International Moves to Frankfurt
All moves to Frankfurt take place weekly. If you are thinking of moving to Frankfurt from Spain, you can request a quote directly here on our website.
Exclusive Moves to Frankfurt
This option is always available and consists of a comprehensive moving service with direct transport. The advantage is the speed of delivery and the total exclusivity of the move. The entire vehicle will be available for the client.
REQUEST YOUR QUOTE TO MOVE TO FRANKFURT
Shared Load Moves to Frankfurt
This service is very common for students or people relocating to or returning to Frankfurt with their personal belongings, excluding furniture. The delivery time is approximately 7-10 business days and includes all the standard conditions of any move: disassembly, insurance, packing, etc. It allows cost savings by sharing transport with other clients.
Available Services
- Disassembly and reassembly of furniture
- High-quality packing materials (customized wooden boxes)
- Storage at origin and destination
- Lifting platform at origin and destination
- Parking permit management at origin and destination
- Customized goods insurance
- Visit/Video call with a commercial agent
If your destination is Frankfurt
Frankfurt is a key transportation hub in Europe due to its location, making it easier to provide moving services to Frankfurt and all of Germany from Spain. This is evidenced by the facilities at Frankfurt Airport, Frankfurt (Main) Central Station, and the world’s densest highway network.
Today, Frankfurt is an important economic and financial center in Europe (it is sometimes unofficially referred to as the “economic and financial capital of the European Union”). The city is home to the European Central Bank (ECB), the Deutsche Bundesbank, the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, and Messe Frankfurt, the latter hosting major exhibitions, fairs, and international events such as the Frankfurt Motor Show, the largest of its kind, and the Frankfurt Book Fair, the most important in the world.
One unique feature of Frankfurt is the concentration of high-rise buildings in the city center, forming a distinctive skyline, locally known as the “Frankfurter Skyline.” These skyscrapers are among the tallest buildings in Europe.
Frankfurt especially embodies the so-called “German economic miracle” that developed in the decades following the end of the war. The city quickly rose to prominence as the country’s financial center, taking this status away from Berlin. Deutsche Bank left the former capital and relocated to Frankfurt.