
Sprinter Van Shipping and Commercial Van Transport
A Sprinter van is not always a standard car-shipping job with taller shoes. Roof height, wheelbase, commercial upfits, running condition, pickup access, and delivery timing can all change the plan. AutoStar Transport Express helps you talk through the details, match the van with a practical transport option, and move it without turning your workweek into a logistics meeting that somehow needs three more meetings.
Trusted Commercial Van Transport Support
- Transport experience
- Since 2007
- Vehicles shipped
- 300,000+
- Vetted carriers
- 25,000+
- States served
- 50
Sprinter Van Shipping Means Moving the Van, Not the Cargo
When AutoStar talks about Sprinter van shipping, we mean moving the van as the vehicle being transported. That could be a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter bought out of state, a cargo van headed to a contractor, a passenger van moving between facilities, or a fleet unit going from an upfitter to a business location.
That distinction matters because searches for commercial van transport can drift into freight, moving services, public transportation, or manufacturer information. AutoStar focuses on vehicle transport: getting the van from pickup to delivery with clear quote planning and carrier coordination.
The details matter more than they do with many standard cars. A high roof, long wheelbase, ladder rack, refrigeration setup, wheelchair conversion, shelving, camper conversion, or service body can affect equipment fit and loading. If you are not sure what matters, call before pickup day starts freelancing.
Commercial Vans AutoStar Can Help Transport
Sprinter vans, cargo vans, passenger vans, upfitted work vans, and fleet units all need clear details before pickup.
Mercedes-Benz Sprinter Vans
Sprinter vans vary by roof height, wheelbase, length, and configuration. Share the full van details so the shipment can be reviewed before carrier assignment.
Cargo Vans
Cargo vans used for contractors, delivery routes, service teams, and mobile businesses may include shelving, racks, tools, or added equipment that should be discussed before transport.
Passenger Vans
Passenger vans for schools, churches, nonprofits, shuttle services, corporate transportation, or private owners can be transported when pickup and delivery details are clear.
Cutaway Vans
Cutaway vans and specialty builds can differ in height, weight, and body shape. Photos and measurements help determine the right direction.
Delivery and Fleet Vans
Fleet vans often need schedule coordination, site contacts, and clean handoffs between dealerships, upfitters, yards, branches, or business locations.
Service and Contractor Vans
Ladder racks, toolboxes, partitions, shelves, generators, tanks, and other work equipment can change transport planning. Share those details early.
Upfitted or Modified Vans
Refrigerated vans, wheelchair-accessible vans, camper-style vans, mobile service units, and other custom builds should be reviewed carefully before quote finalization.
Non-Running Commercial Vans
A non-running van may still be transportable when the right loading support is available. Tell AutoStar whether the van rolls, steers, brakes, starts, and has keys.
Have the Van Details? Your Quote Gets Better Fast.
Pickup and delivery ZIP codes.
Preferred pickup and delivery timing.
Van year, make, model, and body configuration.
Roof height, total length, wheelbase, width, and weight when available.
Running condition, including whether the van rolls, steers, brakes, and starts.
Photos from multiple angles.
Upfits or modifications such as ladder racks, shelves, partitions, refrigeration, liftgates, wheelchair equipment, camper conversions, tanks, racks, or oversized tires.
Pickup and delivery access notes for dealerships, auctions, upfitters, fleet yards, job sites, storage lots, gated properties, or tight streets.
Site contact names, appointment rules, gate codes, and loading-area instructions.
What Affects Sprinter Van Shipping Cost?
Sprinter van shipping cost depends on the route, the van, the equipment needed, and the pickup and delivery details.
Longer distances, rural locations, tight delivery zones, limited carrier availability, and route complexity can affect pricing.
Roof height, wheelbase, total length, and clearance can determine whether the van fits standard equipment or needs a different transport setup.
A running van is usually easier to load than one that does not roll, steer, brake, or start. Non-running vans may require additional loading support.
Shelving, ladder racks, liftgates, refrigeration, wheelchair equipment, service bodies, camper conversions, and commercial equipment can affect the transport plan.
Dealerships, auctions, upfitters, job sites, yards, storage lots, low trees, narrow streets, gates, and appointment windows can affect coordination.
Open carrier, enclosed transport, flatbed, lowboy, or other options may be considered depending on the van size, weight, condition, and route.
Flexible timing can help with carrier matching. Expedited needs, seasonal demand, weather, and specialty equipment needs can affect availability.
Commercial Van Transport Options
The right option depends on the van's height, length, weight, condition, and route.
| Attribute | Option | Good Fit | What to Know |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open carrier | Open carrier | Standard vans that fit carrier limits | Often practical when the van's height, length, and clearance work for available equipment. |
| Enclosed transport | Enclosed transport | High-value, custom, classic, or weather-sensitive vans | Availability depends on van height, roof clearance, and trailer fit. |
| Flatbed | Flatbed | Larger, upfitted, or harder-to-fit commercial vans | Useful when deck space, flexible loading, or van dimensions require extra review. |
| Lowboy or specialty equipment | Lowboy or specialty equipment | Tall, heavy, modified, or harder-to-load vans | May be considered when height, weight, or loading angle creates standard equipment concerns. |
| Single-van transport | Single-van transport | One business van, online purchase, or relocation | Good when the move is one unit and timing is specific. |
| Fleet or multi-van coordination | Fleet or multi-van coordination | Dealerships, rental fleets, contractors, delivery companies, and business relocations | Vehicle count, pickup windows, site contacts, and delivery sequencing should be planned early. |
- Open carrier
- Option: Open carrier
- Good Fit: Standard vans that fit carrier limits
- What to Know: Often practical when the van's height, length, and clearance work for available equipment.
- Enclosed transport
- Option: Enclosed transport
- Good Fit: High-value, custom, classic, or weather-sensitive vans
- What to Know: Availability depends on van height, roof clearance, and trailer fit.
- Flatbed
- Option: Flatbed
- Good Fit: Larger, upfitted, or harder-to-fit commercial vans
- What to Know: Useful when deck space, flexible loading, or van dimensions require extra review.
- Lowboy or specialty equipment
- Option: Lowboy or specialty equipment
- Good Fit: Tall, heavy, modified, or harder-to-load vans
- What to Know: May be considered when height, weight, or loading angle creates standard equipment concerns.
- Single-van transport
- Option: Single-van transport
- Good Fit: One business van, online purchase, or relocation
- What to Know: Good when the move is one unit and timing is specific.
- Fleet or multi-van coordination
- Option: Fleet or multi-van coordination
- Good Fit: Dealerships, rental fleets, contractors, delivery companies, and business relocations
- What to Know: Vehicle count, pickup windows, site contacts, and delivery sequencing should be planned early.

Quote Planning
Commercial Van Details and Equipment Fit
Commercial vans can look simple from a distance and get complicated the moment the tape measure comes out. Roof height, wheelbase, upfits, racks, running condition, and site access all help determine the transport plan.
If you are shipping a Sprinter van, cargo van, passenger van, or upfitted work van, call with the details. The goal is to identify practical carrier options before pickup day, not discover a clearance issue while everyone is already standing in the lot.
How Commercial Van Shipping Works
A clear quote-to-delivery process keeps commercial van shipments coordinated.
- 1
Share the Van Details
Tell AutoStar the pickup and delivery locations, van type, dimensions if known, running condition, timing, upfits, and access notes. Photos are especially helpful for high-roof, long-wheelbase, modified, or specialty vans.

- 2
Review Route and Equipment Fit
The shipment is reviewed for route, carrier availability, van size, loading needs, and equipment fit. This is where roof height, wheelbase, racks, shelving, or non-running condition can matter.

- 3
Confirm the Quote and Pickup Plan
Your quote reflects the route, timing, van details, and transport needs. Pickup details are coordinated with the carrier and site contact.

- 4
Inspect, Load, and Transport
At pickup, the van condition is documented. The carrier loads and secures the van, then transports it toward delivery with communication along the way.

- 5
Complete Delivery and Final Inspection
At delivery, inspect the van, confirm condition, and complete the handoff. The best commercial van shipment is organized enough to feel refreshingly uneventful.

Common Commercial Van Shipping Scenarios
Commercial van transport can support purchases, upfitter moves, contractor vehicles, fleet relocation, and specialty van needs.
Dealer or Online Purchase
Bought a Sprinter van, cargo van, or passenger van from a dealer or online seller? AutoStar can help coordinate pickup and delivery around seller availability and site instructions.
Upfitter or Conversion Delivery
Commercial vans often move to or from upfitters for shelving, refrigeration, accessibility equipment, mobile service builds, or camper-style conversions. Share dimensions and modifications before pickup.
Contractor and Service Van Moves
Work vans do not always start or end in easy locations. Job-site access, ladders, racks, tools, appointment windows, and loading space should be discussed early.
Delivery and Fleet Relocation
Businesses moving delivery vans, route vans, or service units between branches can reduce downtime by planning contacts, timing, vehicle count, and delivery sequence upfront.
Passenger Van Transport
Churches, schools, nonprofits, shuttle operators, and private owners may need passenger vans moved without adding road miles or creating a long-distance driving problem.
Non-Running or Specialty Vans
If the van does not run, steer, brake, or roll, say so before dispatch. That detail can change the loading plan quickly.
How to Prepare a Sprinter or Commercial Van for Pickup
Remove loose personal items and unsecured cargo.
Confirm whether tools, equipment, or cargo must be removed before transport.
Secure or remove loose racks, ladders, covers, ramps, detachable parts, and accessories.
Share accurate roof height, total length, wheelbase, and weight when available.
Take photos before pickup.
Confirm whether the van runs, rolls, steers, and brakes.
Keep fuel low unless instructed otherwise.
Make sure the van is clean enough for inspection.
Have keys available for the driver.
Confirm pickup and delivery contacts.
Share gate codes, appointment rules, upfitter instructions, auction details, yard access, and loading-area notes.
Safety, Insurance, and Carrier Vetting
Commercial vans are often business assets. The transport process should include clear coordination, carrier vetting, documented pickup and delivery inspections, and communication from quote through delivery.
AutoStar works with a vetted carrier network and helps coordinate commercial van transport details before dispatch. Vehicles are transported by licensed and insured carriers, and inspections at pickup and delivery help document condition.
AutoStar Transport Express is FMCSA Licensed - MC-600908 and DOT Registered - USDOT-2239014.
Why Commercial Van Owners Call AutoStar
Commercial Van Transport Customer Reviews
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Sprinter Van Shipping Questions, Answered
Sprinter van shipping cost depends on the route, van height, length, weight, running condition, upfits, pickup access, delivery access, timing, and equipment needs. A route-specific quote is the safest way to price the shipment.
AutoStar can help coordinate transport for Mercedes-Benz Sprinter vans when the route, dimensions, condition, access, and equipment fit are clear. High-roof, extended, or upfitted vans should be reviewed before dispatch.
High-roof or extended-wheelbase Sprinter vans may be transportable, but their dimensions matter. Share roof height, total length, wheelbase, weight, photos, and any upfits so the shipment can be reviewed correctly.
Helpful details include pickup and delivery ZIP codes, van year/make/model, roof height, total length, wheelbase, weight, running condition, photos, upfits, timing, and pickup or delivery access notes.
Some commercial vans may fit standard open transport, while taller, longer, heavier, modified, or non-running vans may need a different setup. The right direction depends on the van and route.
Different equipment may be considered when van height, length, weight, value, condition, modifications, or loading requirements make standard transport a poor fit. AutoStar can help review the details before pickup.
AutoStar can help review transport needs for many commercial van types, including cargo vans, passenger vans, cutaway vans, delivery vans, service vans, upfitted vans, and fleet vans.
AutoStar can help review multi-van or fleet transport needs. Share the number of vans, vehicle details, pickup location, delivery location, timing, and site-contact information so the move can be planned clearly.
Non-running commercial vans may be transportable when the right loading support is available. Tell AutoStar whether the van rolls, steers, brakes, starts, and has keys before the quote is finalized.
Loose items, cargo, and business equipment can create weight, safety, and carrier-acceptance issues. Ask AutoStar what should be removed or secured before pickup.
Vehicles are transported by licensed and insured carriers. Pickup and delivery inspections help document van condition at both ends of the shipment.
Timing depends on route, distance, carrier availability, van size, equipment needs, running condition, and pickup or delivery access. Flexible timing can help when specialty equipment is needed.
Remove loose items, confirm whether business equipment must be removed, secure accessories, take photos, share accurate dimensions, confirm running condition, keep keys ready, and provide site-access instructions.
AutoStar can help review van moves for dealers, online purchases, upfitters, contractors, delivery companies, fleet managers, nonprofits, and business locations. Share the route, van details, timing, and contacts.
Yes. Commercial van transport means the van itself is being shipped as the vehicle. Freight or moving services usually involve transporting goods, cargo, furniture, or pallets.
Ready to Ship a Sprinter or Commercial Van?
If the van is tall, modified, work-ready, non-running, fleet-owned, or simply too important to leave to guesswork, call AutoStar. We will help you talk through the details and start a route-specific quote.
- Since 2007
- 300,000+ Vehicles Shipped
- 25,000+ Vetted Carriers
- No Upfront Payment Required

BBB Top Rated for Over 19+ Years
Inc5000 Accredited
FMCSA MC: 600908
U.S. DOT 2239014
