There is no single right answer to "should I hire someone?" — it depends on the size of your loss, how the carrier is behaving, and how much of the process you want to run yourself. The goal of this page is to make that decision clear, so you neither overpay a professional for a simple claim nor go it alone on a complex one that needs expertise.
Your three paths
Broadly, you have three ways to pursue a moving claim. They escalate in cost and in firepower.
| Path | Typical cost | Best for | What you get |
|---|---|---|---|
| Do it yourself | Free – $49 (templates) | Clear, documented claims of any size you are comfortable handling | Templates, deadline tools, and checklists; you file and negotiate |
| Claims consultant | Flat fee or 20–40% contingency | Mid-size or stalled claims; denials with a clear case | An expert prepares, values, and negotiates your claim |
| Attorney | Contingency or hourly | Large losses, hostage loads, bad-faith denials | Everything a consultant does, plus suit or formal arbitration |
Many people move between paths: they file themselves, and only bring in a consultant or attorney if the carrier denies a clearly valid claim. As long as you have not missed a deadline and your file is organized, handing off later is straightforward.
When it is worth hiring help
Reach for a professional when one or more of these is true:
- The loss is large. Once you are claiming several thousand dollars or more, an expert's cut is often easily outweighed by what they recover.
- The carrier denied a valid claim. A clear, well-documented claim that still gets refused signals a carrier betting you will give up.
- Your goods are held hostage. Time pressure and unlawful charges make these the highest-stakes cases.
- The paperwork is overwhelming. If deadlines and forms are causing you to freeze, a professional keeps the case moving.
- You are out of your depth on value. High-value antiques, art, or specialized equipment benefit from expert valuation.
Conversely, if your claim is modest, your evidence is strong, and the carrier is engaging in good faith, the free templates and a little persistence will usually get you there without paying anyone.
How specialists charge
Understanding fee models helps you compare offers and avoid surprises. There are three common structures.
| Model | How it works | Good when | Watch for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contingency | A percentage (often 20–40%) of what they recover; nothing if they recover nothing | You want aligned incentives and no upfront risk | The exact percentage and whether costs come off the top |
| Flat fee | A set price for a defined service (case review, demand letter) | You need one specific deliverable | What is and is not included in the scope |
| Hourly | Billed per hour, more common with attorneys | Complex disputes or litigation | Retainers and how hours are estimated |
Always get the fee agreement in writing before you engage, and make sure it states what happens to any out-of-pocket costs (filing fees, expert valuations) and whether they come out of your recovery.
Contingency-fee calculator
See what a contingency arrangement would actually leave in your pocket.
A rough guide. Compare this against what you would realistically recover on your own.
How to vet a specialist
Not everyone who advertises "moving claim help" is qualified. Before you sign anything, confirm:
- Specific experience with moving and cargo claims — not just general consumer or personal-injury law.
- Written, transparent fees with no vague language about extra costs.
- Verifiable reviews or references from people with similar claims.
- No pressure tactics and no demand for a large upfront payment on a contingency case.
- Clear communication about your odds — an honest professional discusses risk, not guarantees.
| Green flags | Red flags |
|---|---|
| Names specific regulations and processes | Speaks only in vague reassurances |
| Fee in writing before any work | Wants a large fee upfront on contingency |
| Realistic about your range of outcomes | Guarantees a specific dollar recovery |
| Focused on moving/cargo claims | Generalist with no moving track record |
| Lets you keep and review your file | Resists putting things in writing |
Vetted claims consultants & attorneys
The professionals below specialize in moving and cargo claims. We list only those with genuine experience in this niche. Contacting them is free, and you are under no obligation.
Harbor & Reed
Former carrier adjusters who now work for consumers on complex damage claims.
Meridian Transit Law
Transportation attorneys handling hostage-load and high-value cargo disputes nationwide.
Coastline Cargo
Specialists in delay and overcharge recovery, working on contingency for larger claims.
We may earn a referral fee from some listings. It never changes the price you pay, and we only list specialists with real moving-claims experience.
Make any specialist cheaper: prepare your file
Whether you hire help or not, an organized file lowers cost and raises your odds. Before you reach out, assemble: your bill of lading and inventory, the estimate and final invoice, every photo, your proof-of-value documents, a dated timeline of the move and all carrier contact, and copies of anything you have already sent. A consultant who can open a complete file spends less time — and bills you less — getting up to speed.
The bottom line: match the tool to the job. Small, clean claim? The free templates win. Large, denied, or hostage claim? A vetted specialist usually pays for itself. Either way, keep your documentation tight from day one so you can change your mind without losing ground.
