Best way to move from London to Berlin: transport, cost and timing
Plan your move from London to Berlin with clear insight into cost, timing, transport options and customs handling.
Plan your London → Berlin move
Keep London and Berlin selected and move straight into the planner.
1,050–1,200 km
Fast crossing + long inland
Direct preferred
Aachen / inland
Typical cost for this route
Based on route depth, channel crossing, mainland delivery distance and destination access.
Why is moving from London to Berlin different?
London gets you to the crossing quickly, but Berlin keeps the route heavy after mainland entry and longer inland delivery.
Route shape
This corridor starts fast on the UK side and becomes distance-heavy later across Germany.
Transport effect
Direct transport usually fits better because the longer inland leg makes coordination tighter.
Planning implication
The key decision is not just the crossing but how customs and the Berlin delivery phase are sequenced afterwards.
Direct vs shared transport on this route
Direct transport
Best fit when timing matters or when the move is too large to leave to a multi-stop delivery chain.
Shared / groupage
Possible, but the longer Germany-side leg makes shared timing less predictable than on western or northern routes.
Planner-first
This corridor should be planned around crossing choice, T1 discharge timing and Berlin-side access from the start.
What affects the cost of moving from London to Berlin?
Moving from London to Berlin is priced mainly by the longer Germany-side inland delivery after the crossing.
Typical move ranges
| Move type | Typical range | What drives pricing here |
|---|---|---|
| Small move | €1,800 – €3,200 | Longer Germany-side inland delivery distance |
| Standard move | €3,000 – €5,500 | Fuel, route length and delivery sequencing after entry |
| Full household move | €5,000+ | Route depth across Germany and timing control |
How long does it take to move to Berlin from London?
When moving from London to Berlin, timing pressure usually appears after mainland entry once the longer inland delivery begins.
2–3 days
Possible when departure, crossing and final delivery sequence align cleanly.
3–5 days
The most realistic range once route coordination and customs handling are included.
5–7+ days
Delays usually appear later in the route when inland scheduling and final delivery access tighten.
Customs handling on this route
Each move runs under a T1 transit procedure together with the household goods documentation, including form 0350.
The operational question is where the T1 is discharged. On this corridor that is often Aachen after Belgium-side entry, or the inland customs office near Berlin if the route is structured that way in advance.
The T1 has to be discharged within roughly 5–8 days after mainland entry, so customs planning has to sit inside the route plan rather than outside it.
For London to Berlin, customs timing matters because the corridor still carries a long inland Germany delivery phase after the crossing is already complete.
What affects this move
London
Crossing access can be fast, but departure congestion, loading access and slot timing still shape the early route.
Berlin
The longer inland leg, urban delivery access and possible parking constraints shape the final stage of the move.
What can delay a move from London to Berlin?
Crossing rhythm
A quick start can still be lost if crossing timing is poorly aligned with the rest of the route.
Customs sequencing
If T1 discharge is not planned early, the route can lose time later when the inland schedule becomes tighter.
Final delivery access
Berlin-side access and unloading coordination can slow the final delivery stage even after the long route is complete.
Questions about this route
How long does a London to Berlin move usually take?
Most moves sit inside the 3–5 day range once route structure, customs and final delivery are included.
Is direct transport better on the London to Berlin route?
Usually yes, because the longer inland Germany section rewards cleaner timing and fewer coordination points.
Where is customs usually handled on this corridor?
Usually in Aachen or at the inland customs office near Berlin, depending on how the route is planned.
Plan the next step
Customs guide
Understand T1 discharge, form 0350 and route-linked customs timing.
Read customs guideBuild this corridor properly
What determines success on this corridor is what happens after mainland entry, not just how fast the crossing is.