Last updated: July 3, 2026

TL;DR

  • Renting a truck yourself in San Diego runs about $150 to $350 all-in for a studio or one-bedroom, once you count truck, gas, insurance, and supplies.
  • Full-service movers run $600 to $1,500 for the same size move, and $1,400 to $2,800 for a three-bedroom home.
  • The break-even shifts fast. Studios and one-bedrooms usually stay cheaper as a DIY rental. Two-bedroom and up, the gap narrows to a few hundred dollars once you count everything.
  • Labor-only movers, where you rent the truck and hire the crew, sit in the middle and often win on both cost and effort.
  • Your time, your back, and the freeway driving are real costs even though they never show up on a receipt.

Renting a truck yourself in San Diego costs roughly $150 to $350 all-in for a studio or one-bedroom move, once you add up the truck, gas, mileage, a dolly, and basic supplies. Full-service movers run $600 to $1,500 for that same size home. For a studio or one-bedroom, DIY rental is usually cheaper in dollars. For a two-bedroom or larger, the gap closes to a few hundred dollars once you price in a bigger truck, more fuel, more boxes, and the day or two of your own labor, and full-service starts to look like the better deal.

Master Movers San Diego serves all 67 cities across San Diego County, and we quote binding written estimates so you know the real number before you decide. Below is the honest math on rental trucks, labor-only hybrids, and full-service movers, using real San Diego numbers instead of national averages that ignore this county’s traffic, parking, and stairs.

What does a DIY truck rental actually cost in San Diego?

A DIY truck rental costs more than the sticker price once you add gas, insurance, and supplies, and the true total usually lands between $150 and $350 for a small move.

Here’s what actually shows up on the bill:

  • Truck rental: $40 to $130 for a local one-day rental inside San Diego County, depending on truck size (10-foot to 20-foot) and the company.
  • Mileage: Many local rentals include limited free miles, but expect $0.79 to $1.09 per mile beyond that. A cross-county move can add $20 to $50.
  • Fuel: A 15 to 20-foot truck gets 8 to 10 miles per gallon. Budget $30 to $60 for a local move, more if you’re driving from North County to South Bay.
  • Damage coverage: Rental companies push collision damage waivers at $15 to $30 per day. Skip it only if your own auto policy or credit card actually covers a rented box truck, and confirm that in writing before you decline.
  • Dolly and furniture pads: $10 to $25 to rent a hand truck and moving blankets if you don’t own them.
  • Boxes and tape: $50 to $150 depending on home size, unless you source free boxes.

Add it up and a studio or one-bedroom DIY rental typically lands at $150 to $350. A two-bedroom home needs a bigger truck, more miles if you make two trips, and more supplies, which pushes the total closer to $300 to $500, not counting your time.

What does hiring full-service movers cost for the same move?

Full-service movers cost $600 to $1,500 for a studio or one-bedroom local move in San Diego County, and $1,400 to $2,800 for a three-bedroom home, based on our full local moving cost breakdown.

That price includes the truck, fuel, the crew, all the lifting, wrapping, loading, driving, and unloading, plus cargo coverage while your things are in transit. You show up and point. Every California household goods mover bills by an hourly Cal-T tariff, so the final number tracks your home size, stairs, and how packed you are before the crew arrives, same as any other moving quote.

Is it cheaper to rent a truck or hire movers in San Diego?

For a studio or one-bedroom, renting the truck yourself is usually cheaper in raw dollars. For anything larger, the savings shrink fast and often disappear.

Move typeStudio / 1BR cost2BR+ costWhat you’re buying
DIY truck rental$150 to $350$300 to $500Truck, gas, insurance, supplies. You load, drive, and unload.
Labor-only hybrid$300 to $550$700 to $1,200Truck rental plus a hired crew to load and unload. You drive.
Full-service movers$600 to $1,500$1,400 to $2,800Truck, crew, driving, and cargo coverage, start to finish.

The math tells the real story. On a studio, DIY rental can save $400 to $1,000 over full-service. On a three-bedroom home, that same DIY approach might only save $800 to $1,000 once you count a bigger truck, more fuel, more trips, and the fact that you’re now doing two full days of heavy labor instead of one afternoon.

If your load is big enough to need help either way, the labor-only hybrid is worth pricing before you commit to either extreme. You keep the cheaper truck rental and skip the worst part, which is carrying a couch down three flights alone.

Master Movers San Diego mover carrying a wrapped dresser down apartment stairs toward a rented truck

What costs never show up on the rental receipt?

The receipt never counts your time, your back, or the risk of driving a box truck you’ve never driven before, and in San Diego those costs are real.

Your weekend. A DIY move usually eats a full Saturday, sometimes bleeding into Sunday for a return trip or a return-the-truck deadline. Full-service crews typically finish a one-bedroom in 3 to 5 hours.

Your body. Two people carrying a couch down apartment stairs without training is how backs and door frames both get hurt. Professional crews carry a lot for a living and know how to load a truck so nothing shifts on the freeway. Our guide on how to load a moving truck covers the technique if you’re going the DIY route regardless.

Driving a truck you’ve never driven. A 15 to 20-foot box truck handles nothing like your car. Add San Diego’s downtown parking, the grades on I-8 through El Cajon, and rush hour on the 5 or 805, and an inexperienced driver is taking on real risk with no cargo coverage backing them up if something goes wrong.

Second trips. If your load doesn’t fit in one trip, you’re paying for a second day of rental, more gas, and another few hours of your weekend. Underestimating truck size is the single most common DIY rental mistake.

No cargo coverage. When you drive, your renters or auto policy is what protects your stuff, not a mover’s cargo insurance. If a dresser cracks on the freeway, that’s on you. Full-service movers carry coverage that applies the moment the truck starts moving, which we cover in released value vs. full value protection.

When does DIY rental actually make sense in San Diego?

DIY rental makes the most sense for small, simple, ground-floor moves where the labor is light and the distance is short.

It’s the right call when you have a studio or one-bedroom with minimal furniture, ground-floor or elevator access on both ends, a short drive across town, and at least one person comfortable behind the wheel of a box truck. It also works well for a partial move, like moving a few large items yourself and hiring help for the rest.

It stops making sense the moment you add stairs, a two-bedroom-plus home, a long freeway haul, or a tight moving-day schedule. That’s when the labor and time costs quietly erase the dollar savings.

Frequently asked questions

Is renting a U-Haul cheaper than hiring movers in San Diego? For a studio or one-bedroom, usually yes. Expect $150 to $350 all-in for the rental versus $600 to $1,500 for full-service. For a two-bedroom or larger, the gap shrinks to a few hundred dollars once you add a bigger truck, more fuel, and more of your own time.

What’s the real cost of a U-Haul rental once you add everything up? Truck rental ($40 to $130), mileage beyond the free allowance, fuel ($30 to $60), optional damage coverage ($15 to $30 per day), a dolly rental, and boxes usually add another $75 to $150 on top of the base rental price.

Is there a middle option between DIY and full-service? Yes. Labor-only movers load and unload the truck you rent, so you skip the heavy lifting but keep the cheaper truck rental. It typically runs $300 to $550 for a studio or one-bedroom. Our labor-only movers guide breaks down the full pricing.

Does my rental truck come with insurance for my belongings? No. Rental damage waivers cover the truck itself, not your furniture and boxes inside it. If something breaks while you’re driving, your own renters or auto policy is what applies, not the rental company’s coverage.

How much does it cost to hire full-service movers in San Diego? A local full-service move runs $600 to $1,500 for a studio or one-bedroom and $1,400 to $2,800 for a three-bedroom home. See our complete 2026 local moving cost guide for the full hourly breakdown.

Get a real number before you decide

Price it both ways before you commit to a weekend of driving a box truck. Master Movers San Diego covers all 67 cities in San Diego County, and we’ll give you a binding written estimate for a full-service move so you can compare it directly against a DIY rental. Call (858) 925-5546 to get your number.