Packout Company vs. Moving Company: Why It Matters for Your Insurance Claim

Insurance & Claims · 2026-03-07 · 7 min read

They both move stuff — so what's the difference? Everything. Hiring the wrong one can leave your claim undocumented and your belongings unprotected.

They Both Move Things — So Why Does It Matter?

When your home floods or catches fire, someone tells you to 'get your stuff out.' You Google 'movers near me' and call whoever picks up. Understandable — but it could be a costly mistake for your entire claim.

A moving company is built to transport belongings from Point A to Point B. A packout company is built to document, protect, store, and return every item in a disaster recovery scenario — with the insurance-grade accountability your carrier requires to approve the claim.

The distinction isn't semantic. It directly affects whether your contents claim is properly documented, whether your belongings survive the process, and whether you receive the coverage you're entitled to.

What a Moving Company Does

Moving companies are designed for relocations — apartment to apartment, house to house. Here's what a typical moving crew does:

  • Loads items onto a truck — usually with blankets and basic wrapping
  • Drives to the new location and unloads
  • Charges by the hour or by weight
  • Provides a bill of lading — a basic inventory list

That's the job. It's legitimate work, and good movers do it well. But none of that is designed for an insurance claim. There's no photo documentation, no Xactimate-based pricing, no climate-controlled storage, no coordination with adjusters, and no plan for returning items to their exact original locations months later.

What a Packout Company Does

A professional contents packout company operates within the insurance claims ecosystem. Every step is designed to satisfy carrier requirements and protect the policyholder's claim. Here's the difference:

  • Pre-pack photo inventory — Every item photographed and catalogued before it's touched. This becomes part of the claim file.
  • Insurance-grade packing — Furniture blanket-wrapped and shrinkwrapped with exterior labels. Art in custom crates. Electronics documented and tested. China and fragile items individually wrapped.
  • Xactimate-based billing — Pricing follows the same industry-standard software your insurance adjuster uses. No hourly rates or arbitrary quotes.
  • Direct carrier billing — The packout company bills your insurance directly. You don't pay out of pocket.
  • Climate-controlled storage — Contents stored in a private, monitored facility — not a storage unit or a pod.
  • Adjuster coordination — Scope submitted and approved before work begins. Supplements filed when scope changes.
  • Contents return — Everything placed back in its exact original location. Furniture reassembled, art rehung, all packing materials hauled away.

The packout company isn't just moving your stuff — it's building the documentation that gets your claim paid.

How Hiring Movers Can Hurt Your Claim

Insurance adjusters need documentation to approve contents claims. When you hire movers instead of a packout company, here's what typically goes wrong:

No photo inventory — Without pre-pack documentation, you can't prove the condition of items before they were moved. If something arrives damaged, your carrier may deny the claim for that item because there's no baseline.

No Xactimate pricing — Movers charge hourly rates or flat fees. Your insurance adjuster prices contents work using Xactimate. If the mover's invoice doesn't align with industry-standard line items, the adjuster may only reimburse a fraction of what you paid.

No scope approval — A packout company submits the scope to your adjuster for approval before starting. Movers just show up and work. If the carrier didn't approve the scope, they may dispute the charges entirely.

Inadequate storage — Movers typically drop items at a self-storage unit. If contents suffer heat damage, moisture damage, or theft in an unmanaged facility, that's on you — not the carrier.

No chain of custody — When items go missing or get damaged during a move, liability is murky. A packout company maintains chain of custody with photographic evidence at every stage.

The Insurance Billing Difference

This is where the rubber meets the road. A packout company bills using Xactimate — the same pricing platform your insurance adjuster uses to write estimates. Every line item matches what the carrier expects to see:

  • Packing labor (by room and complexity)
  • Packing materials (boxes, tape, specialty crating)
  • Furniture protection (blankets, shrinkwrap, disassembly/reassembly)
  • Transport (loaded miles, crew size)
  • Storage (per vault, per month, climate-controlled)
  • Contents return (unloading, placement, unpacking)

When a mover hands you an invoice that says '$2,500 — moving services,' your adjuster has nothing to match it against. The claim gets delayed, disputed, or incomplete. We've seen homeowners face significant claim issues because they hired movers instead of a packout team.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Here's the clearest way to see the difference between a moving company and a packout company:

Photo documentation: Movers — No. Packout — Yes, every item before packing.

Xactimate billing: Movers — No. Packout — Yes, industry-standard line items.

Insurance direct billing: Movers — No, you pay and seek reimbursement. Packout — Yes, we bill your carrier directly.

Adjuster coordination: Movers — None. Packout — Full scope approval and supplement filing.

Climate-controlled storage: Movers — Rarely. Packout — Standard, private facilities.

Contents return to exact location: Movers — No. Packout — Yes, with reassembly and placement.

Specialty item handling: Movers — Basic blanket wrap. Packout — Custom crates, certified disassembly, electronics testing.

Chain of custody: Movers — Bill of lading only. Packout — Full photo documentation at every stage.

Out-of-pocket cost: Movers — You pay upfront. Packout — Typically $0 for qualifying insurance claims.

When You Actually Need Movers

To be clear — moving companies serve an important purpose. If you're relocating to a new home, downsizing, or moving across the country, hire a reputable moving company. That's their expertise.

But if you're dealing with a disaster — water damage, fire, smoke, storm, or any insured peril — you need a packout company. The documentation, billing, storage, and return process is fundamentally different, and it's what your insurance policy is designed to cover.

How to Choose a Packout Company

Not all packout companies are equal. Here's what to look for:

  • Experience with insurance claims — Ask how many packouts they've completed and whether they bill carriers directly using Xactimate.
  • Photo inventory process — Every item should be photographed before packing. If they don't do this, walk away.
  • Climate-controlled storage — Ask where your items will be stored and whether the facility is climate-controlled and privately managed.
  • Dedicated project manager — You should have one point of contact who coordinates with your adjuster, contractor, and crew.
  • Contents return capability — Ask specifically whether they place items back in original locations with reassembly and cleanup.

At Total Packout Solutions, we've completed 300+ insurance packouts over 20+ years in the industry. We bill your carrier directly, handle all documentation and coordination, and return everything exactly where it belongs. No out-of-pocket costs for qualifying claims.

Dealing with a disaster and not sure whether you need movers or a packout company? Call Tyler at 214-718-1685 — we'll walk you through your options and make sure your claim is handled right.

Request a DFW packout consultation · 214-718-1685