What Furniture Do Movers Assemble and Disassemble?

Most movers will handle most bulky furniture items, like couches, bedframes, dressers, and desks. Disassembling furniture before a move makes it easier to navigate tight spaces like doorways, stairwells, and hallways. This extra step also helps pieces fit more efficiently in the moving truck and reduces the risk of injury to both movers and your belongings.
Below, we list common pieces of furniture that movers will take apart and put together, along with items they won't disassemble and why. However, this ultimately depends on the type, weight, and style of the furniture you have, so when in doubt, ask your moving company in advance.
Items Movers Typically Will Disassemble
These are the standard household items most professional movers are trained and equipped to take apart. Disassembly is recommended for these pieces to protect doorways, prevent damage, and make loading and unloading safer for everyone:
- Beds and bed frames: Movers can disassemble standard beds and bed frames of all sizes. Separating the frame, headboard, and footboard makes it far easier to move through tight spaces and protects the pieces from scratches and stress during transport.
- Tables and nightstands: The process usually involves removing drawers, legs, and any other parts that are loose or stick out. Taking off table legs dramatically reduces the space the furniture takes up and protects them from snapping under pressure.
- Dressers: They’re one of the bulkier items to move, but disassembling them makes it much easier and lighter. Similar to nightstands, drawers, legs, and other removable parts will be taken off. Keep in mind that built-in dressers usually can't be disassembled.
- Cabinets: Movers can take apart and transport most freestanding cabinets. However, wall-mounted and built-in cabinets often can’t be disassembled or moved.
- Bookshelves and bookcases: Freestanding bookshelves and bookcases are good to go, but built-ins and wall-mounted pieces usually stay behind. Disassembly involves removing legs, drawers, or other loose pieces.
Items Movers Typically Won’t Disassemble
Some items are off-limits for furniture disassembly due to safety regulations, structural complexity, fragility, or hygiene concerns. Attempting to move or dismantle these without the right expertise can damage the item, and improper handling might also void warranties or create liability issues for the moving company.
- Cribs and baby furniture: There are many safety regulations involving children’s furniture. Because of this, movers usually leave assembly and disassembly up to the homeowners to ensure proper reassembly and compliance with safety standards.
- Pool tables: Most need specialized disassembly due to their massively heavy parts, including the slate bed, which can crack if handled incorrectly.
- Adjustable beds and massage chairs: Both are heavy and have many electrical and moving parts. They’re difficult and risky to disassemble and move, and usually require a specialist.
- Waterbeds and aquariums: Transporting these items poses serious risks of leaking and damage. Movers will likely move aquarium cases just fine, provided you follow the steps to pack an aquarium properly.
- Murphy beds: They’re attached to the floor or wall, so moving one requires specialized tools and knowledge to safely remove and transport.
- Particle board furniture: Movers usually won’t handle it, as it can easily come apart, snap, or get damaged even with proper handling.
- Damaged, unstable, or infested items: A cracked antique table or a bedbug-infested bedframe is typically a no-go. Moving companies carry liability for damage that occurs during a move, and items that are already compromised create too much risk.