Summer break and study abroad both leave a car sitting unused in Gainesville for months — racking up insurance, parking fees, and storage costs while slowly deteriorating from disuse. For most students, the math favors shipping the car home, using it all summer, and shipping it back before fall semester. This page walks through when that calculation works and when storage is the better call.
A 90-day Gainesville storage spot averages $80–$150/month. A round-trip ship from Atlanta runs $1,300–$1,700 total. Compare to your route — for short routes, storage often wins; for longer routes, round-trip shipping is competitive once you factor in usage value.
The honest answer is “it depends on the route and the use case.” For students with internships or jobs at home, shipping the car back means three months of free use, no rideshare fees, and no parental car-sharing arrangements. The round-trip cost gets amortized across actual driving value.
For students staying near campus for summer classes, summer research, or a Gainesville-based internship, shipping the car home and back usually doesn’t pencil out — better to keep the car here and pay for parking. The math also shifts based on insurance: comprehensive insurance on an unused car can run $80–$150 per month, which by itself often exceeds storage cost.
Study abroad is a different equation. Most programs run 4 to 6 months — a longer window than summer break and one where the car generates zero value sitting in Gainesville. Storage costs scale linearly, so a 5-month indoor spot can run $400–$750. Round-trip shipping usually wins in that scenario, especially if parents can use the vehicle while the student is overseas.
Three approaches we see most often. None is universally right — the best choice depends on your route, your summer plans, and how much you’ll actually drive at home.
Round-trip from Gainesville to home in May, back to Gainesville in August. Best for students with internships at home or families that can use the car during summer.
Long-term covered or indoor storage. Best for students staying near campus for summer classes, research, or a Gainesville-based internship. Avoids round-trip shipping cost.
Less common. Student ships the car home in May, parents sell or use it long-term, student buys a different vehicle for the next school year. Useful if the car was a parental hand-me-down anyway.
Decision point 2–3 weeks before departure. Round-trip math vs. storage cost. Most students ship home if program is 4+ months.
Vehicle is at home for parental use or in long-term storage. Insurance can typically be downgraded to comprehensive-only during this window for additional savings.
Final 2 weeks before return to Gainesville. Either ship the car back ahead of arrival or drive it back if logistics work. We coordinate either way.
Car is back in Gainesville, parking is reactivated, semester starts. Some students delay full reentry until October once initial fall demand subsides.
Run through these six questions before deciding whether to ship the car or store it. The honest answers usually point to a clear winner.
Less than 60 days: storage usually wins. 60–120 days: math is closer, depends on route. 120+ days: shipping usually wins.
Daily commute, family-shared vehicle, weekend trips: ship home. Sitting in the driveway: stay in storage.
Short routes (under 600 miles): round-trip is cheaper, shipping makes sense more often. Long routes (1,000+ miles): storage often wins.
Apartment parking: usually included in lease, but sometimes $30–$80/month. UF on-campus permits: $200+ per year.
A car in storage can drop to comprehensive-only coverage, often saving $40–$80/month. A car driving daily at home keeps full coverage.
Round-trip shipping needs someone 18+ on each end of each leg. Four signing events total. Parents typically handle home-end logistics.
Don’t see your question? Call or text us at (352) 519-4421.
It depends on the route and how long you’ll be home. Round-trip shipping (May out, August back) typically costs $1,500 to $2,500 total — often less than three months of insurance, parking, and storage in Gainesville plus the wear of leaving a car unused. For students returning home for jobs or internships, shipping makes financial sense; for students staying near campus for summer classes, it usually doesn’t.
Three options: (1) ship the car home so parents can use it, (2) leave it at a Gainesville long-term storage facility, or (3) leave it at the apartment if your lease allows. Most study-abroad students choose option 1 because parking and storage in Gainesville for 4 to 6 months adds up quickly and the car deteriorates from disuse.
Yes. We coordinate August return shipping for students who went home for summer. Book 2 to 3 weeks before your fall move-in date. The August return window has the same demand spike as the southbound August move-in route, so booking ahead matters.
We don’t operate storage facilities directly, but we partner with vetted long-term storage operators in Gainesville and can refer you. Storage rates typically run $80 to $150 per month for indoor or covered outdoor spots. Comparing storage cost vs. round-trip shipping is worth the math — sometimes storage wins, sometimes shipping does.
We accommodate schedule changes with at least 48 hours notice. Internships extending, jobs ending early, family situations shifting — we redispatch the carrier or rebook the route as needed. Just call as soon as you know the new dates.
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