Washington to Arizona Car Shipping Cost
What it actually costs to ship a car from Washington to Arizona in 2026-07: an honest 924-1,705 dollar range for open transport, built from published market pricing.
Representative lane: Seattle, WA to Phoenix, AZ (1,421 mi). Washington and Arizona are large states; your exact pickup and drop-off cities will shift the distance and price somewhat.

Estimated cost
$924 – $1,705
Open transport · 1,421 mi
Enclosed: $1,201 – $2,728
Typical transit: 3–7 days
This is an honest estimate built from published market pricing, not a locked quote from any single carrier or broker. Rates as of 2026-07, reviewed 2026-07-02.
An honest range for a Seattle, WA to Phoenix, AZ car shipment runs $924 to $1,705 on an open carrier, covering 1,421 miles. Enclosed transport runs $1,201 to $2,728 for the same lane. That’s a real range, not a lowball number designed to get your phone number.
Why this lane costs what it costs
Washington to Arizona is a long-haul move, and long hauls actually cost less per mile than short ones. A carrier moving your car 1,421 miles spreads its fixed costs (fuel, driver time, tolls) across a lot of pavement, so the per-mile rate drops compared to a 300-mile move across one state. Don’t be surprised if a shorter in-state quote looks more expensive per mile than this cross-country lane. That’s normal, not a mistake.
Demand on this lane matters too. Snowbird season pushes some Washington-Arizona routes up 10-25% as retirees move south for winter and back north in spring. If your timing lines up with peak season, expect the top of the range, not the bottom.
Phoenix is a snowbird destination, so that seasonal swing isn’t theoretical here. The $924 to $1,705 spread on a single 1,421-mile lane is nearly a factor of two, and distance isn’t what moves you inside it. Timing does, along with how well your car fits a truck already running this corridor.

How long does this route take?
Typical transit for this distance runs 3-7 days, depending on the carrier’s route and how many other stops it makes along the way. A truck moving your car door-to-door on its own is faster than one picking up and dropping off other vehicles en route. More stops, more days.
That window covers the drive, not the wait before it. Booking and dispatch come first, and a carrier has to actually be running this lane when you need it. If you have a hard date on the Phoenix end, count backward generously instead of assuming the truck leaves the day you book. Our transit-time guide covers how the schedule comes together on longer lanes.

Open or enclosed on this lane?
The gap is real money: $924 to $1,705 open against $1,201 to $2,728 enclosed on the same 1,421 miles. The enclosed ceiling sits well above the open ceiling, and that spread is the decision.
For most cars, open transport is the sane default and the reason the low end of this lane exists at all. Enclosed earns its premium on a specific kind of vehicle, where road grime and rock chips aren’t acceptable. If you’re weighing it, the open vs. enclosed comparison lays out the tradeoff, and classic car transport covers the case where enclosed is the obvious call.
Vehicle type shifts the number inside either range too. A full-size pickup takes more deck space than a sedan and prices accordingly, which the truck shipping guide gets into.

What to check before booking
Get quotes from more than one source and compare them against this range. A quote noticeably below $924 for this lane (roughly 25% under is the classic tell) isn’t a bargain, it’s usually the opening move in a lowball-then-raise game. Ask who the actual carrier is before you pay a deposit. Read how the deposit scam works before you hand over any money.
Sometimes a low quote is legitimate: a carrier with a truck already headed to Phoenix and one empty slot will price to fill it. The difference is that a real carrier can tell you which truck, which driver, and when. A broker who can’t name any of that is quoting a number, not a move.
Flexible pickup dates help the carrier slot your car into a truck that’s already running this route, which keeps you closer to the low end. Demanding a specific day pushes you toward the high end or beyond.
Shipping out of Seattle in a different direction? The Seattle to Denver lane prices a comparable long haul east.
