Mobile home movers in Iredell County, NC work one of the best-positioned counties in the state for an oversize haul. Iredell sits at the crossing of Interstate 40 and Interstate 77 — the east–west and north–south interstates meet right at Statesville — which makes nearly any site in the county reachable on a four-lane within minutes. Mobile Home Mover Pro is a licensed manufactured-home mover serving all of Iredell County, from the county seat at Statesville to the booming Lake Norman town of Mooresville, hauling single-wides, double-wides, and modular sections across the county and over the state line.
What an Iredell County move actually costs
A single-wide in-state move runs $3,000–$8,000 and a double-wide $7,000–$15,000; a cross-state relocation can reach $20,000–$25,000 depending on distance and section count. Iredell's two-interstate position works in your favor — the I-40/I-77 junction means crews rarely burn hours on long rural detours to reach a four-lane. The levers that genuinely move an Iredell quote are total distance, unit width, the number of escorts the route requires, and the condition of the existing setup. A clean single-wide on standard piers is cheap to free; a home tied to a wraparound deck, hard-piped utilities, or a lakeside lot with a steep grade takes more labor before it ever rolls. For the full breakdown, read our guide on how much it costs to move a mobile home, then get a hard number with a 24-hour written quote. Long cross-state runs are covered in moving a mobile home across state lines.
The towns and routes: Statesville, Mooresville, I-40 and I-77
Iredell County is a genuine highway crossroads, and the road a crew picks decides the escort bill. I-40 is the east–west workhorse — west toward mobile home movers in Hickory and the Catawba Valley, east toward Statesville's connector to the Triad. I-77 is the north–south spine — south through Mooresville and Lake Norman toward Charlotte and the South Carolina line, north toward the Virginia state line and the mountains. Off the interstates, US 21, US 64, and US 70 feed the rural two-lanes out to Troutman, Harmony, Union Grove, and the lakeside lots. The hazards here aren't mountain grades — they're the rail underpasses around downtown Statesville, the weight-posted bridges over the South Yadkin River and the arms of Lake Norman, and the tight, winding streets in the lake communities where an overhanging limb catches a 14-foot-tall load. A crew lead pre-drives the route before we commit to a date.
How Iredell County handles mobile-home moving permits
North Carolina gates every move through the county tax office, and Iredell County runs its permitting on a modern online system. Under N.C.G.S. § 105-316.1, you cannot move a manufactured home on a public road until the Iredell County tax office verifies that property taxes on the home are paid and a moving permit is issued. Iredell County runs its permits through the EnerGov/Tyler self-service portal at selfservice.iredellcountync.gov — the same Tyler EnerGov platform several neighboring Piedmont counties use — so the transport/moving permit is applied for and tracked online rather than only at a counter. The Iredell County permit portal lists more than 963 manufactured-home permits on record, so before we quote we already know how the county codes a job like yours and what the EnerGov queue expects. On top of the county permit, the hauled home is an oversize load, so NCDOT requires a permit under NCDOT Publication MH-2 that fixes the legal route, the daylight travel window, and how many certified escorts ride front and rear. Mobile Home Mover Pro files the Iredell County EnerGov permit, pulls the NCDOT MH-2 permit, and coordinates the utility disconnect — so the move stays legal end to end. For the statewide picture, see our guides on the mobile home moving permit and North Carolina mobile home moving laws.
The move: disconnect, haul, set, level, and anchor
The haul is only half the job. Once the EnerGov and NCDOT permits clear, our crew runs the move end to end: disconnect the utilities and break the home down off its blocking, haul it on the permitted route inside the daylight travel window with escorts front and rear, then set it on the new pad. On the new site we re-block the piers, level the chassis to a 1/4-inch tolerance, bolt up the marriage line on multi-section homes, and re-anchor. The Piedmont sits in HUD Wind Zone I, so anchoring follows the federal frame-tie and auger-anchor standard at HUD 24 CFR Part 3280, Subpart G — Iredell is an inland Piedmont county, not coastal, so it does not carry the higher Wind Zone II coastal anchoring load. We finish with mobile home setup, leveling, and anchoring the same week the home lands. Need just the transport leg? See mobile home transport. Iredell County anchors our central-Piedmont coverage for mobile home transport across NC — from the Catawba Valley to Lake Norman.
Storms, FEMA, and manufactured homes in Iredell County
Iredell County, NC has been included in 20 federal disaster declarations for storms and flooding since 1973 — among them Tropical Storm Debby (2024), Hurricane Helene (2024), and Hurricane Ian (2023). Manufactured homes take the worst of every major storm — and each one puts homes on the move: damaged single- and double-wides hauled off, replacement units delivered, and families relocated to safer ground. When the wind passes, our crew is who you call to move, set, or remove a manufactured home in Iredell County. (Source: FEMA OpenFEMA disaster-declaration data.)