The week before your move comes down to five priorities: confirming your moving crew, filing your USPS change of address, scheduling utility transfers, finishing all packing, and defrosting your refrigerator. Handle these five in order and everything else — labeling, parking permits, essentials boxes — fits naturally around them.
This guide breaks down exactly what to do each day of that final week, why the order matters, and which mistakes cost Sacramento movers the most time and money. If you’d rather hand off the heavy lifting, Service Pro Movers has helped more than 3000 Sacramento-area households through this exact week.
Do this first, seven days out, not the night before.
Call to confirm your crew’s arrival window, team size, and the exact addresses for pickup and drop-off. Sacramento’s summer moving season (May–September) fills up fast, and schedules sometimes shift when a company is juggling multiple jobs across the I-80 and Highway 99 corridors. A five-minute call prevents a no-show or a scheduling mix-up.
What to confirm on the call:
If your moving date changed unexpectedly, don’t panic — last-minute moving services exist for exactly this situation, with crews that can deploy on short notice.
Common mistake: Assuming your original booking email is enough. A phone confirmation with your crew leader is the only reliable proof you have a truck and team locked in for moving day.
Submit this online at least 7–10 days before your move date, not after.
Go to the USPS Change of Address portal, pay the $1.10 identity-verification fee, and select your forwarding start date. Mail forwarding typically takes 7–10 business days to activate, which is why waiting until moving week itself means you’ll have a gap with no forwarding coverage.
Beyond USPS, update these separately — USPS forwarding does not update your address with these organizations automatically:
| Account Type | Where to Update |
| Bank & credit cards | Online banking portal or app |
| DMV / vehicle registration | California DMV online services |
| Voter registration | California Secretary of State portal |
| Insurance (auto, renters, health) | Provider’s website or agent |
| Subscriptions & deliveries | Individual account settings |
| Employer / payroll | HR department directly |
Sacramento-specific note: If you’re moving within Sacramento County but crossing school district lines (e.g., from Sacramento City Unified to Elk Grove Unified), notify your child’s school separately — district changes aren’t triggered by USPS forwarding.

Set shut-off and start dates now so you’re never without power, water, or internet.
At your old address: Schedule disconnection for the day after your move, not the same day — this gives you a buffer if the move runs long.
At your new address: Schedule activation for the day before you arrive, so lights and internet work the moment you walk in.
| Utility | Sacramento Provider | Lead Time Needed |
| Electricity/Gas | SMUD (Sacramento Municipal Utility District) | 3–5 business days |
| Water/Sewer | City of Sacramento Utilities | 3–5 business days |
| Internet | Comcast Xfinity, AT&T, or local ISP | 5–7 business days (longer if a technician visit is required) |
| Trash/Recycling | City of Sacramento or contracted hauler | Automatically tied to address if within city limits |
Common mistake: Forgetting that SMUD requires proof of residency (lease or deed) to activate service, which can delay setup if submitted too close to moving day.
By the start of your final week, packing should be at least 80% done. The last seven days are for finishing, not starting.
Daily packing pace for the final week:
Labeling system that actually works: Label each box with the destination room and a one-word content summary (e.g., “Kitchen – Utensils,” not just “Kitchen”). This cuts unpacking time significantly because your crew can place boxes directly in the correct room without asking.
If the final-week packing pace feels unrealistic with everything else going on, Service Pro Movers’ packing and moving services can take over some or all of it — from wrapping fragile items to fully packing a room on request. Our team also handles full-service packing and moving from start to finish if you’d rather not touch a box at all.
Build your essentials box separately from the moving truck. Pack it last, keep it with you in your car, and include:
Do this 24 hours before moving day, not the morning of.
Refrigerator/freezer: Empty it completely, unplug it, and let it defrost with towels underneath to catch water. Prop the doors open so it doesn’t develop mold or odor during transit. A fridge that’s still cold or icy when your crew loads it risks water damage to your other belongings and can crack the compressor if tilted.
Washing machine: Run a final cycle, then disconnect and drain the hoses. Coil them and tape them to the machine so nothing leaks in the truck.
Water heater or gas appliances: If you’re taking a gas dryer or water heater, this needs a professional disconnect — don’t attempt it yourself unless you’re qualified, since Sacramento building codes require proper gas line handling. Let your crew leader know in advance so it’s accounted for on the schedule.
The week before your move is about locking in logistics, not scrambling. Confirm your crew first, file your change of address early, schedule utilities with buffer days, finish packing with a clear labeling system, and defrost your fridge the day before. Everything else — parking permits, documentation, essentials boxes — supports these five priorities.
Confirm your moving crew, file your USPS change of address, and schedule your utility transfers. These three tasks have lead times of several days, so starting them a week out avoids last-minute gaps.
At least 7–10 business days before your move, since mail forwarding takes that long to activate after submission.
About 24 hours before moving day. This gives it enough time to fully defrost and dry so it doesn’t leak or grow mold during transport.
The day after. This gives you a buffer in case the move takes longer than planned and you need power, water, or internet at your old place a little longer.
Medications, phone chargers, toiletries, a change of clothes, basic tools, pet supplies, and toilet paper — anything you’d need in the first 24–48 hours without unpacking.
At least 80%. The final week should be for finishing non-essential rooms and packing your last-used items, not starting from scratch. If you’re behind, packing and moving services can help you catch up quickly.
If you live in an apartment building or a dense neighborhood like Midtown or Downtown, yes — contact your property manager or the City of Sacramento for temporary parking permits.
Write the destination room and a short content summary on each box (e.g., “Bedroom – Linens”), so boxes go directly to the right room without questions.
Yes. Run a final cycle, disconnect the hoses, drain them fully, and tape them to the machine to prevent leaks during transport.
SMUD (Sacramento Municipal Utility District) handles electricity and gas for most of the Sacramento area; confirm your specific provider based on your new address.
Through the California Secretary of State’s online voter registration portal — this is separate from your USPS change of address.
Every room in both your old and new home, focusing on existing damage, wall condition, and appliance state. This protects your security deposit and provides evidence for any disputes.
No — gas appliance disconnection should be handled by a licensed professional to meet safety codes and avoid gas leaks.
Assuming an online booking confirmation is enough without a follow-up call, and waiting until the last day to defrost the fridge or drain appliances, both of which cause avoidable delays.
5–7 business days, since providers often need a technician visit that requires scheduling in advance, especially during peak moving season.
Moving within Sacramento or planning a long-distance move? The core checklist stays the same, but timelines can shift depending on your building requirements and utility providers. Contact Service Pro Movers to confirm your schedule, or check our moving tips and FAQ for more guides like this one.