| Layer | What it pays | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Basic valuation (required, automatic) | 60¢ × item weight in lbs | Free |
| Full-value protection | Repair, replace or current value | ~1–2% of declared value |
| Your renter's / homeowner's policy | Per policy — often covers transit theft/fire | Already paying for it |
It's a weight formula, not a value formula: a 10-lb laptop ($2,000) pays $6; a 200-lb dresser from IKEA ($180) pays $120. Light-and-expensive items are exactly where basic valuation fails — which is why we flag electronics, art and instruments during the quote and offer options up front, including specialty handling for the irreplaceable category.
Craigslist crews quoting half price carry none of this — no cargo coverage, no liability, no CPUC tariff, and your building's deposit on the line. Two questions expose it: "Can you send a COI today?" and "What's your CAL-T number?" Hesitation on either is your answer. (Ours: full cargo and liability coverage on every move; CAL-T in final approval and published here the day it's issued — ask us anything at (213) 676-9460.)
Yes — California movers must include basic valuation free: 60 cents per pound per item. A 50-lb TV = $30. For real replacement value, add full-value protection or check your renter's policy before move day.
Valuation is the mover's liability limit set by tariff; insurance is a regulated policy. Basic valuation is free but thin; full-value protection makes the mover repair, replace or pay current value for anything damaged in their custody.
Ask for a certificate of insurance (COI) naming cargo and liability coverage, and verify their CAL-T permit on the CPUC website. A legitimate company produces both within hours, not days.
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