Moving to or from Maine?
Acadia's rocky coast, 3,500 miles of Atlantic shoreline, lobster everywhere, and some of the cleanest air and darkest night skies on the East Coast. Vacationland is becoming a year-round destination.
- #41 Population rank
- 1,400,000 Residents
- Portland Largest city
- Augusta State capital
Why people move to Maine.
- Vacationland — Maine's license-plate motto captures the identity
- Lobster — Maine produces more than 80% of the US lobster catch
- Acadia National Park — the oldest national park east of the Mississippi
- 3,500+ miles of coastline — more than California despite being a small state (because of all the coves and inlets)
- Stephen King's home state — Bangor is the thinly-veiled 'Derry' of many novels
- Oldest median age of any US state — Maine is aging faster than it's growing
Where people spend their time.
- Acadia National Park Mount Desert Island
- Portland Head Light Cape Elizabeth
- Bar Harbor Mount Desert Island
- L.L. Bean Flagship Store Freeport
- Kennebunkport Southern Coast
- Mount Katahdin & Baxter State Park North Central ME
- Moosehead Lake Greenville
- Old Orchard Beach Saco Bay
Biggest cities in Maine.
Where most of Maine's moves originate and terminate.
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Portland Pop. 68,000
Largest ME city; one of the best food scenes per capita in the US
Explore Portland guide -
Lewiston Pop. 38,000
Central Maine; former mill city; Franco-American heritage
Explore Lewiston guide -
Bangor Pop. 32,000
Eastern Maine; Stephen King's hometown; logging and paper mill heritage
Explore Bangor guide -
South Portland Pop. 27,000
Across Casco Bay from Portland; Maine Mall
Explore South Portland guide -
Auburn Pop. 24,000
Twin city with Lewiston; Androscoggin River
Explore Auburn guide -
Biddeford Pop. 22,000
York County; revitalizing mill-town downtown
Explore Biddeford guide -
Sanford Pop. 21,000
York County; western Maine hub
Explore Sanford guide -
Augusta Pop. 19,000
State capital; Kennebec River; government and healthcare
Explore Augusta guide
Where Maine movers come from and go to.
Most common moves to Maine from:
Most common moves out of Maine to:
Planning a Maine move.
Humid continental. Cold, snowy winters — Northern Maine regularly sees -20°F and 80+ inches of annual snow. Short, mild summers; often spectacular. Nor'easters are frequent from November through April. Coastal Maine is moderated by the Atlantic; interior and northern Maine is genuinely harsh in winter. Black fly season in late May and early June is its own kind of seasonal weather.
- Maine winter moves are challenging in a way most states aren't. November through April brings heavy snow, frigid temperatures, and Nor'easters. Trucks have mechanical issues in deep cold; items can freeze in transit. Build 2-day weather buffers and confirm cold-weather protocols with your mover.
- Coastal Maine is dotted with historic fishing and shipbuilding towns — narrow streets, tight corners, colonial-era homes with low ceilings. Portland and the Midcoast especially require careful walkthroughs. Ask your mover about historic-home experience.
- Northern Maine is remote. Distances are long, movers are thin on the ground, and Route 1 runs the length of the state without a faster alternative. Moves to Aroostook County or the Allagash can cost more per mile than southern Maine work.
- Maine's mover community is small but experienced — many companies are family-owned and know every inlet and hollow. Tourist-season peak (Memorial Day through Labor Day) tightens supply significantly along the coast.
Intrastate household-goods movers in Maine must be licensed by the Maine Public Utilities Commission (PUC) and hold a valid Class III motor carrier certificate. Verify any ME mover's license at the Maine PUC public lookup before signing. Interstate movers also need a USDOT number from the FMCSA.
Moving in Maine: FAQ.
How much does it cost to move within Maine?
Portland and southern Maine local moves run $800–$2,700 for a 1–2 bedroom and $2,600–$6,000 for a 3–4 bedroom. Northern and coastal-resort Maine moves carry premiums during summer tourism season. Bangor and interior Maine are 15–25% cheaper year-round.
How bad are Maine winter moves?
Genuinely difficult, especially in northern and interior Maine. January–February brings subzero temperatures, heavy snowfall, and ice storms. Experienced Maine movers handle winter work routinely but build 2-day weather buffers into schedules. Coastal southern Maine (Portland, Kittery) is milder but still gets regular Nor'easters.
Do Maine movers need a state license?
Yes. Household-goods movers operating within Maine must be licensed by the Maine Public Utilities Commission (PUC). Always verify a mover's license before booking. Unlicensed movers are rare in the small Maine market, but occasionally appear in the Portland area — verify first.
Why is Maine suddenly a destination?
COVID-era remote work reshaped the state's demographics. Portland's food scene draws young professionals; coastal Maine draws retirees and second-home-to-primary-home transplants from the Northeast Corridor. Housing prices have climbed sharply in the past five years — Portland especially. Maine remains cheaper than MA or CT but the gap has narrowed.
When's the best time to move to Maine?
May–June (before black fly season settles in) and September–October (before winter). Summer is peak tourism season — pricing spikes and traffic slows down coastal routes. Winter is doable but weather-dependent; plan flexibly.
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