Keep pets out of the move itself: a closed room, a friend's place, or a day at a kennel. They travel with you in the car, never in the truck. Stick to their normal routine, set up one safe room first at the new home, and keep cats indoors for two to three weeks so they bond to the new place.
Animals are creatures of habit, and a move is the opposite of habit. Doors stand open, furniture disappears, strangers come and go, and their humans are stressed. Most moving-day pet problems come down to two things: stress and escape. Plan for both and the day goes smoothly for them and for you.
Before the move
- Update their tag and microchip details with the new address and your current number. If your pet does bolt, this is what gets them home.
- Keep their routine boringly normal in the days before. Same food, same walks, same spots. Predictability is calming when everything else is changing.
- Pack their things last and unpack them first. Bed, bowls, toys, blanket. Familiar smells are how a pet recognises home, so do not wash everything just before the move.
- Sort out where they will spend moving day ahead of time, whether that is a friend, family, or a kennel or cattery booking.
On moving day
The single best thing you can do is keep your pet away from the action.
- Set up a safe zone, or send them off-site. A closed room with their bed, water, and a sign on the door so nobody opens it, or a day away from the house entirely. Both work. What does not work is a loose, anxious animal near open doors and a busy crew.
- Walk dogs hard before we arrive. A tired dog is a calm dog. Burn the nervous energy early.
- They travel with you, not in the truck. Pets go in your own car, in a carrier or harness. A removals truck is enclosed for furniture and is never a safe place for an animal.
- Keep your own stress in check. Pets mirror your mood. If you are calm, they are calmer. Letting the crew handle the heavy lifting is part of that, it frees you to look after the family.
Where we fit in. The less you have to think about the furniture, the more you can focus on a nervous pet. That is the whole idea behind a managed move: our crew wraps, carries, and loads while you keep the routine steady. Get the rest of the day planned with our Cape Town moving checklist.
Settling in at the new home
- Start small. Set your pet up in one quiet room first, with everything familiar, rather than letting them loose in a strange whole house. Let them widen their territory over a few days.
- Cats stay indoors for two to three weeks. This is the big one. Cats navigate by territory and will try to walk back to the old house if let out too soon. Give them time to claim the new one first.
- Walk dogs around the new neighbourhood on the lead so they learn the area and the way home before any off-lead freedom.
- Check the garden and fences for gaps and escape routes before you trust a new outdoor space.
- Be patient. A few days of hiding, off appetite, or clinginess is normal. Routine and calm bring them back to themselves.
Let us handle the heavy part
You look after the dog and the cat. We will look after the couch, the bed, and everything else, wrapped and moved with care across Cape Town and the Western Cape.