May graduation week is our second-busiest period of the year, right after August move-in. Thousands of UF and Santa Fe graduates simultaneously moving out of apartments, picking up final paychecks, attending three days of ceremonies, and trying to figure out how the car gets to a new job in a different city. The good news: that last part is the easy one.
Most UF leases end May 31. Students typically fly home before the lease expires, leaving the car parked at the apartment for pickup. We coordinate with parents, roommates, leasing offices, or friends — whoever is on-site.
Move-out logistics work backward from move-in. In August, the car comes to Gainesville from somewhere else and the priority is pickup-end coordination. In May, the car leaves from Gainesville and the priority shifts to delivery-end coordination — usually to a city the student has never lived in before, sometimes to an address that doesn’t exist yet because the new job’s start date hasn’t arrived.
We see three patterns. About 40% of grad moves go home: students returning to parents’ addresses in the Northeast, Midwest, Texas, or California while they figure out next steps. Another 40% go directly to a new job in NYC, DC, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Dallas, or the Bay Area — consulting analysts, finance recruits, engineering hires, grad school enrollees. The remaining 20% are headed to grad school programs spread across every state in the country.
The booking timeline is tighter than August because graduation week itself is hectic. Most students wait until after the last final exam to book, which lands them in a 7-to-14-day window. That works, but it eliminates flexibility on pickup day. Booking 2 to 3 weeks ahead — ideally before final exam week kicks off — gives you the widest pickup window and the best pricing.
Best pricing of the season. Book during finals week if you can — pickup day is fully flexible, and rates haven’t spiked yet.
Peak demand. Commencement ceremonies Thursday through Saturday. Pickup windows narrow to 3–5 days. Most-popular outbound destinations: NYC, DC, Boston, Atlanta, Texas.
Steady volume. Students still in town settling final logistics, parents flying in to help pack, late pickups for graduates who left immediately after commencement.
Last-call window. End-of-lease pickups, friend-of-a-friend handoffs, leasing-office coordinations. Capacity loosens but pricing stays elevated through the month.
The post-Gainesville map. These are the three buckets we see for May and December graduates — same booking process for all three.
Parents’ address while the next chapter takes shape. Returns to Northeast (NYC, NJ, MA, PA), Midwest (IL, OH, MI), Texas, California, and the Carolinas dominate the volume.
Direct moves to first-job destinations. NYC, DC, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Dallas, Austin, the Bay Area — all common. We can deliver to temporary addresses or hotels.
Med school, law school, MBA programs, PhD positions. Often a totally different metro than where the student grew up, requiring full coordination from a Gainesville apartment to an unfamiliar city.
Six things to handle in the days leading up to pickup. Identical to move-in coordination on the technical side, but the logistics flip because you’re leaving the apartment rather than arriving.
If pickup happens after you’ve flown home, the leasing office needs to know a carrier is coming. Most are happy to release the car if you give them written authorization.
Front, rear, both sides. This is your insurance baseline for the bill of lading inspection. Take them on pickup day if possible.
Carriers prefer low fuel for weight reasons. Don’t fill up before pickup — you’ll just be paying to ship gasoline.
Most carriers allow up to 100 pounds of soft items (pillows, bedding, soft luggage). Loose cabin items are not permitted — they shift in transit and damage interiors.
Aftermarket alarms can trigger during loading. Either disable it before pickup or share the disarm sequence with the driver.
Whoever signs the bill of lading on the delivery end needs to be 18+, available during the delivery window, and have the driver’s direct phone number.
Don’t see your question? Call or text us at (352) 519-4421.
Book 2 to 3 weeks before commencement. The first weekend of May is our second-busiest week of the year because thousands of UF graduates are simultaneously moving out of Gainesville apartments and shipping cars home or to new cities for jobs and grad school. Booking ahead locks in pickup before the apartment lease ends.
Yes — this is the most common arrangement we coordinate. Most UF leases end May 31. Students fly home before then, leaving the car parked at the apartment, the leasing office, or a friend’s place. We coordinate pickup with whoever is available — roommate, RA, leasing manager, or a parent flying back for graduation.
December commencement is smaller-volume than May but still busy. Book 2 weeks ahead. The window between December 12 and December 22 sees the most demand because graduates are moving out before holiday travel and apartment leases ending in December.
Yes. Post-graduation moves to NYC, DC, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, Charlotte, Dallas, and the Texas metros are extremely common. We handle thousands of these every May. Tell us where you’re headed and we’ll quote door-to-door from your Gainesville apartment to the new city — even if you haven’t found permanent housing yet (we can deliver to a temporary address or hotel).
Most carriers allow up to 100 pounds of soft personal items in the trunk only — pillows, bedding, soft luggage, clothing. Loose items in the cabin are not allowed because they shift during transit and can cause interior damage. Our team will share the specific carrier’s policy before pickup.
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