full of belongings that need to be sorted, moved, and cleared our dual-service model covers both the premium relocation and the full junk removal or estate cleanout. That combination is genuinely rare in this market. Most movers handle one or the other. We handle both, under one roof, with the same crew accountability from the first walkthrough to the final sweep.
White glove moving is a step above standard residential service in every measurable way. It means our crew arrives prepared not just with a truck, but with floor protection, custom padding and wrapping materials, specialty equipment for high-value items, and a plan for your specific home layout. In Nesconset, where a significant portion of the housing stock was built in the 1970s and features split-level entries and narrower hallways, that advance planning matters more than most people realize until something goes wrong.
In practice, white glove service means your floors are protected before anything moves, your furniture is wrapped on-site rather than tossed in a blanket, and items like pianos, antiques, fine art, and large safes are handled with dedicated specialty protocols not treated the same as a standard dresser. Disassembly and reassembly are included. Our crew is uniformed, English-speaking, and accountable to named owners. And the estimate you receive before the job is written, accurate, and binding not a number that changes once the truck is loaded.
For a summer move in Nesconset, four to six weeks of lead time is a realistic minimum and that’s on the shorter end. The summer window is the busiest period for family relocations in this area, largely because of the Smithtown Central School District calendar. Families want to be settled before the fall semester, which means June and early July dates get claimed quickly. If your closing is in late June or early July, waiting until two weeks out to book is a real risk.
The in-person estimate process also takes time to schedule properly. You want an estimator walking through your home, seeing your belongings and layout, and producing a written quote not a rushed phone estimate that gets revised later. Building that step into your timeline before you start calling movers is the right move. If you’re planning a spring or fall relocation in Nesconset, the lead time is more flexible, but summer is a high-demand window that rewards early planning.
In New York State, any company moving household goods intrastate is required to hold a valid NYSDOT license. For interstate moves, they need a USDOT number and MC number registered with the FMCSA. Both are publicly searchable the FMCSA SAFER System at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov lets you look up any carrier by DOT number and see their registration status, insurance filings, and safety record in real time.
We carry DOT# 3706838 and MC# 1340650 both active and verifiable. Beyond the federal registration, New York State law also requires licensed movers to provide written estimates before any work begins. If a company gives you only a verbal quote or an online estimate without a physical walkthrough, that’s a compliance issue as well as a practical red flag. In a market like Suffolk County, where unlicensed operators do exist and bait-and-switch pricing is a documented problem, taking five minutes to verify a mover’s credentials before signing anything is time well spent.
Yes and finding a company that does both well is harder than it sounds. Most movers handle relocations. Most junk removal companies handle cleanouts. Very few do both at a professional level, which means most clients managing an estate transition in Nesconset end up coordinating two separate vendors, two separate schedules, and two separate points of accountability for what happens to the contents of a home.
We handle both services under one roof. For a longtime Nesconset homeowner downsizing out of a property on Gibbs Pond Road or Smithtown Boulevard or an adult child managing a parent’s estate that means one call covers the premium relocation of everything being kept and the full cleanout of everything that isn’t. No gap between vendors. No confusion about who’s responsible for what. The same company that wraps your antiques and protects your floors also handles the removal and disposal of what remains. That’s a meaningful difference in a situation that’s already logistically and emotionally demanding.
The short answer is: anything in your home that you’d be genuinely upset to see damaged. In Nesconset’s established residential neighborhoods where families have lived in the same homes for 20 or 30 years that list tends to be longer than the average move. Pianos are one of the most common specialty items, and they require dedicated equipment, proper weight distribution, and a crew that understands how to navigate tight hallways and level changes without damaging the instrument or the floors beneath it.
Beyond pianos, we regularly handle large safes, fine art, antique furniture, oversized mirrors, custom cabinetry, heirloom pieces, and high-end furniture that can’t be disassembled without risk of damage. Each of these items gets assessed during the in-person estimate so our crew arrives with the right materials and a specific plan not a general approach. For homes in the Nottingham Acres area where newer construction includes high-end finishes throughout, that level of pre-planning protects both the items being moved and the property they’re moving through.
For a standard apartment move with minimal furniture, a phone estimate might be workable. For a Nesconset home valued at $700,000 or more, with decades of accumulated belongings and specialty items throughout, a phone estimate is genuinely not sufficient and in New York State, it’s not what a licensed mover is supposed to provide anyway. State law requires written estimates from licensed household goods carriers, which means a phone number that changes on moving day isn’t just frustrating it’s a sign the company may not be operating within the rules.
The in-person walkthrough is also where the accuracy of your quote gets built. An estimator who has seen your split-level entry, noted the piano in the living room, and walked through your specific layout can give you a number that holds. One who hasn’t seen any of it is guessing and the gap between that guess and the final invoice is where most moving horror stories begin. For a Nesconset homeowner, the in-person estimate isn’t an inconvenience. It’s the step that makes everything else predictable.