Relocating with Pets

Pet Relocation: A Practical Overview

Moving to a new home is a major event for the whole household, including our pets, who make it feel like home.

The good news: with a few early steps (and the right timing), you can plan your pet’s travel with confidence and care right alongside everything else on your relocation checklist. 

If you’re not sure where to start, your WHR Relocation Counselor will help you line up timing, documentation, and any approved partners you may need so pet planning stays connected to the rest of your move.

This quick guide highlights the basics and gives you a simple checklist to follow.

WHR Global supports relocation with pets

For Employees: Planning Your Pet’s Move

Whether you’re moving domestically or relocating internationally, focus on three basics: your pet’s health, destination requirements, and a flexible travel plan. Domestic moves are usually simpler, but airlines and some locations still have rules. International moves typically involve more paperwork and tighter timing.

  • Know what rules apply to your move: for domestic relocations, confirm airline requirements and local rules; for international relocations, confirm entry requirements for dogs and cats, required health certificates, and whether quarantine or a waiting period may apply
  • Talk to your veterinarian early, especially if your pet has health issues or takes medication. Ask about fitness to travel, prescription refills, and what records or medications you should keep with you during travel
  • *Note: for international travel – a specific registered Vet may be required
  • Decide on the travel approach: in-cabin when available, ground travel, or a professional pet relocation provider
  • Plan timing realistically: build in extra lead time for international paperwork and appointments, and account for any required waiting period or quarantine so your move dates stay realistic. Note: planning may need to begin several months in advance of your move
  • Confirm pet-friendly housing early: check pet policies for temporary living and your long-term home, including deposits or monthly pet fees, limits on the number of pets, weight limits, and any breed or building restrictions. If you will stay in temporary housing first, confirm pet rules at check-in
  • Investigate options for a potential return to your home country: Some countries require an extremely long lead time, up to one year, and complex process to return pets to their home location. Ie Australia. Fully investigate this at the time of departures, to be prepared in case it affects your decision to relocate them

How WHR helps:
Your WHR Relocation Counsellor can help you understand what’s covered, set a realistic timeline, and coordinate approved partners, so pet planning stays connected to the rest of your move.

Furthermore, our team has personally moved their pets internationally and has first-hand experience with the relocation process and options.

The takeaway:
Start early; minimum 90days before the move, ideally longer. Your WHR Relocation Counselor can help you keep pet requirements and move timing in sync

Quick resource tip: If you’re relocating internationally and want a simple way to double-check destination rules and timing, destination guide sites (for example, PetRelocation.com’s country pages) can help you understand typical steps, required documents, and estimated lead times before you start booking flights and vet appointments. 

Real-world example (UK entry rules):

The United Kingdom has stricter arrival rules than many destinations. Often, pets cannot arrive in the passenger cabin on UK-bound flights (service dogs are an exception) and must follow an approved route and process as manifest cargo. Because of that, some assignees choose to fly into a nearby EU city (for example, Paris or Brussels), where in-cabin travel may be permitted by the airline, and then continue into the UK by car or an approved pet shuttle/ground transport option. 

Airline pet policies and handling standards vary by carrier and route. When air travel is necessary, ask early about options (in-cabin vs. hold vs. cargo), seasonal restrictions, and how animals are handled during connections.

Depending on the season and destination, especially during summer, an evening flight may be a more comfortable option when you’re using a pet-friendly airline because cabin temperatures are often lower than they are on mid-day or afternoon departures. That can be especially helpful for pets that are sensitive to heat or weather changes. Some airlines also have specialized live-animal handling facilities (for example, Lufthansa Cargo’s Animal Lounge in Frankfurt), which can be one factor families consider when selecting routings. 

Once you’ve confirmed destination rules and flight options, the checklist below helps you keep the remaining details organized, from packing through arrival. If this feels like one more thing on an already-full list, you’re not alone; a simple plan early on can make everything go more smoothly.

Pet Move Checklist

Use the steps below as a guide to keep pet planning on track alongside the rest of your move:

  • Book a vet appointment early: make sure your pet is healthy enough to travel, confirm vaccines, refill prescriptions, and find out if you’ll need a health certificate for your route or destination. For international moves, ask whether your destination requires a specific vaccine, blood test, or treatment sequence and whether a waiting period applies before travel is allowed.
  • Confirm the rules and pick your travel approach: for moves within the U.S., double-check airline and state/local requirements. For international moves, confirm entry requirements, documents, and any waiting periods or quarantine rules. Then choose what makes the most sense for your family (in-cabin when available, ground travel, or a professional pet relocation provider).
  • Get your pet used to the carrier or crate early: leave it out at home and make it comfortable, so it feels familiar by travel day.
  • Keep routines as steady while you pack: try to stick with normal feeding, walks, and playtime, and keep favorite toys or bedding out until the end.
  • Have a moving-day safety plan: moving day can be loud and unpredictable. If possible, have your pet stay with a friend or relative. If not, set up one closed, quiet room with food, water, and a litter box (if needed), and post a clear note on the door for movers.
  • Confirm pet-friendly housing early: check policies for temporary housing and your long-term home, including deposits or monthly fees, limits on the number of pets, weight limits, and any breed or building restrictions.
  • Settle in with a “home base” and a simple care plan: set up a pet-safe zone first (one room is perfect), then expand access gradually. It’s normal for pets to act a little “off” at first, so give them a few weeks. If you can, identify a new veterinarian near your destination before you need one.

How WHR helps:
We’ll help you understand what’s covered per your employer’s policy, map out a realistic timeline, and coordinate approved partners when needed, so pet planning stays aligned with the rest of your relocation.

The takeaway:
Start early, confirm requirements, and build in a little buffer for timing. Your counselor can help you keep the pieces moving together.

For Employers: Offering Pet Relocation as a Benefit

Pet relocation support can ease employee stress and reduce last-minute disruptions when plans change. The simplest programs spell out what’s covered and give employees one clear place to get answers and guidance.

Note: Service animals are not the same as pets, and they follow different rules and documentation standards (each country may have it’s own rules). On the employer side, it’s usually best to route service animal questions through your accommodation or HR process rather than a pet relocation benefit. Calling out that difference upfront can help avoid confusion during travel planning and housing setup.

  • What is covered: guidance only, an allowance, reimbursement up to a cap, or direct-billed provider support
  • Who is eligible: which move types, which pets, and any limits on the number of pets
  • How approvals work: when pre-approval is required and who makes exception decisions
  • How employees get help: clear instructions, trusted partners, and a consistent process

How WHR helps:
WHR helps you define how pet relocation fits into your program and gives employees counselor-led guidance. We also provide visibility into common questions and exceptions, so you can keep your process consistent and adjust policy over time.

The takeaway:
Keep it clear and consistent. WHR helps connect employees with support while giving mobility teams insight into what’s being requested.

Pet Relocation: Common Questions and Helpful Resources

ReloHow do I help my pet stay calm during the move?
Keep routines as steady as possible, help your pet get used to the carrier/crate early, and use a moving day plan that limits noise and open-door risk (a trusted caregiver offsite or a closed, quiet room). If anxiety is a concern, your veterinarian can recommend options that are appropriate for your pet.

Can my pet fly in the cabin with me?
It depends on your destination, airline, route, and your pet’s size. Some flights allow small pets in-cabin in an approved carrier, while other routings require pets to travel in the hold or as cargo. The key is to confirm requirements before you book, especially for international travel.

How long will it take my pet to adjust to the new home?Keep routines as steady as possible, help your pet get used to the carrier/crate early, and use a moving day plan that limits noise and open-door risk (a trusted caregiver offsite or a closed, quiet room). If anxiety is a concern, your veterinarian can recommend options that are appropriate for your pet.

Helpful Resources:

How WHR Global Supports Relocating Employees and Their Families

Working with a Relocation Management Company (RMC) like WHR Global, can help your mobility team streamline the complex employee relocation process while controlling costs

If you manage a mobility program, consider how pet support benefits can enhance employee experience, strengthen assignment acceptance, and contribute
to a more seamless relocation process.

Relocating with pets takes more than a checklist, it requires thoughtful planning around health requirements, transportation logistics, housing considerations, and the comfort of your animal throughout the journey. From ensuring vaccinations and documentation are up to date to understanding airline policies, quarantine rules, and pet-friendly housing options, each step plays an important role in a smooth transition. For employers, providing pet-inclusive relocation support can help reduce employee stress, prevent delays, and improve overall satisfaction with the move.

Partnering with a Relocation Management Company (RMC), like WHR Global, can successfully support the entire family by coordinating essential pet-related logistics, including guidance on travel requirements, connections to pet transport specialists, and assistance with identifying pet-friendly communities and housing options. Employees stay informed, timelines remain clear, and pets can transition safely into their new home environment with minimal disruption.

If you are relocating with a pet, connect with your Relocation counselor early to discuss transportation methods, breed or size restrictions, local regulations, and settling-in strategies that support your pet’s adjustment. 

Moving with Children: A Family-Friendly Guide to a Smooth Relocation

Moving is a big change for any family, and children experience it differently depending on their age and what feels familiar to them. With the right preparation, a relocation can feel like an exciting fresh start, not just a disruption.

At WHR, we help relocating families feel supported from day one, so parents can stay focused on what matters most: keeping life steady, maintaining routines, and building connections in the new community. From home finding and temporary housing to school research and settling-in resources, a relocation support program can reduce uncertainty and make the transition smoother for the whole family. Whether your move is within your home country or to another country for a long-term assignment, good planning helps children of any age settle in faster.

Moving-with-Children-A-Family-Friendly-Guide-to-a-Smooth-Relocation

Quick Start: A Simple Timeline for Moving with Children

2 weeks before:
Workflows support consistent billing practices by connecting services, approvals, and documentation to each file. WHR also uses defined review controls to help ensure invoice accuracy and required attachment compliance. Invoices and supporting documents can be made available through the client portal to support transparency and internal auditing.

1 week before:
Pack a first-week essentials kit for each child (favorite comfort item, pajamas, basic supplies, a few familiar snacks), review the neighborhood map together, and plan a simple rhythm for the first few meals and bedtimes

First week after:

  • Rebuild routine quickly, do a low-pressure neighborhood walk, and choose one connection activity (a playground visit, a visit to the local library, or a practice with a local team)
  • It also helps to name what kids may not have words for yet. Many children feel excited and sad at the same time, and that is normal.  Try simple prompts like, “What are you looking forward to?” and “What are you worried about?” Then follow up with, “What would make the first week easier?” so you can turn feelings into a plan.

Relocating with Toddlers & Nursery/Preschoolers (Approx. Ages: 1–5)

Relocating-with-Toddlers,-Nursery-and-Preschoolers

Comfort comes from routine:

  • For little ones, a move is less about the new address and more about familiar people and predictable rhythms.
  • When daily routines stay consistent, such as meals, bedtime, favorite toys, and family time, toddlers and preschoolers often adjust more quickly than parents expect. 
  • What can be toughest at this stage is the sheer amount of change happening at once: new rooms, new childcare, new faces, and a different schedule. The simpler you can keep the transition, the better. 
  • Aim for fewer surprises and more reassurance and build in extra time for rest and familiar activities during the first few weeks.
  • For example, try to keep bedtime and wake-up time consistent from the first night, even if boxes are still everywhere

How WHR helps:
We take the pressure off the logistics so you can keep routines steady. From home finding and temporary housing to local childcare and family-friendly neighborhood insights, we help reduce the last-minute scramble (and kids pick up on that calm). And when travel is part of the move, we can help you line up the details that matter with little ones, like bassinet seating and stroller arrangements. We’ll also flag early if you may need to arrange a baby cot separately for temporary housing. 

The takeaway:
Keep the familiar with steady routines, comfort items, and lots of reassurance. When the day-to-day feels stable, the new place starts to feel like home faster.

Relocating with Primary/Grade School-Aged Children (Approx. Ages 6–10)

Relocating-with-Primary-or-Grade-school-aged-kids

Friends, school and where do I fit?:

  • For children ages 6–10, moving often feels very real the moment school and friendships change
  • They may feel excited and worried at the same time, curious about what comes next, but uneasy about starting over socially and academically
  • What helps most is a clear plan for continuity: understanding the new schedule and expectations, keeping extracurricular interests going, and creating early opportunities to meet peers.
  • Small wins, like finding the library, joining a team, or learning the transportation routine, build confidence quickly
  • If possible, set up one get together or attend a school event in the first week so the start feels less overwhelming

How WHR helps:

We help take some of the guesswork out of school decisions, from initial research to enrollment next steps. If your child needs learning support or special education services, we can help you take a more tailored approach, including looping in trusted local partners (and, in some locations, an education consultant) to sort through options and timelines. We can also help you look at neighborhoods and the way families actually live, thinking through commute times, school options, and after-school activities. And for look-see trips or school tours, we’ll help make sure local partners are thinking about practical safety details too, like child car-seat rules that vary by country.

The takeaway:
Make connections easy. Prioritize school readiness, keep favorite activities in the mix, and create quick ways to build new friendships

    Relocating with Early Adolescent Children (Approx. Ages 11-13)

    Relocating with Early Adolescent Children

    Change feels personal:

    • Early adolescence (roughly ages 11‑13) is a time when kids are figuring out friendships, confidence, and where they fit in
    • A move can feel bigger here because social circles can be more established, and kids may worry about standing out, finding their people, or keeping up with new routines and expectations
    • A helpful approach is to plan for connection before day one. If possible, visit the school, preview schedules, identify clubs or teams that match their interests, and set up a simple way to stay in touch with friends from the previous school
    • When kids can picture what life will look like, worry often eases, and excitement has room to grow. Even choosing one familiar activity to restart quickly, such as soccer, robotics, or band, can provide an easy first connection

    How WHR helps:
    We help families get organized early (housing timing, school options, and community resources) so your child isn’t walking into a total unknown. If your child needs accommodations or specialized support, we can help you run a more customized school search with trusted local partners and, when needed, an education consultancy. We can also share local activity ideas and neighborhood insights to help your child meet peers and get into a new routine faster

    The takeaway:
    Plan for belonging. The faster your child can see their next chapter (school, activities, friends, and routines), the smoother the transition tends to be

    Relocating with Teen Children (Approx. Ages 14-18)

    Relocating-with-Teens

    Independence, priorities, and future plans:

    • Moves during the teenage years can carry significant consequences, impacting academic course progression, extracurricular involvement, athletic participation, leadership opportunities, and post-graduation plans
    • Teens value independence, so they may want more say in decisions and more information up front
    • The more you can treat the move as a team effort with clear options and honest timelines, the more likely they are to engage with the transition.
    • One practical step is to ask the new school early about graduation requirements, credit transfers, and tryouts or application timelines for programs your teen cares about

    How WHR helps:
    We support families with location and school insights that align with what matters during the teen years, such as academics, activities, commute realities, and a community where teens can stay involved. For international moves, we help families navigate the practical details that make day-to-day life easier, so your teen can focus on settling in and staying on track.

    The takeaway:
    Respect their independence and protect continuity. Prioritize clear information, smart school planning, and quick ways to stay engaged in activities and community.

    Relocating with Children for Long-Term International Assignments

    Helping children adjust to life abroad:

    • When your move takes you to another country for a long-term assignment, the opportunity can be exciting for the whole family, and it often comes with extra planning that affects children at every age
    • Before you go, it helps to outline the first 30 to 60 days, including arrival timing, housing milestones, and how quickly you will need to be ready for school or childcare
    • Many countries and school systems require specific documents, immunization records, or translated paperwork, and securing those items early can reduce stress later. It is also smart to ask about language support, curriculum fit, and how records or credits may transfer, especially for older children. Families benefit from confirming how medical coverage will work in the new country, where to find pediatric care, and how to refill ongoing prescriptions, so everyday needs stay predictable even while everything else is new
    • Beyond logistics, kids adjust best when they can picture what life will look like on the other side of the move. For younger children, that may mean recreating familiar routines quickly and finding local playgroups or family activities.
    • For older kids, it often helps to identify clubs, sports, arts programs, or youth organizations where they can meet peers early. Practical steps, such as learning transportation basics, setting up communication options, and understanding local norms at school and in the community, can help children feel capable and included. Some families also schedule a simple cultural orientation, such as a neighborhood tour and a few key phrases to practice together, so children feel prepared to interact respectfully and confidently.
    • With the right guidance and a realistic timeline, parents can focus less on surprises and more on helping their children build confidence in their new surroundings.

    How WHR helps:
    For global assignments, WHR and our on-the-ground destination partners coordinate the pieces that make family life feel doable (such as neighborhood insights, temporary housing, and school exploration support). We’ll also help you stay ahead of the practical stuff that can slow families down, like paperwork, healthcare navigation, and settling-in resources, so that you can focus on your kids (not the surprises). 

    If travel assistance is required, your Relocation Management Company (RMC), like WHR Global, can coordinate with your travel booking company to accommodate family needs, such as bassinet seating and stroller arrangements. And for look-see trips or school tours, we’ll help flag destination-specific safety requirements, for example, child-restraint rules in vehicles that differ by country, so that local partners can plan accordingly. We can also connect your family with cultural training options, including youth-focused sessions for children ages 6 and up, to help everyone settle in more quickly.

    The takeaway:
    Start earlier than you think you need to. When paperwork, school or childcare plans, healthcare, and first-week routines are mapped out before departure, children of any age can settle in faster and feel more secure in a new country.

    Practical Strategies for Relocating with Children 

    Helping children adjust no matter their age:

    Across every age group, a few practical strategies can make a noticeable difference:

    If your child has learning accommodations or ongoing support needs, plan even earlier. Ask the current school or provider what records you should request, what can be shared with a new school, and what timelines apply for evaluations or services in the new location. 

    If your child has an Individualized Education Plan (IEP) or a similar learning support plan, confirm what documents will help the new school replicate supports quickly, and consider scheduling an introductory call before the first day. For medical, therapy, or prescription needs, identify local providers in advance and confirm how coverage, referrals, and medication refills will work, so care stays consistent during the transition.  

    • Keep routines predictable. Familiar rhythms, including sleep, meals, and family time, help kids feel grounded even while everything else is changing.
    • Lighten the load for parents. Kids take cues from the adults around them. When timelines, housing, and logistics are handled smoothly, families have more bandwidth for reassurance, patience, and presence
    • Aim for smart, stable planning. When possible, thoughtful neighborhood selection, realistic budgets, and the right housing fit can help families avoid extra interim moves and repeated re-adjustments
    • Give kids age-appropriate ownership. Let them help choose room setup, explore the neighborhood, or pick an activity to try. Turning the move into a shared plan builds confidence

    How WHR Global Supports Relocating Employees and Their Families

    Relocating with children takes more than a checklist. It takes a plan that supports school decisions, community connection, and the day-to-day details that help families settle in with confidence. For employers, that kind of family-forward planning can support smoother transitions, stronger assignment acceptance, and fewer last-minute disruptions. 

    WHR Global supports relocating employees and their families around the world by coordinating destination research, housing support, school exploration, and settling-in resources. Parents stay informed, timelines stay clear, and kids can step into their new community with confidence. If you are relocating, connect with your mobility counselor early to discuss school or childcare timing, neighborhood priorities, and settling-in support. If you manage a mobility program, consider how family support benefits can reduce employee stress and improve the overall relocation experience for your workforce.

    Ready to see what that could look like in your program? Let’s connect for a brief walkthrough and show how partnering with a Relocation Management Company (RMC), like WHR Global, can successfully support the entire family.

    Navigating Employee Relocations: Lump Sum vs. Managed Budget

    Lump Sum and Managed Budget: Flexibility Without Losing Control

    When it comes to employee relocations, companies often face the decision between offering a lump sum or a managed budget. Each approach has its unique advantages and considerations.

    In this blog post, we’ll explore:

    • the key differences between lump sum and managed budget relocations
    • how each of these options fit within a corporate mobility program and may benefit both the company and the employee
    • how partnering with a relocation management company, like WHR Global, streamlines relocation processes and enhances cost efficiency
    Lump Sum and Managed Budget Relocation Benefits

    Lump Sums

    Lump Sum Relocations: A Brief Overview

    Lump sum relocation benefits are popular for a reason. This approach involves providing employees with a one-time payment, predetermined cash allowance to manage their relocation independently.  

    Lump sums are commonly viewed as a cost-saving measure rather than a standalone benefit. They are easy to communicate, faster to launch, and they can reduce administrative lift for mobility and HR teams. However, there are challenges associated with lump sum relocations:

    Lump Sums Offer Limited Support:

    With a lump sum, employees may experience limited support from the Relocation Management Company (RMC). While they can leverage a network of supplier partners, they often find themselves navigating the relocation process alone.

    Employees May Experience Financial Pitfalls:

    Employees receiving lump sums may struggle with understanding the true cost of relocation. This can lead to uneven spending, opting for the cheapest quotes without considering the overall experience, and even attempting to save cash rather than facilitating a smooth transition.

    Employees Risk Using Rogue Movers:

    Choosing the cheapest mover online can result in unforeseen issues. From untrained crews to unexpected additional charges, the lack of pre-move surveys can lead to complications, including goods being held hostage on the truck – a situation that is both inconvenient and illegal. 

    Managed Budget

    Managed Lump Sum: Striking a Balance

    A managed lump sum, often called a managed budget program, keeps employee choice while adding structure. Rather than issuing funds and stepping back, the budget is supported by relocation expertise to help employees plan, select the right services, and keep spending aligned to the amount provided. Budgets can be created as one total or organized into components such as household goods, miscellaneous expenses, or spouse or partner support.

    Managed lump sums provide a middle ground, offering both cost containment for the company and flexibility for the employee. Here’s why businesses should consider this approach:

    Give Ongoing Support:

    Unlike traditional lump sums, managed lump sums come with continuous support from the Relocation Management Company (RMC). This support extends throughout the entire relocation process, ensuring employees receive assistance, issue escalation, and regular status updates.

    Leverage Expense Tracking:

    The RMC utilizes technology to track dates and estimates, holding supplier partners accountable for delivering excellent service at transparent prices. This proactive approach minimizes the risk of unexpected costs and ensures a smoother relocation experience.

    Offer Flexibility for Employees:

    Managed lump sums allow employees to have more control over their relocation budget. They can pick and choose how to allocate their funds, providing a personalized experience that caters to individual needs.

    Managed Lump Sums Deliver Cost Savings:

    If an employee doesn’t utilize the entire managed budget, the remaining amount is captured by the employer as cost savings. This ensures that companies maintain financial efficiency while still prioritizing employee well-being.

    When is a Managed Budget Worth it?

    If your move population is higher-cost, higher-complexity, or higher-risk, added guidance and controls can protect both the employee experience and the company’s spend. Even for simpler moves, a managed approach can improve consistency and reporting. The key is to define what the benefit covers, set expectations for what happens if funds run out, and measure results so future budgets reflect real costs.

    In the debate between lump sum and managed budget relocations, it’s clear that a managed lump sum offers a balanced solution. By combining ongoing support, expense tracking, and flexibility for employees, businesses can ensure successful relocations that benefit both the company and its workforce.

    By adopting a managed lump sum strategy, organizations can ensure that their relocation benefits are both cost-effective and scalable, aligning with the needs of different employee tiers while maintaining a streamlined and equitable relocation experience for all.

    As companies navigate the complexities of employee relocation, the managed lump sum emerges as a strategic and employee-centric choice.

    How WHR Global’s Managed Budget Tool Provides Guidance and Control

    WHR’s Managed Budget Tool helps keep everyone on the same page with a clear view of starting balance, spend, and remaining funds, including multi-currency support. 

    • Embedded in both WHR Client & Transferee Portals
    • Creates a trigger when projected spend is trending over budget and before end-of-move surprise
    • Budget can be set in 163+ currencies but converted and managed in USD only
    • Tracks employee reimbursements
    • Estimates costs until final billing
    • Capture only items you want reported
    • Supplier invoices paid directly

    How WHR Global Helps You Control Costs and Improve Relocation Success

    Working with a Relocation Management Company (RMC) like WHR Global, can help your mobility team streamline the complex employee relocation process while controlling costs

    When a company partners with a Relocation Management Company (RMC), like WHR Global, to execute a managed lump sum program, they gain access to a suite of benefits designed to streamline relocation processes and enhance cost efficiency. RMCs’ expertise in managing lump sum programs ensures that funds are utilized effectively, with an experienced team negotiating favorable rates and handling all logistical details to reduce overall expenses.

    By leveraging the RMC’s advanced technology and tools, they offer real-time tracking and reporting, providing organizations with transparency and detailed insights into every relocation. By implementing a managed lump sum approach, companies can achieve greater efficiency, cost savings, and overall satisfaction in their relocation programs.

    What Today’s Freight Volatility Means for Household Goods Moves

    Global Mobility Advisory

    Global transportation conditions remain fluid, and household goods (HHG) move planning is being affected by a mix of geopolitical uncertainty, constrained routing options, and rising fuel and capacity costs.

    Based on the latest market intelligence shared with WHR, here are the key developments we’re monitoring and what they may mean for your mobility program in the weeks ahead.

    Global transportation conditions remain fluid, and household goods (HHG) move planning is being affected

    Cost Pressure: Air Rates and Fuel Surcharges are Climbing

    Cost escalation is not isolated to one lane. WHR is seeing air freight pricing increases in select markets that are multiples of what they were earlier this spring, driven by tight capacity and disruption-related rerouting. In the U.S., van line fuel surcharges are also elevated. WHR’s whitepaper on the rising costs of household goods shipments provides useful background on the structural factors driving these trends.

    The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) ATLAS program published Household Goods fuel surcharge is listed at 34.5% for the current effective period (and can move with weekly diesel pricing). This combination can influence overall move budgets, especially for time-sensitive shipments or peak-season bookings.

    WHR’s Move Management Platform: Domestic Fuel Surcharge at a Record High

    For U.S. domestic shipments utilizing WHR’s single factor rate (SFR) via the Move Management Platform (MMP), the fuel surcharge is currently at 17%, which is the highest level WHR has ever recorded for this program.

    For context, the WHR SFR fuel surcharge held in the 3-4% range throughout all of 2025. It rose to 5% in March 2026, then climbed sharply to 17% in April, which is a level it has maintained into May.

    In practical terms, if a WHR SFR transportation charge comes out to $10,000, the fuel surcharge applied on top would be $1,700 at the current rate.

    The surcharge is determined by benchmark diesel prices. WHR monitors the average U.S. diesel fuel price on the first Monday of each month, and where that price lands determines the surcharge in place for that period. With diesel prices elevated well above their 2025 levels, mobility teams should incorporate this into any domestic move cost projections that utilize the MMP single-factor rate.

    Middle East and Red Sea: Limited Change in Corridor Access

    Despite frequent headlines, access conditions in and around the Red Sea/Suez corridor have not materially normalized. While some vessels have recently moved through the Suez Canal, those movements largely reflect ships that were already queued or stranded earlier in the disruption. As of this update, the canal’s broader operating status remains uncertain, and even after a meaningful reopening, supply chains may require up to six months to stabilize as schedules, equipment, and capacity rebalance. Mobility teams managing assignments in the region may find WHR’s overview of international relocation challenges a useful reference as conditions continue to evolve.

    How HHG Shipments are Moving Right Now

    Most ports in the Middle East region remain operational, and relocations are continuing. However, routing decisions are increasingly shifting toward air and land freight where feasible, which can help maintain movement but often comes with higher costs and longer or less predictable transit times. Understanding the full scope of what goes into a coordinated household goods shipment and storage plan becomes especially relevant when standard ocean routes face disruption.

    As a result, employees may see extended delivery windows, and mobility teams may need additional flexibility on required-by dates for temporary living and shipment arrival.

    What Mobility Teams Can Do Now

    • Start moves earlier than usual. Early initiation increases the likelihood of securing preferred pack/load dates before summer capacity tightens
    • Plan for schedule flexibility. Build in buffer time for shipment delivery, especially for lanes impacted by rerouting or modal shifts
    • Review budget assumptions. Ensure cost models account for higher fuel surcharges (including the record 17% fuel surcharge) and the possibility of premium routing (air/land) in constrained markets. WHR’s employee relocation cost containment resources can help teams identify where flexibility is possible without compromising the employee experience
    • Set employee expectations proactively. Clear guidance on timelines, what’s controllable, and what may change reduces escalations and improves the relocating employee experience. Employees managing move logistics on their own can also find practical guidance at SimpleMove’s guide to saving money on a move, which covers cost strategies that apply even in volatile market conditions

    At-a-glance: key takeaways

    • Middle East: Most ports remain operational, but transit times are still elevated, and routing often relies more heavily on air and land options
    • Freight pricing: Rates continue to trend upward globally, with pronounced spikes in certain air freight lanes
    • U.S. fuel: Van line fuel surcharges remain high. DOE’s Household Goods fuel surcharge is currently listed at 34.5% and may continue to fluctuate. The U.S. domestic fuel surcharge has reached a record high of 17%: build this into domestic move cost projections.

    How WHR Global Will Support Your Mobility Program

    Working with a Relocation Management Company (RMC) like WHR Global, can help your mobility team streamline the complex employee relocation process while controlling costs

    As peak moving season approaches, earlier planning and realistic timeline and budget assumptions will help reduce disruption for both your program team and your relocating employees. Relocation Management Company (RMC), WHR Global, will continue to monitor conditions with our supplier network and share material updates as they emerge. Learn more about WHR’s global mobility services and how our team can support your program through evolving market conditions. Relocating employees can also explore SimpleMove’s relocation services for self-service tools and resources designed to simplify every step of the move experience.

    Note: This update is provided for general informational purposes and reflects current conditions reported at the time of writing. Routing, capacity, and pricing can change quickly by lane and provider.

    Why Workflows Matter

    Smarter Relocations, Better Experiences

    In relocation and global mobility, timing, compliance, and communication have to work together across dozens of moving parts. Workflows reduce exceptions, speed decisions, and give employees and program teams a clearer path from start to finish.

    At WHR, workflows are the operating foundation behind that coordination. They help our teams and supplier partners stay aligned, keep clients informed, and support relocating employees from initiation through final billing.

    WHR workflows are powered by our proprietary operating platform, CARICS, and our internal task management engine, myWorkOne. Together, they track key events and dates, route tasks to the right people at the right time, and keep documentation, approvals, and status updates connected to the relocation file.  

    Our latest blog explores the benefits of workflows in global mobility and how WHR’s integrated platforms align teams, suppliers, and employees for faster decisions and better relocation experiences.

    WHR Global Mobility Workflows

    Why Workflows Matter in Global Mobility

    A well-designed workflow turns a complex relocation into a managed, visible process. It lowers the risk of missed steps and creates consistency across suppliers and regions.

    Most importantly, it supports a smoother experience for the relocating employee while giving program owners visibility, control, and transparency.

    • Fewer exceptions and fewer surprises: policy parameters, approvals, and required documents are tracked and surfaced early
    • Better visibility: live status, reporting, and stored documentation are available through WHR portals
    • Stronger consistency: repeatable steps support service quality across every relocation file
    • Faster issue resolution: alerts and escalations help address concerns before they become disruptions

    How WHR Workflows Work: CARICS And myWorkOne

    CARICS is WHR’s enterprise operating platform, built by WHR for WHR clients. Within CARICS, myWorkOne monitors each relocation for key events and critical dates, then uses smart routing to release tasks and notifications to WHR teams and approved partners. This helps ensure that deliverables, documents, and approvals stay on track across the relocation lifecycle.
    Documentation, eForms, and Secure Signatures
    Workflows keep paperwork from becoming a bottleneck. Employees can complete eForms online and sign securely using DocuSign®. Signed documents and key correspondence are stored in WHR’s integrated document repository so approved users can quickly find what they need without chasing emails or attachments.

    Policy compliance that is built into the process
    Relocation programs often have complex rules, caps, and approval requirements. WHR configures your policy parameters into our technology so that expense limits, eligibility rules, and required approvals are monitored and reported. When an exception is needed, workflows can surface it for review, so decisions are documented and consistent.

    Benefits for Relocating Employees
    Relocation is personal. Employees need clarity, easy access to information, and quick answers. WHR workflows help create that experience by connecting counseling, documentation, and due dates to a single relocation file, so employees spend less time tracking details and more time moving forward.

    • Clear next steps and due dates: reminders and notifications for required tasks and documentation
    • Expense tools: expense submission and tracking for eligible benefits
    • Visibility into benefits: assigned benefit summaries, service status, and key relocation milestones
    • Easy communication: secure messaging with the WHR relocation team
    • One place for documents: access to stored forms and important file documents
    • Resources for the family: helpful guides, checklists, and destination information

    Benefits for Clients and Program Leaders
    Workflows are not only about internal efficiency. They are also about program governance. WHR workflows support transparent oversight through our client portal, where authorized users can access relocation status, reporting, invoices, and stored documentation in one place, 24/7

    Client Portal Visibility and Reporting

    Clients can complete online authorizations, review real-time reporting, access invoices and supporting documents, and monitor satisfaction and file status updates. Many clients also use the reporting available through the portal to support internal budgeting, auditing, and year-end reconciliation.

    • Accurate billing and cleaner compliance
      Workflows support consistent billing practices by connecting services, approvals, and documentation to each file. WHR also uses defined review controls to help ensure invoice accuracy and required attachment compliance. Invoices and supporting documents can be made available through the client portal to support transparency and internal auditing.
    • Supplier partner coordination and quality management
      Relocation outcomes depend on strong supplier partner execution. WHR workflows coordinate activities with our supplier partners and support performance management through metric-driven scorecards and satisfaction feedback. When feedback indicates a service risk, the right teams can be alerted quickly so issues are addressed and documented
    • Security and privacy by design
      Workflows are only as strong as the safeguards around the data they use. WHR incorporates role-based access and security controls to help protect employee and client information, and we continuously maintain and review our technology environment to support confidentiality and appropriate access.

    How WHR Global Workflows Can Improve Your Mobility Program

    Working with a Relocation Management Company (RMC) like WHR Global, can help your mobility team streamline the complex employee relocation process while controlling costs

    When relocation workflows are built for real-world mobility, the impact is immediate and measurable. Employees have clearer next steps and faster access to support, while program leaders gain stronger oversight, cleaner compliance, and a more consistent experience across every file. 

    Ready to see what that could look like in your program? Let’s connect for a brief walkthrough and show how partnering with a Relocation Management Company (RMC), like WHR Global, can tailor smart workflows to your policies and program goals.