Movers run a high-comp, heavy-lifting, often interstate-licensed workforce where workers comp pool placement, multi-state SUTA, DOT compliance for any operation using commercial vehicles, and labor-day-style seasonal scaling shape the PEO comparison. This page walks the buyer-side angle for movers owners shopping providers.
Three drivers shape the PEO comparison for movers:
Workers comp on a high-claim trade. Moving and heavy-lifting operations carry significant comp exposure — lifting strain, dropped-item injuries, vehicle injuries, slip-trip-fall on stairs and ramps. Pool placement through a PEO can stabilize comp pricing meaningfully, especially for operators with claim history.
Multi-state expansion + interstate authority. Interstate moves require ICC/FMCSA authority (USDOT number, MC number). The personnel-side compliance — driver-qualification files, drug-and-alcohol testing program documentation, hours-of-service tracking where applicable — is real admin load. PEO HRIS systems with moving-industry experience handle the documentation.
Seasonal scaling for peak moving months. May–September pulls 2–3x off-peak crew sizes. PEO payroll handles the cycle cleanly.
NCCI 7219 (commonly used for moving operations, though some states map differently) for the moving crews. Self-storage operations map differently (often 8017 or 8395). Office and admin on 8810. Quality PEOs verify state-specific NCCI mapping.
Mod handling matters here — movers mod rates often run high due to lifting and vehicle exposure. Pool placement through a PEO frequently helps. Confirm scenario during demo and walk through the underwriting honestly.
Replacing experienced crew leads costs $5K–$15K. For senior dispatch / operations staff, replacement costs run higher.
PEO pool benefits: group health, dental, vision, short-term disability (highly relevant for the lifting-injury risk), 401(k) with modest match, EAP. For driver staff, drug-and-alcohol testing program coordination matters — confirm PEO support during demo.
Under 15 W-2 employees: payroll software often works for single-location operations. At 15–60 W-2 employees with multi-state operations, PEO economics usually pay back — comp pool + DOT compliance + multi-state SUTA. Above 60, in-house HR with broker becomes economic.
PEO HRIS systems track driver-qualification files, MVR documentation, drug-and-alcohol testing program records, hours-of-service tracking where applicable. Actual ICC/FMCSA authority management and interstate licensing stays with your in-house compliance lead.
Often yes — when your mod is high, pool placement gets you rates closer to industry average rather than your individually-experienced rate. The honest version: low-claim operations might give up credit on pool placement; high-claim operations usually benefit. Walk through underwriting honestly during demo.
Standard — PEO payroll handles seasonal scaling. Confirm COBRA / state continuation mechanics align with your peak-vs-off-season cycle.
Self-storage has lighter comp exposure than moving (NCCI 8017 vs 7219 typically). Office staff dominate the W-2 footprint. PEO economics often work earlier for self-storage given the cleaner claim profile.
If you're shopping PEOs for the topic on this page, these adjacent verticals share workforce, regulatory, or buyer dynamics worth comparing alongside it.
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