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Texas

Moving damage claim help in Texas

Damaged, delayed, lost, or held hostage by a mover in Texas? Document it correctly, hit every deadline, and get connected with a specialist — free to start.

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9 months
To file your written claim

Federal rules give Texas residents nine months from delivery to file an interstate moving claim.

30 / 120
Days to acknowledge / resolve

The carrier must acknowledge your claim within 30 days and resolve it within 120.

$0.60
Per pound, if released value

Know whether you had released or full value protection before you file.

What to do after a bad move in Texas

Whether your mover damaged furniture, lost boxes, ran weeks late, or refused to unload until you paid more, the playbook in Texas is the same: document everything before you unpack, note the damage on the delivery paperwork, and start your written claim quickly. The steps below work for both interstate moves (covered by federal rules) and local Texas moves.

If a mover in Texas is holding your belongings hostage or has denied a valid claim, an FMCSA complaint plus the right demand letter usually moves things fast. For larger or denied claims, the specialists in our directory handle cases throughout Texas.

Get help in your Texas city

What went wrong with your Texas move?

Pick your situation — the steps, deadlines, and templates are the same whether your move stayed inside Texas or crossed state lines.

Know your coverage

Released vs. full value in Texas

Most movers serving Texas default you to released value — just $0.60 per pound, per item. Confirm which coverage you had before you file; it decides what you can recover.

Default · Free

Released value

Pays only $0.60 per pound, per item
Automatic — you get it unless you opt up
A $2,000 sofa at 80 lbs pays just $48
Recommended

Full value

Mover must repair, replace, or pay full value
Coverage equals your goods' actual worth
Worth it for electronics, antiques & art
Escalation

Filing an FMCSA complaint from Texas

If a mover in Texas ignores you, holds your goods hostage, or denies a valid claim, a federal complaint adds real pressure. It is free and takes about 10 minutes.

1
Gather your move details
Mover name, USDOT number, dates, and your claim history.
2
File at the National Consumer Complaint Database
Submit online — it's free and goes on the mover's federal record.
3
Write a clear, factual narrative
Use our template to state what happened and what you're owed.
4
Follow up and escalate
Reference your complaint number in every message to the mover.

Texas moving claim questions

For interstate moves you generally have nine months from the delivery date to file a written claim. The carrier must acknowledge it within 30 days and resolve it within 120 days.

Released value is free but only pays 60 cents per pound, per item — so a heavy-but-cheap item pays more than a light-but-valuable one. Full value protection costs extra but makes the mover liable for the full worth of your goods.

Holding your goods 'hostage' for charges beyond your binding estimate is a violation of federal rules. Document everything, pay the lawful amount, and file an FMCSA complaint immediately — this is one of the strongest cases to escalate.

Often no. Many claims are resolved with a well-documented written claim and the right template. For large losses, denied claims, or hostage situations, a claims consultant or attorney can dramatically improve your outcome.

No. We're an educational platform offering templates, checklists, and referrals to vetted specialists. We don't provide legal advice, and some referrals may earn us a fee.

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