Hard-to-Move Household Items: What to Know Before Moving Day
How to move home gyms, oversized furniture, heavy appliances, and tricky items, plus what should never ride in the truck. Expert advice from Utah's Movers.
Most of a household move is straightforward: pack a box, label it, load it, repeat. Then you hit the items that make people stop and stare. The home gym that took a full weekend to assemble. The oversized sectional that barely fit through the front door the first time. The antique hutch that weighs a small car.
At Utah’s Moving & Storage, our family-owned crew in Orem has carried just about everything you can imagine up and down Wasatch Front stairwells. After years of doing this work, we have learned that the trick to hard-to-move items is not brute strength. It is knowing what needs special equipment, what needs to be disassembled, what should never touch the truck at all, and when to call a professional rather than risk your back or your belongings. This guide walks through the hard-to-move categories and exactly how we approach each one.
What Makes an Item “Hard to Move”
An item earns specialty status when it checks one or more of these boxes:
- Extreme weight. Large appliances and oversized furniture can run hundreds of pounds and demand the right dollies, straps, and trained hands.
- Awkward shape. Ellipticals, sectionals, and odd-angled bookshelves do not behave like a tidy box, so they fight you through every doorway and hallway.
- Fragility or value. Antiques, heirlooms, aquariums, and fine art can be ruined by a single bad bump.
- Complex assembly. Bunk beds, modular wardrobes, and platform beds come apart into dozens of fasteners that must go back together correctly.
Recognizing which of these apply to a given item tells you how much planning, manpower, and equipment you will need before you lift a thing.
Home Gym Equipment
Treadmills, ellipticals, weight stacks, and racks are heavy, awkward, and expensive, which is exactly the combination that gets people hurt. Here is how we approach a home gym.
Sanitize First
Before anything gets packed, wipe down mats, handrails, and machine surfaces. A sweaty yoga mat pressed against your bedding in a hot truck is a problem you can avoid. Disinfecting wipes work on machines; a half-water, half-white-vinegar spray is a fine homemade option; and towels and blankets can go through a hot wash.
Start Light, Then Get Strategic
Pack the lightest items first, including yoga mats, blocks, and straps. Roll mats top to bottom and secure them with a strap before boxing. For weights, use several small sturdy boxes rather than one heavy one. Cardboard and backs both fail when you overload a single box. Plastic bins are a smart reusable upgrade.
The Big Machines
- Treadmill. Check the manual for the weight and the folding and locking mechanism. Unplug it, fold and lock the deck, and if it tops 100 pounds (most do), set it on a furniture dolly with a partner on each side. Lift with your legs. Reinspect and test on a low setting before you trust it again.
- Elliptical. The shape is the enemy here. It is often easier to remove the handlebars and pedals with a screwdriver and wrench, bag the hardware, and tape the bag to the frame. Wrap the base in moving blankets.
- Stationary bike. The easiest of the group. Unplug it if electric, save the cords in a labeled box, slide cardboard under it to protect floors, and lift it in with a helper.
- Weight machines. Remove all weights first, then disassemble step by step. Bag and label hardware, keep the manual handy for reassembly, and photograph the process if you have no manual. Secure loose parts with tape, zip ties, or bungee cords, and wrap weight bars in towels so they do not scratch other items.
Heavy Appliances
Large appliances are dense, heavy, and connected to your home in ways that need careful handling.
Refrigerators, washers, and dryers must be safely disconnected before they move. Done wrong, you can damage the appliance, the water or gas lines, or both. Refrigerators should travel upright so the cooling system does not leak, and they need time to settle before being plugged back in. These items also require a proper appliance dolly, which is reason enough to let a crew that already owns one handle them.
Oversized Recreation Items and Furniture
Some items are simply too big for a standard doorway or too heavy for a typical crew. Hot tubs, trampolines, oversized sectionals, and large entertainment centers fall into this category. They often require partial disassembly, multiple movers, and careful maneuvering through tight spaces. Planning your path in advance and having the right equipment on hand makes all the difference.
The Hardest Furniture to Assemble and Disassemble
Some furniture is not especially heavy but punishes you with complexity. Based on what movers see most often, these are the usual headaches:
- Bunk beds. Large, bulky, and full of small parts that must connect correctly, often with two mattresses and frames adding weight and awkwardness.
- Modular and sectional sofas. Many pieces with unique connectors that must line up in a specific sequence to fit and look right.
- Platform beds with built-in storage. Drawers and compartments require intricate steps to detach, and the finished piece is heavy and unwieldy.
- Tall or asymmetrical bookshelves. Often need the original manual to reassemble correctly.
- Modular wardrobes (such as PAX units). So many parts that pieces frequently break during disassembly. Some owners leave them behind rather than risk it.
- Antique or handmade pieces. Irregular shapes, non-standard hardware, and delicate finishes that demand extra care.
The universal rule for all of these: keep the hardware organized. Bag and label every set of screws and bolts, tape the bag to the matching piece, photograph each step, and hold onto the assembly manual. That single habit prevents most reassembly disasters.
Should You Let Movers Handle It?
Many homeowners hesitate before trusting a crew with disassembly and reassembly. The readers who did it told us the deciding factors were professionalism, a proven track record, the right tools on hand, and liability insurance that covers damage during the work. The takeaway is not “always DIY” or “always outsource.” It is to vet the company. Read reviews, ask about insurance, and confirm they bring the equipment. When those boxes are checked, handing off the hardest pieces saves time and spares your weekend.
Items That Should Never Go on the Moving Truck
Some things are not hard to move so much as they should never touch a moving truck at all, for safety, legal, or practical reasons. Reputable movers will refuse these outright.
- Hazardous materials. Anything flammable, corrosive, or explosive: propane tanks, gasoline, paint thinner, cleaning solvents, fireworks. Dispose of these properly before the move.
- Perishable food. It spoils, smells, and attracts pests. Stop buying perishables about a week before moving day, and eat or donate what is left. Properly packed canned and dry goods are fine.
- Living plants and animals. Trucks have no ventilation, light, or temperature control. Transport pets and plants yourself.
- Weapons and ammunition. Firearms should be unloaded, locked, and personally transported by the owner.
- Valuables and irreplaceable items. Jewelry, important documents, daily medication, family heirlooms, and printed photos belong with you. As one mover noted, the real risk with irreplaceable items is not breakage but loss. If it cannot be replaced, keep it in your own car.
- Temperature-sensitive items. Fine art, certain electronics, and some medications can be damaged by the heat inside a truck. Move them yourself when you can.
Let the Hard Stuff Be Our Problem
Heavy appliances, home gyms, oversized furniture, and tricky disassembly jobs are exactly the kind of work our family crew is built for. We bring the dollies, straps, blankets, and trained hands so your back stays intact and your belongings arrive in one piece. If your move includes any of the items above, reach out to our team and let us handle the heavy lifting.
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