Zip Codes
77055, 77080, 77043, 77024
Housing Mix
Ranches, Apartments & New Builds
Moving Here Since
2009
The Neighborhood
West Houston's Largest and Most Diverse Neighborhood
Spring Branch predates Houston. German dairy farmers settled here in the 1830s, and the area has been evolving ever since — postwar ranch homes, 1970s apartment corridors, and now a teardown-and-rebuild cycle bringing new construction to blocks that haven't changed in 50 years. It covers 40 square miles of west Houston between the 610 Loop and Beltway 8. Spring Branch ISD is independent from HISD, and schools like Memorial and Stratford rank among the metro's best.
The housing mix here is massive. Original 1950s ranch homes sit next to brand-new two-story custom builds. Gated townhome clusters fill commercial corridors. Walkup apartments from the 70s and 80s line Long Point and Gessner. A move in Spring Branch East near the 610 Loop is a completely different job than one in Spring Branch West near the Energy Corridor. Doorframe widths, lot access, staircase configurations — all of it changes by era and sub-neighborhood. We've been moving families across Spring Branch since 2009 and know what every block requires.

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What to Expect
Moving Challenges in Spring Branch
Every neighborhood has its quirks. Here's what makes moving in Spring Branch different — and why experience matters.
Massive geographic spread — 40 square miles, four sub-neighborhoods
Spring Branch is divided into East, Central, West, and North sections, each with different housing stock, price points, and access conditions. A move in Spring Branch East (near 610, close to Memorial) is a completely different job than one in Spring Branch West (near Beltway 8, bordering the Energy Corridor). Quoting by neighborhood name alone is not accurate — the specific address is essential.
Mixed housing stock from five different decades
Spring Branch's inventory spans 1940s cottages, 1950s-60s ranch homes, 1970s apartments, 1980s-90s subdivisions, and 2020s new construction. Each era brings different doorframe widths, staircase configurations, lot access, and furniture volume expectations. A pre-move walkthrough or detailed description of the home type is critical for accurate quoting.
Active teardown-and-rebuild cycle
Like The Heights, Bellaire, and Garden Oaks, Spring Branch is in a constant cycle of demolition and new construction. Adjacent-lot construction activity — dumpsters, heavy equipment, worker vehicles — is common and can reduce available street parking and narrow access to the property being moved.
Apartment-heavy corridors along major roads
Spring Branch's commercial corridors (Long Point, Gessner, Blalock, Witte) are lined with apartment complexes ranging from older 1970s walk-ups to newer gated communities. Apartment moves here may involve exterior staircases with no elevator, limited parking lot staging space, and building management protocols for newer complexes.
Variable $150 rate eligibility across the area
Spring Branch's eastern sections (near the 610 Loop) are within the Houston city radius and may qualify for the $150 rate on simple jobs. Western sections (near Beltway 8 and the Energy Corridor) may fall outside the standard radius. Eligibility depends on the specific address — confirm during the estimate.
Why Choose Us
Spring Branch Movers Who Know Every Sub-Neighborhood
We're not learning your neighborhood on move day. Our crews have been moving families across Spring Branch since 2009 — from the ranch homes in Spring Branch Central to the new construction in Spring Branch East to the apartment corridors along Long Point. We know the housing stock, the access conditions, and what each sub-neighborhood requires.

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No pressure. No hidden fees. Just an honest estimate from Houston's best movers — the same way we've done it since 2009.
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