Brushy Creek Movers
Let Royal Moving & Storage in Brushy Creek, TX handle your move with care, planning, and Central Texas expertise.
Get your FREE quote
Let Royal Moving & Storage in Brushy Creek, TX handle your move with care, planning, and Central Texas expertise.
4.9/5
27,819 reviews
50K+
Moves completed
3+
Years in AUS
AS REVIEWED ON
Get your FREE quote
Brushy Creek is named for the waterway that threads through the heart of Williamson County, and that creek carries a deep history. Tonkawa and other peoples camped and hunted along it for centuries, the Chisholm Trail crossed it, and in 1839, one of the largest frontier battles in the area was fought on its banks. The water came first; the community took its name from it.
Today, Brushy Creek is a thriving suburban community wedged between Cedar Park and Round Rock, technically unincorporated but very much its own place. Master-planned neighborhoods like Brushy Creek, Highland Horizon, and Sendero Springs fill the rolling land north of the creek, and the Brushy Creek Regional Trail links parks, lakes, and greenbelts across the area.
Moving here means moving through established family subdivisions with mature trees, community amenities, and the kind of winding residential streets that reward a crew that has worked them before. Royal Moving & Storage has.
Brushy Creek local moves are mostly single-family homes in neighborhoods like Sendero Springs, Highland Horizon, and the original Brushy Creek subdivisions. These are tree-lined streets with HOA considerations and tight cul-de-sacs, and we plan parking and access before the day. One flat rate, agreed in advance.
Housing here is largely suburban single-family, from 1990s subdivisions to newer construction near the trail. Each home gets a crew sized to its layout and stairs, with full floor and corner protection as standard.
The Parmer Lane and RM 1431 corridors hold offices, clinics, and small businesses serving the area. We move them after hours and on weekends, coordinate access at both ends, and map everything to the new space, so Monday runs normally.
Long distance out of Brushy Creek rides on our equipment and never gets brokered. Expect a complete item list, a price locked in writing, and a delivery date range we hold to.
Every piece gets blankets, stretch wrap, and corner guards, and we lay floor runners and pad the door jambs before anything moves through the house.
When the dates do not line up, we collect in Brushy Creek, keep everything in secure storage, and redeliver the moment your new home can take it.
HOA rules, cul-de-sac parking, and stair counts are priced into the quote before move day, never tacked onto the invoice after.
A single coordinator owns your Brushy Creek move from quote to delivery, so the details never fall through the cracks between a sales desk and a crew.
Check the reviews anywhere they are posted. On-time arrivals, careful work in family neighborhoods, and bills that hold to the quote.
We run under Texas DOT #010072391C with full cargo and liability protection on every Brushy Creek move.
Brushy Creek is an unincorporated community of roughly 22,000 residents in southern Williamson County, sitting between Cedar Park to the west and Round Rock to the east. Parmer Lane and RM 1431 form its main corridors, and the namesake creek and the Brushy Creek Regional Trail run through the center of it.
The community is overwhelmingly residential, built around master-planned subdivisions, neighborhood parks, and the trail system that connects Brushy Creek Lake Park to the wider county greenbelt network.
Brushy Creek, the waterway, shaped the area long before the suburb existed. Tonkawa peoples used its banks, and the 1839 Battle of Brushy Creek was fought nearby during the Republic of Texas era. Cattle drives on the Chisholm Trail forded the creek, and farming communities grew along it through the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Suburban development arrived in the late twentieth century as Austin’s growth pushed north into Williamson County. The master-planned neighborhoods that define Brushy Creek today filled in from the 1980s onward, and the regional trail and park system gave the community a recognizable identity distinct from its larger incorporated neighbors.
Brushy Creek move days are neighborhood moves. Most jobs are in established subdivisions with homeowners’ association guidelines, narrow cul-de-sacs, and mature trees that limit where a truck can park. We confirm parking and any HOA notice requirements ahead of time so the crew is not improvising on arrival.
Access between Brushy Creek and the rest of the metro runs on Parmer Lane, RM 1431, and the nearby toll roads, all of which carry heavy commuter traffic at peak hours. We schedule the route to avoid losing time in the Cedar Park and Round Rock backups.
Beyond Brushy Creek, our crews cover the Williamson County corridor, the northern Austin suburbs, and communities across the wider metro.
Subdivision, two-story or a single heavy piece, we have moved its twin somewhere along this creek. Call (737) 237-9076 or submit the form for a same-day response.
A one-bedroom runs a few hundred dollars, while a large family home reaches the low thousands. The figure comes from a walkthrough or detailed inventory and is fixed in writing.
Often yes. Many Brushy Creek neighborhoods have guidelines about truck parking and move-in hours, and we are glad to work within them once you share the rules.
Yes. We scout parking and turning room in advance and bring the right size vehicle, staging a smaller truck where a full-size rig cannot maneuver.
Storage covers it. We collect in Brushy Creek, hold everything securely, and deliver when the new home is ready.
Yes, on our own equipment with our own crew, a flat written price, and a delivery date range we hold to.
Yes. Royal Moving & Storage operates under Texas DOT #010072391C, with full cargo and liability coverage on each job.
Parmer Lane to MoPac or the toll roads south, depending on your destination. For moving trucks, we time the trip around the Cedar Park and Round Rock rush hours.