Need movers near Dyess AFB in Abilene TX 79607? Here is a direct answer. We are a locally operated moving company serving Dyess Air Force Base and the surrounding southwest Abilene corridor — ZIP codes 79607, 79606, and 79605. We hold on-base access credentials for Dyess AFB housing moves, generate binding estimates in the format the Dyess TMO office requires for PPM reimbursement submission, and provide complete PPM weight ticket documentation including certified gross and tare weights from FMCSA-registered scales. PCS moves from Dyess to anywhere in Texas run $1,400–$5,000 on a binding estimate. Out-of-state PCS moves are priced by weight and mileage under FMCSA tariff rates. We respond to PCS inquiries the same day you call — regardless of how short your orders timeline is. Call us the day your orders arrive. We have executed 7-day-notice PCS moves and will do everything within our capability to accommodate your timeline. | |
We handle PCS moves near Dyess AFB in Abilene TX 79607 for 7th Bomb Wing and 317th Airlift Wing families. Our crews have on-base access, provide TMO-formatted binding estimates, and generate full PPM weight ticket packages. Call— same-day response for any PCS order timeline. |
Dyess Air Force Base sits 7 miles southwest of downtown Abilene on 6,409 acres in the 79607 ZIP code corridor. Home to the 7th Bomb Wing (B-1B Lancers, Air Force Global Strike Command) and the 317th Airlift Wing (C-130J Super Hercules, Air Mobility Command), Dyess employs more than 5,000 people and generates $310 million in annual economic impact on the Abilene community — making it Taylor County’s largest single employer and the dominant driver of the local moving market. The base has 988 units of family housing managed by two housing companies: Balfour Beatty Communities (32 Louisiana Road, 325-701-9276) and Hunt Military Communities (5802 Kala Drive, Abilene TX 79606, 325-690-6698). Seven distinct on-base neighborhoods serve officer and enlisted families: Eagle Heights (O4–O6, 3–4 bedroom), Freedom Run (O1–O3, 3–4 bedroom), and five additional enlisted neighborhoods. Moving in and out of this environment — whether from on-base housing or the civilian neighborhoods that house the majority of Dyess families off-base — requires a moving company that understands base access, PPM documentation, weight allowances, and the tight timelines that PCS orders create. Here is exactly how we handle each piece. |
Every moving company crew member working inside Dyess AFB must clear the security gate with valid government-issued identification. Vehicle passes for moving trucks require advance coordination with the Housing Office — this is not a day-of arrangement. Our on-base process: we contact the Dyess AFB Housing Office and the appropriate housing management company (Balfour Beatty Communities for most on-base housing) minimum 72 hours before your move date. We confirm vehicle pass requirements for our truck size, obtain the access window for your specific housing neighborhood, and verify that move-in or move-out inspection scheduling aligns with your pickup date. On move day, our crew arrives at the gate with all required identification and vehicle documentation. No delays at the gate. No surprises for your Housing Office. Families moving into or out of Eagle Heights, Freedom Run, or any Dyess Family Homes neighborhood: inform us of your on-base address during the estimate call. We handle all Housing Office coordination from that point forward. |
The Department of Defense sets maximum household goods weight allowances by pay grade and dependent status. Shipping above your allowance means paying the excess weight charges out of pocket — a cost that reaches several thousand dollars on overweight shipments. We calculate your projected shipment weight against your authorized allowance during the pre-move inventory. If we identify items at risk of pushing you over your limit, we flag them before loading — not after the weight ticket comes back. You have the opportunity to adjust what ships before the truck is loaded. 2026 DoD Weight Allowances (lbs): E-1 to E-3: 5,000 (w/o dependents) / 8,000 (w/ dependents) E-4: 7,000 / 8,000 E-5 to E-6: 9,000 / 11,000 E-7 to E-9: 12,000 / 13,500 W-1 to W-2: 10,000 / 12,500 W-3 to W-4: 13,000 / 14,500 O-1 to O-3: 10,000 / 13,500 O-4 to O-6: 14,000 / 17,000 O-7 and above: 18,000 / 18,000 These are authorized maximums — not targets. Excess weight is billed at commercial rates per pound, typically $0.50–$0.80/lb for long-distance moves. |
The Personally Procured Move (PPM), formerly called DITY, allows Dyess service members to manage their own household goods move and receive government reimbursement at 95% of what the government would have paid a commercial carrier. When executed correctly, a PPM generates reimbursement that covers professional moving costs — and sometimes pays the service member a net amount above expenses.
Our complete PPM package for Dyess families:
Binding estimate: Formatted specifically for TMO submission. Includes all required fields in the format the Dyess TMO office processes without kickback. We know the specific documentation format Dyess TMO requires because we have submitted PPM packages there many times.
Certified weight tickets: We transport your shipment to FMCSA-certified scales for gross weight (loaded) and tare weight (empty truck) tickets. The net weight calculation — gross minus tare — is your PPM reimbursement basis. We generate these tickets in the format your finance office accepts for DD Form 1351-2 (Travel Voucher or Subvoucher) submission.
Complete package: Weight tickets + binding estimate + mileage documentation + any additional paperwork your specific TMO or finance office requires. We have processed enough Dyess PPM moves to anticipate documentation questions before they arise
The primary Dyess PCS season runs February through August, with peak order release in March–June and peak execution in May–August. This window coincides with Abilene’s broader summer moving peak — making southwest Abilene the most congested moving zone in Taylor County from May through August. We maintain priority scheduling capacity specifically for Dyess PCS families. When you call with orders in hand, you are not put on a general waitlist — you are scheduled as a PCS priority. Weekend and after-hours moves are available for PCS timelines that require them. Important: Call us the day your orders arrive. Not when you have a clear move date. Not when you’ve found housing. The day you receive orders. Early contact gives us the most flexibility to accommodate your timeline — including short-notice PCS execution when orders compress. We have successfully executed PCS moves with 7 days’ notice. We have moved Dyess families who received amended orders mid-pack and needed to adjust destination mid-move. Military life does not follow a predictable schedule and we do not operate like a company that requires 3 weeks’ notice. |
Some Dyess service members move under Government Bill of Lading (GBL) authorization — where the government arranges and pays for a commercial carrier directly rather than through PPM reimbursement. We coordinate GBL-authorized moves within the framework that the government transportation contracting process requires, working within the rate structures and documentation requirements of GBL authorization. Contact us with your specific GBL authorization details and we will confirm whether and how we can serve your specific move. |
Most Dyess families live off-base. The base’s 988 family housing units serve a portion of the demand — the rest choose civilian housing in the southwest and south Abilene corridor. Understanding where Dyess families actually live is how we know your neighborhood before move day. |
The Buffalo Gap Road and Catclaw Drive corridor is the highest-concentration off-base military family area in Abilene. It sits 10–15 minutes from the Dyess main gate via Catclaw Drive or the Loop 322 connector — the two primary commute routes for Dyess personnel living off-base. Most homes in this corridor fall within the Wylie ISD boundary — the school district consistently rated higher than Abilene ISD and the #1 school-district preference among Dyess families with school-age children. 3-bedroom homes in this corridor run $1,300–$1,700/month rental, with newer construction running higher. BAH rates for E-5 and above cover most of this range. We serve this corridor on more Dyess-adjacent moves than any other area in Taylor County. We know the access characteristics, the HOA communities, and the school-calendar timing that drives move demand here. |
Chimney Rock is one of southwest Abilene’s most established residential neighborhoods, directly adjacent to the Dyess AFB corridor along Southwest Drive. It is served primarily by Abilene ISD — families seeking the shorter commute over the Wylie ISD premium often choose Chimney Rock. Older construction with well-maintained lots, active neighborhood character, and lower home prices than the Wylie corridor make it the first-choice area for E-4 and E-5 families watching their BAH. We handle Chimney Rock moves regularly — the neighborhood’s mature tree canopy and established driveway access patterns are familiar to our crews. |
Buck Creek is a quieter residential area in southern Abilene serving Dyess families who prioritize affordability and space over school district premium. Mostly Abilene ISD. Rental prices run below the Buffalo Gap corridor — a meaningful difference for junior enlisted families with tighter BAH. Lower density, larger lots, and fewer HOA governance requirements make Buck Creek a practical choice for families with vehicles, outdoor equipment, or storage needs. We serve Buck Creek regularly on both incoming PCS arrivals and outbound departures. |
Park Central sits centrally in Abilene — further from the Dyess gate than the southwest corridor but preferred by single service members and couples without school-age children who value proximity to downtown Abilene amenities and the ACU/McMurry university corridor. BAH covers comfortable options in this zone for E-4 and above. Apartment-heavy with some single-family inventory. Elevator and multi-floor building experience matters in this corridor — our crews handle it regularly. |
The Wylie ISD area — primarily the 79606 ZIP code west of Abilene along Antilley Road and Buffalo Gap Road — is the top school district choice for Dyess families with school-age children. Wylie ISD schools consistently earn higher TEA performance ratings than Abilene ISD and 8/10+ ratings on GreatSchools.org. The commute from Wylie area to Dyess gate runs 15–20 minutes via Buffalo Gap Road — acceptable for most families in exchange for the school district premium. Wylie ISD area homes command higher rents and purchase prices than comparable southwest Abilene properties, but BAH for E-6 and above typically covers the difference. We serve the Wylie ISD corridor on more inbound Dyess PCS move-ins than any other off-base zone. |
The Fairway Oaks and River Oaks-Brookhollow areas in southwest Abilene serve the O-4 and above Dyess population choosing to live off-base. Larger homes, more established neighborhoods, and proximity to the Abilene Country Club corridor characterize this zone. These are our most physically demanding residential moves — larger homes, heavier furniture, and more specialty items per household. We provide senior-crew assignments for Officer-zone moves in southwest Abilene. |
A smaller segment of Dyess families choose the Jim Ned Consolidated ISD area south of Abilene along the Buffalo Gap and Tuscola corridors — typically those who want acreage, animals, or rural quiet with a manageable Dyess gate commute (20–30 minutes via Buffalo Gap Road). Jim Ned CISD is a well-regarded rural district serving the southern Taylor County communities of Buffalo Gap, Tuscola, and Lawn. We serve this area for both PCS arrivals and departures with a minimal travel supplement. |
Military families with school-age children list school district as a top-3 PCS housing decision factor. Three school districts serve the Dyess AFB residential corridor. Here is what each one means for your family’s off-base housing search. |
Abilene ISD is the largest district serving the Dyess AFB area, covering most of the city including the on-base area, Chimney Rock, Buck Creek, and central Abilene. Dyess Elementary School — adjacent to the base, AISD-operated — serves K–5 families living in on-base housing (approximately 97% of its students are Dyess residents, per Military Town Advisor). Middle schools nearest the base: Clack Middle School (325-692-1961) and Mann Middle School (325-672-8493). AISD offers AP, STEM, and fine arts programs at the high school level. The TEA gives AISD an overall B rating — quality varies by individual campus more than in smaller districts. The district’s military-family experience is deep: Dyess has been part of AISD’s enrollment for nearly 70 years. |
Wylie ISD serves the southwest Abilene area west of the city, primarily the 79606 ZIP. It is the most sought-after school district for off-base Dyess families — consistently earning A-level TEA performance ratings and 8/10+ scores on GreatSchools.org. Smaller district, strong athletics, active parent involvement. The Wylie ISD area runs 15–20 minutes from the Dyess main gate, which most families find acceptable for the school quality premium. BAH for E-6 and above covers the higher housing costs in Wylie ISD territory. |
Jim Ned CISD serves the rural southern Taylor County communities of Buffalo Gap, Tuscola, and Lawn — south of Abilene along FM 89 and Buffalo Gap Road. A smaller rural district serving Dyess families who choose acreage or rural living over suburban convenience. Commute to Dyess gate: 20–30 minutes depending on exact address. For families who want land, animals, and quieter surroundings within reach of the base, Jim Ned CISD area housing is a niche but established Dyess family preference. |
The 7th Bomb Wing (Air Force Global Strike Command) and 317th Airlift Wing (Air Mobility Command) generate PCS moves to installations across the United States. Here are the most frequent destinations for Dyess AFB families — each with mileage, binding estimate range, and transit timeline. |
One of the most frequent Dyess departure routes, serving Randolph, Lackland, and Fort Sam. Same-day loading with next-morning delivery possible on standard households. Binding estimate range: $1,800–$4,500. Transit: 1 day. |
North Texas destination. Straight shot north on US-277 from Abilene. Binding estimate range: $1,400–$3,500. Transit: same-day delivery possible. One of Dyess’s most common in-state PCS routes. |
Southwest Texas destination near the US-Mexico border. Binding estimate range: $2,200–$5,000. Transit: 1 day with early start. Popular route for Dyess aviators entering pilot training. |
DFW metropolitan area destination. I-20 east from Abilene runs direct. Binding estimate range: $1,500–$4,000. Transit: same-day delivery. One of Dyess’s highest-volume in-state PCS routes. |
Air Force Global Strike Command sister installation — one of the most frequent out-of-state Dyess PCS routes given shared B-1B mission. I-20 east runs direct. Binding estimate range: $2,100–$4,800. Transit: 1 day. |
Air Force Materiel Command installation. US-277 north to I-44/I-35 corridor. Binding estimate range: $2,200–$5,200. Transit: 1–2 days. |
Air Force Special Operations Command installation. US-84 northwest from Abilene to Lubbock, then US-60 west to Clovis. Binding estimate range: $1,800–$4,200. Transit: 1 day. |
Air Force Global Strike Command B-52 installation — the most challenging climate transition for Dyess families (West Texas to North Dakota). We pack specifically for this temperature differential. Binding estimate range: $3,500–$7,500. Transit: 2–3 days. |
Air Mobility Command hub installation in the Sacramento Valley. Long-haul Pacific Coast route. Binding estimate range: $4,200–$8,500. Transit: 3–4 days. |
Air Combat Command headquarters installation. I-20 east corridor. Binding estimate range: $3,800–$8,000. Transit: 3 days. Frequent Dyess-to-Langley route due to ACC/AFGSC coordination assignments. |
Air Force Global Strike Command B-2 installation. Binding estimate range: $2,800–$6,000. Transit: 2 days. |
Call with destination base, reporting date, current address, and pay grade. We issue a binding estimate the same day for any destination in the contiguous United States. |
Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) is the financial foundation of every off-base housing decision for Dyess families. Abilene’s cost of living — ranked #15 nationally for affordability in 2025 — means BAH covers comfortable housing options across most pay grades. Understanding how BAH aligns with housing costs in each off-base corridor helps you choose a neighborhood before your PCS move arrives, not after. |
E-4: $882 / $1,122 per month E-5: $1,005 / $1,302 per month E-6: $1,068 / $1,377 per month E-7: $1,131 / $1,422 per month O-1E: $1,122 / $1,401 per month O-3: $1,431 / $1,791 per month O-4: $1,593 / $1,962 per month BAH covers most of the Buffalo Gap Road / Catclaw Drive corridor ($1,300–$1,700/month) for E-5 and above with dependents. The Wylie ISD area runs $1,500–$2,000+ for 3-bedroom, which falls within O-3 and above BAH with dependents. Chimney Rock and Buck Creek are accessible for E-4 families at or near BAH. Source: DoD BAH rates for Abilene TX ZIP 79607, effective January 2025. |
MOVE TYPE | RATE | TYPICAL TOTAL | NOTES On-base to off-base (local Abilene) | $90–$110/hr | $350–$950 | No travel supplement Off-base to on-base (local Abilene) | $90–$110/hr | $350–$950 | Housing Office coordination included Local PCS (Abilene to Abilene) | $90–$115/hr | $350–$1,100 | Standard Abilene rates Long-distance PCS — Texas in-state | Binding estimate | $1,400–$5,000 | FMCSA documented Out-of-state PCS — contiguous US | Binding estimate | Custom by weight/mileage | DOT# verified PPM move — full professional service | Binding estimate | Covered by PPM reimbursement | Weight tickets provided Storage near Dyess AFB | Coordinated | Climate-controlled available | Short/long-term |
Dyess Air Force Base was established in 1942 as the Abilene Army Air Base and renamed in 1956 to honor Lieutenant Colonel William Edwin Dyess — an Albany, Texas native, WWII fighter ace, Bataan Death March survivor, and escape hero who died test-piloting a P-38 in 1943.
Today, Dyess covers 6,409 acres on the southwest edge of Abilene in ZIP 79607, approximately 7 miles from downtown via Arnold Road / Southwest Drive. It is home to two wings:
7th Bomb Wing (Air Force Global Strike Command): Operates B-1B Lancer strategic bombers — one of only two B-1B wings in the USAF, alongside the 28th Bomb Wing at Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota. The 28th Bomb Squadron serves as the USAF’s only B-1B formal training unit. Assigned to 8th Air Force at Barksdale AFB, Louisiana.
317th Airlift Wing (Air Mobility Command): Operates C-130J Super Hercules tactical transport aircraft. One of four worldwide active-duty C-130 locations. Assigned to 18th Air Force. The wing traces its lineage to 1961 when the first C-130A arrived at Dyess.
The base employs more than 5,000 people, making it Taylor County’s largest single employer. Annual community economic impact: $310 million. Total Texas economy contribution: $3.6 billion (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, 2024). Base infrastructure: nearly 200 facilities, 988 family housing units, 13,000+ total military and civilian population on-base.
The Dyess Linear Air Park — adjacent to Arnold Boulevard — displays a collection of historic aircraft including A-10 Thunderbolt IIs and F-16 Fighting Falcons, permanently dedicated in May 2026
Three PCS moves in my career. This was the only company that handed me a binding estimate formatted for TMO before I asked for it. Weight tickets came back clean. Finance office had zero questions. The crew cleared the Dyess gate without a hitch — they’d clearly done this before. If you’re at the 7th BW and getting orders to Barksdale, these are your movers. |
Minot orders in February. I told them about the temperature swing from Abilene to North Dakota and they knew exactly what it meant for packing — extra blanket wrapping on wood furniture, additional protection for electronics. Finance office cleared everything. They knew the DD Form 1351-2 requirements without me explaining them. I recommend them to every 317th family getting North Dakota or any cold-weather orders. |
Moving out of Eagle Heights into a house on the Catclaw Drive corridor. They coordinated with Balfour Beatty on the Housing Office walk-out inspection timing before we spoke about it. Everything was done before move day. Two hours to empty a 3-bedroom. One of the smoothest moves I’ve had since joining. |
Short-notice PCS — less than 2 weeks. Called them the morning orders arrived. They fit me in 10 days out. PPM package was complete: binding estimate, gross and tare weight tickets, all the documentation. Reimbursement covered the whole move plus a net payment. I told every Airman in my squadron about them. |
Retiring after 26 years — the final PCS out of Dyess to Colorado. We had accumulated 3 bedrooms of furniture, memorabilia, and 26 years of military household goods. They did a thorough pre-move inventory, gave us a binding estimate we could plan around, and delivered everything to Colorado in two days without a single item damaged. After 26 years of military moves, this was the best professional experience we’ve had. |
Yes. Our crews have all required documentation for Dyess AFB gate access, including government-issued identification for every crew member and vehicle documentation for our trucks. We contact the Dyess AFB Housing Office and Balfour Beatty Communities (the primary on-base housing manager) minimum 72 hours before your move date to arrange vehicle passes, confirm your housing neighborhood access window, and align move-out inspection timing. On move day, our crew clears the Dyess gate without delays.
Yes. Every binding estimate we produce for Dyess PPM moves is formatted specifically for TMO submission — with all required fields in the format the Dyess TMO office processes without kickback. We know the specific documentation requirements because we have submitted PPM packages to Dyess TMO many times. Beyond the binding estimate, we provide certified weight tickets from FMCSA-registered scales (gross and tare) and guidance on completing DD Form 1351-2 (Travel Voucher or Subvoucher) for finance office submission.
We have executed PCS moves with 7 days’ notice from Dyess AFB. Call us the day your orders arrive — not when you have a confirmed move date or housing secured. Early contact gives us the maximum flexibility to schedule around your timeline. We maintain PCS priority scheduling capacity specifically for military families, which means you are not placed on a general residential waitlist. Amended orders, compressed timelines, and last-minute destination changes are situations we have navigated successfully for Dyess families.
A: 2025 Abilene TX BAH rates (without/with dependents): E-4 $882/$1,122; E-5 $1,005/$1,302; E-6 $1,068/$1,377; E-7 $1,131/$1,422; O-3 $1,431/$1,791; O-4 $1,593/$1,962. Abilene’s cost of living — ranked #15 nationally for affordability — means BAH covers comfortable off-base housing for most pay grades in the Buffalo Gap Road and Catclaw Drive corridor (3-bedroom rentals $1,300–$1,700/month). Wylie ISD area housing runs higher, typically accessible for E-6 and above with dependents. |
The Buffalo Gap Road and Catclaw Drive corridor is the highest-concentration off-base military family area — 10–15 minutes from the Dyess main gate, mostly within Wylie ISD (the preferred school district for families with children). Chimney Rock is popular for its shorter gate commute and Abilene ISD access at lower rental cost. Buck Creek suits E-4/E-5 families watching BAH tightly. The Wylie ISD area (ZIP 79606) is the top choice for school-age families who want TEA A-rated schools and can accept a 15–20 minute gate commute.
Go to safer.fmcsa.dot.gov and enter our DOT number. Confirm: active interstate operating authority, valid cargo and liability insurance, and no out-of-service orders. Our DOT number appears on every document we provide — binding estimate, bill of lading, order for service. We encourage Dyess families to verify before signing anything. Only a small number of moving companies in Abilene hold FMCSA interstate authority — verification takes 60 seconds and protects you from unlicensed operators who cannot legally execute your interstate PCS.
Three school districts serve Dyess AFB families: Abilene ISD (TEA B-rated, covers on-base housing and most of southwest Abilene including Chimney Rock and Buck Creek — Dyess Elementary is AISD-operated, adjacent to base), Wylie ISD (TEA A-rated, covers the 79606 corridor west of Abilene, preferred by most Dyess families with school-age children, 8/10+ GreatSchools ratings), and Jim Ned Consolidated ISD (rural south Taylor County, serves families choosing Buffalo Gap and Tuscola area acreage properties, 20–30 minute gate commute).
Yes. We hold active FMCSA interstate operating authority with a valid DOT number verifiable at fmcsa.dot.gov. Our FMCSA registration covers all interstate PCS moves originating at Dyess AFB or any address in the Abilene TX 79607/79606/79605 corridor. We provide all required FMCSA pre-move documentation for interstate moves: Your Rights and Responsibilities When You Move booklet, written Order for Service, binding estimate, Bill of Lading, and numbered inventory sheet — all before loading begins.
Call us with your PCS orders in hand. Tell us: your destination installation or city, your report date, your current address (on-base or off), home size in bedrooms, pay grade and dependent status (for weight allowance calculation), and whether you are pursuing PPM or GBL authorization. We give you a complete action plan within the call — including projected weight vs. allowance, estimated binding cost, PPM documentation requirements, and scheduling availability. For on-base moves, we begin Housing Office coordination the same day.
Our complete PPM documentation package for Dyess families includes: binding estimate formatted for TMO submission, transport to FMCSA-certified scales for gross weight ticket (loaded truck) and tare weight ticket (empty truck), net weight calculation documentation, and any additional paperwork your specific finance office or TMO requires for DD Form 1351-2 submission. We have processed enough Dyess PPM moves to anticipate common TMO documentation questions before they arise — reducing the chance of reimbursement delays caused by incomplete packages.
We serve all units and all pay grades at Dyess AFB — 7th Bomb Wing (Air Force Global Strike Command, B-1B Lancers), 317th Airlift Wing (Air Mobility Command, C-130J), and all associate units, squadrons, and support groups assigned to the installation. We have moved junior enlisted families from Dyess base housing and senior officers from Fairway Oaks and southwest Abilene. Weight allowance expertise covers every pay grade from E-1 through O-7 and above
Yes. For PCS moves where the receiving installation has specific housing coordination requirements — move-in inspection scheduling, vehicle access to on-base housing areas, housing neighborhood access windows — we contact the receiving installation housing office to confirm delivery timing and access requirements. This is standard practice for all Dyess AFB PCS moves we execute, not a premium add-on. Destinations where we have existing housing office coordination relationships include Barksdale AFB, Sheppard AFB, JBSA San Antonio, and NAS Fort Worth JRB.
Yes. When your PCS out-date at Dyess does not align with your destination housing availability — a common situation when on-base housing at the receiving installation has a waitlist — we coordinate short-term and long-term storage in Abilene or along your route to the destination. Climate-controlled storage is available for electronics, wood furniture, and sensitive household goods. We manage the pickup from your Dyess address, storage, and re-delivery to your destination as a coordinated single operation.
A PPM (Personally Procured Move) means you arrange and manage your own household goods move and receive government reimbursement at 95% of what the government would have paid a commercial carrier. When done correctly with a professional mover and proper weight documentation, PPM reimbursement typically covers full professional moving costs and sometimes pays the service member a net amount above expenses. A GBL (Government Bill of Lading) move means the government arranges and pays a commercial carrier directly — the service member has less control over carrier selection and scheduling but faces no out-of-pocket cost risk. We support both.
Military families do not have the luxury of planning a move at their convenience. PCS orders arrive on a timeline that is not negotiable. What you need is a moving company that picks up the phone the day your orders arrive, tells you exactly what documentation your TMO requires, and schedules your move around the military calendar — not their residential booking preferences. That is what we do for every Dyess AFB family. One call. Same-day response. Complete PCS action plan before we hang up. Binding estimate formatted for TMO. On-base access confirmed before move day. Weight tickets in your hands before you file your travel voucher. Call us now or complete our form. For Dyess families with compressed timelines — call directly. We prioritize PCS orders over every other booking type. |