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Moving into an Apartment: Lifts, Parking Permits and Building Rules

Moving into an Apartment

Moving into an apartment comes with a different set of challenges to moving into a house. There's no wide driveway to back a truck into, no front lawn to stack boxes on while you figure out the layout, and often, a building manager with a very specific set of rules about when and how you're allowed to move at all. None of it is complicated once you know what to expect, but it catches a lot of people out if they haven't planned for it.

More Australians are living this way than ever before. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics' 2021 Census, apartments now account for 16 per cent of all private dwellings nationally, and that share has been steadily climbing for years (Australian Bureau of Statistics, abs.gov.au). Apartment moves are becoming the norm rather than the exception, which makes it worth getting the details right.

Start with the building, not the boxes

Before you even think about packing, the first call should be to your new building's management or strata office. Apartment buildings almost always have specific rules about moving day, and finding out late is how moves go from straightforward to stressful.

Things worth asking before your moving date:

  • Is there a dedicated moving lift, or will you be sharing the regular passenger lift with residents?
  • Are there specific time slots or days when moves are allowed?
  • Is there a loading dock, and does it need to be booked in advance?
  • Do you need to provide proof of insurance or a certificate of currency from your removalist?
  • Is there a bond or deposit required to cover potential damage to common areas during the move?


Some buildings are relaxed about all of this. Others have strict booking systems, with moves only permitted during certain hours on weekdays, lift padding that must be installed beforehand, and a building manager who needs to sign off before anyone touches a trolley. Either way, knowing this a week ahead of time means you can plan your moving day properly instead of discovering the rules when a
Brisbane removalist services truck is already double-parked outside.

Lifts: the most common bottleneck on moving day

The lift is usually the slowest part of any apartment move, and it's worth being realistic about how much time it adds. A house move involves carrying things a short distance to a truck. An apartment move involves carrying things to a lift, waiting for the lift, loading the lift, unloading the lift, and then carrying things the rest of the way — multiplied by every single trip.

A few things make this faster and less frustrating:

  • Book a dedicated lift if one's available. Sharing the main lift with other residents during a move slows everything down and annoys your neighbours in equal measure.
  • Protect the lift interior. Many buildings require padding or covers on the lift walls and floor before a move begins. Check whether the building provides this or whether your removalist needs to bring their own.
  • Plan your load order. Heavy or bulky items should go first while everyone's fresh, with smaller boxes filling in around them on later trips.
  • Confirm lift size limits. Larger furniture, like couches or wardrobes, may need to go up a stairwell or be partially disassembled if the lift can't fit them.


Parking permits: don't assume you can just pull up

This is one of the most common moving day headaches in apartment living, particularly in busy inner-city areas. Unlike a house, where a truck can usually park out the front, apartment buildings often sit on streets with permit parking, loading zone restrictions, or simply no space to stop at all.

Before moving day:

  • Check whether your building has a designated loading zone, and whether it needs to be booked through the building manager or local council.
  • Look into temporary parking permits. Many local councils offer short-term permits for moving trucks, but they often need to be applied for several days in advance.
  • Confirm street restrictions around your building, including clearway times and any restrictions that apply during business hours.
  • Have a backup plan. If the loading zone is occupied or the permit falls through, know where the nearest legal parking is and how far it is to carry items if needed.


This is exactly the kind of detail worth raising with your removalist ahead of time. A
highly-rated QLD removalist who works regularly in apartment buildings will usually know the parking quirks of a particular suburb or building already, which can save you the hassle of figuring it out yourself.

Building rules that catch people out

Beyond lifts and parking, most apartment buildings have a handful of additional rules worth checking in advance:

  • Moving hours. Many buildings restrict moves to weekdays only, or set specific start and finish times to avoid disturbing other residents.
  • Common area protection. Corridors, lobby floors and lift interiors may need protective covering, and damage during a move is sometimes charged back to the resident.
  • Noise restrictions. Some buildings have rules around moving equipment, trolleys and even how loudly boxes can be dropped during certain hours.
  • Visitor and contractor access. Removalists may need to be registered as visitors or contractors with building security before they're allowed in.
  • Bin and waste disposal rules. Flattened boxes and packing waste often can't just be left in common areas, and some buildings have specific disposal points or collection days.


Why local knowledge matters

Every apartment building has its own quirks, and a removalist who's worked in your specific area before will usually know what to expect. A removalist familiar with the city's busier apartment precincts, or a reliable Brisbane Southside removalist who regularly handles moves around the inner-city towers in that area, will often have a much smoother run simply because they've dealt with similar buildings and similar street layouts before.

The bottom line

Apartment moves come with extra logistics that house moves don't — lifts, permits, booking systems and building rules all need to be sorted out ahead of time, not figured out on the day. A quick call to building management, a bit of research into parking restrictions, and a removalist who knows the local area will turn what could be a stressful day into a fairly straightforward one.

Find out more. Get in touch with The Times.

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