Introduction
One of the most daunting practical questions facing Americans considering a move to Europe is simple: what happens to all my stuff? For decades, the answer was straightforward—ship everything. Today, more and more expats are questioning that assumption entirely. This guide walks you through the realistic costs, timelines, logistics, and the increasingly compelling case for leaving most of it behind.
The surprising reality: most people who move internationally wish they had shipped less, not more. Understanding your options upfront—and making intentional choices about what actually deserves expensive overseas transport—will save you money, stress, and valuable European living space.
Shipping Methods: Full Container vs. Shared Container vs. Air Freight
Full Container Load (FCL)
A full 20-foot or 40-foot shipping container is reserved exclusively for your belongings. This is the traditional method for substantial household relocations.
Advantages:
- Less risk of damage (dedicated space)
- Faster loading/unloading process
- Single point of contact with one company
- Can include larger furniture and bulk items
Disadvantages:
Best for: Families with multiple large furniture pieces, those relocating with a substantial household, people with valuable collections or items requiring special handling.
Less Than Container Load (LCL) / Shared Container
Your belongings share container space with other shipments, significantly reducing per-person costs.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Cost breakdown: Typically charged per cubic meter. Average household goods (furniture, boxes, moderate appliances) runs 8-12 cubic meters, costing $200-350 per cubic meter to major European ports.
Best for: Most individual relocators and smaller families, those wanting to move a moderate amount without full container expense, first-time movers unsure of commitment.
Air Freight
Shipping by air is dramatically faster but proportionally more expensive.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Best for: Small, valuable items; professional equipment; items you genuinely need immediately; emergency relocations.
Major International Moving Companies
Established Players
Budget-Friendly Options
Insider tip: Get quotes from at least three companies. Rates vary wildly and companies will negotiate, especially for shared container shipments.
Questions to ask:
What to Bring vs. What to Sell/Donate
This decision will make or break your moving satisfaction. Most Americans underestimate how much they don’t actually need.
Items Worth Shipping (Generally)
Items Generally Not Worth Shipping
The harsh math: Shipping a box costs $200-300 to Europe in a shared container. That heavy box of books would cost $25-40 to simply repurchase in Europe. When is shipping actually economical? When item cost exceeds $300-400.
Customs Declarations and Prohibited Items
What You Must Declare
All shipments to Europe require detailed customs documentation. This includes:
Your moving company typically handles this, but you must provide accurate information. Undervaluing items is customs fraud and can result in shipment confiscation or legal consequences.
Prohibited or Restricted Items
Strictly prohibited:
Restricted items requiring special documentation:
Country-specific restrictions:
France, Germany, and Scandinavia have stricter standards for used furniture and building materials. Check with your destination country’s customs authority.
Insurance Considerations
Standard moving company insurance covers “standard breakage” but is typically worth only $1-2 per pound of belongings—inadequate for valuable items.
Additional Insurance Options
Critical decision: If you have valuable items (antique furniture, art, expensive electronics), get full replacement insurance. The cost (typically $200-500 for a household shipment) is negligible compared to potential loss.
Don’t insure cheap items—the deductible often exceeds the item’s value.
Timeline and Logistics Planning
Advance Planning (3-4 months before departure)
Booking Phase (6-8 weeks before departure)
Preparation (4-6 weeks before departure)
Critical timeline:** Book moving companies 8-12 weeks before your planned departure. Shared container shipments require 45-90 days in transit plus 2-3 weeks for customs clearance. If you’re arriving in Europe mid-month and need your belongings, you may need to arrange short-term storage or temporary accommodation without them.
Pro tip: Most expats arrive before their belongings do. Budget for 4-8 weeks of furniture-less living, even with LCL shipments.
Cost Analysis and Budgeting
Full Container Load (FCL)
Less Than Container Load (LCL)
Air Freight
Electrical Voltage and Plug Compatibility
This deserves emphasis: American electronics (110V) don’t work on European power (220V). Using them anyway risks fire or permanent damage.
Incompatibilities:
The reality: European versions of these items are cheap and standardized. A quality hairdryer costs €25-40. The risk and hassle of shipping and converting is simply not worth it. The same applies to most kitchen appliances.
What is safe to bring:
The Case for Minimalism
The growing consensus among experienced expats is stark: ship less. Much less.
Why?
- Space: European apartments are smaller. That bedroom furniture you love simply won’t fit.
- Differentness: European electrical standards, sizing, and design differ. Your American couch won’t fit European doorways.
- Cost-benefit: Shipping $3,000 worth of furniture costs $4,000-6,000. You could sell it and rebuy in Europe for the same money with items actually suited to European living.
- Fresh start: Leaving possessions behind forces intentional choices about what you actually want in your new life.
- Flexibility: Without furniture anchoring you, you can move between apartments or cities more easily.
A different approach: Ship important documents, sentimental items, some clothing, and perhaps one or two meaningful pieces of furniture. Everything else? Sell it and budget that money for European furniture shopping, which you’ll likely enjoy anyway.
The minimalist expats almost universally report greater satisfaction with their moves. They adapted faster, felt less homesick, and had more disposable income for experiences.
Action Plan
If you’re shipping a full household:
If you’re shipping minimally:
Conclusion
Shipping belongings overseas is no longer the default choice. Modern expats increasingly recognize that leaving possessions behind isn’t loss—it’s liberation. Whether you ship a full household or just essentials, make informed decisions about what deserves expensive overseas transport. Most importantly, don’t ship for emotional reasons or because “you might need it.” Ship only what you’ll genuinely use and love in your new European home.




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