Movers in Gloucester Township, NJ

Trusted Moving Services in Camden County

Licensed & Insured • NJ License #39PM00502700

About Gloucester Township

Looking for reliable movers in Gloucester Township, NJ? As your local Gloucester Township moving company, Maloney's Moving LLC provides professional residential and commercial moving services throughout Camden County.

Gloucester Township stands as Camden County's largest municipality by population, where 66,034 residents across 23-24 square miles enjoy comprehensive suburban infrastructure distinguished by Camden County College's 320-acre main campus (Kevin G. Halpern Hall $30M science building, 20 academic/administrative buildings), extensive Route 42 North-South Freeway corridor (14.28 miles) providing direct Philadelphia commuter access, Gloucester Township Public Schools as New Jersey's largest elementary district (11 schools, 6,644 students, Glendora Elementary's 2022 National Blue Ribbon designation), and diverse housing spanning six distinct named communities—Blackwood, Erial, Glendora, Chews Landing, Sicklerville sections, and Grenloch—each maintaining separate identity while sharing township-level governance, schools, and infrastructure. This comprehensive municipality successfully balances multiple identities: the college-town atmosphere surrounding Camden County College in Blackwood creating student housing and cultural programming, Erial's established residential streets with strong neighborhood associations and local shopping districts, Glendora Elementary's National Blue Ribbon achievement attracting education-focused families along Route 561, Chews Landing Road's residential corridor providing convenient municipal services access, Sicklerville sections' newer suburban developments, and Grenloch's quiet residential character. With median household income reaching $95,161 (10% above Camden County, 17% above state), education levels of 95.7% high school graduates and 33.4% bachelor's degrees+, and poverty rates of 7.7% (60% of county rate), Gloucester Township functions as a middle-class suburban anchor rather than a collection of unrelated neighborhoods, with township-wide amenities including Route 168 (Black Horse Pike) $15M resurfacing project through Spring 2026, Gloucester Township Community Park's 62.3 acres, and high school choices spanning Highland, Timber Creek, and Black Horse Pike Regional's Triton. Maloney's Moving LLC, family-owned and operated since 2023 — built on 22+ years of professional moving experience, has served Gloucester Township's extensive residential landscape throughout all six named communities comprising this 23-square-mile municipality, handling relocations across varied township sections—from Blackwood's college-adjacent properties near Camden County College's 320-acre campus to Erial's family subdivisions with neighborhood identity and local shopping, from Glendora Elementary's National Blue Ribbon-attracting residential streets along Route 561 to Chews Landing Road's diverse housing corridor near municipal complex, from Sicklerville sections' contemporary developments to Grenloch's established quiet character. Our moving crews understand this large township's specific characteristics distinguishing it from surrounding municipalities, from navigating Route 42's 14.28-mile corridor experiencing heavy Philadelphia commuter traffic to timing moves around Black Horse Pike's ongoing $15M resurfacing project (Spring 2026 completion), from coordinating relocations near Camden County College during peak academic periods (August/September, May) when student apartments implement strict scheduling to managing township-wide moves across 23 square miles requiring detailed knowledge of six distinct community sections each with unique access patterns and residential characteristics. For detailed information about Blackwood's specific neighborhoods and moving logistics within that community, see our dedicated Blackwood (08012) page covering Valleybrook, Blackwood Estates, Whitman Square, and other developments within the Blackwood section. **Why Choose Gloucester Township?** **Township Structure: Six Distinct Communities Under Unified Governance** Gloucester Township operates as a comprehensive municipality encompassing six named communities—Blackwood, Erial, Glendora, Chews Landing, Sicklerville sections, and Grenloch—each maintaining distinct residential identity while sharing township-level schools, infrastructure, municipal services, and governance. This structure creates unique advantages for residents: families access identical high-quality elementary education (Gloucester Township Public Schools ranking as New Jersey's largest elementary district with 6,644 students) regardless of which community they reside within, all sections benefit from Route 42 corridor commercial development and tax revenue, township-wide recreational facilities serve residents across 23 square miles, and property values remain moderate compared to premium Camden County townships while maintaining solid infrastructure and services. Understanding this township structure proves essential for prospective residents—purchasing a home in any of the six communities provides access to the same school district, municipal services, recreation programs, and infrastructure despite variations in housing stock, neighborhood character, and local amenities specific to each section. The 08012 ZIP code spans multiple communities (Blackwood being the most prominent), creating postal geography where Blackwood, Turnersville, Grenloch, and other sections share the same ZIP despite maintaining separate community identities. **Camden County College: 320-Acre Main Campus and Educational Hub** Camden County College's main campus in the Blackwood section shapes significant portions of Gloucester Township's identity, operating across 320 acres with 20 academic and administrative buildings including the $30 million Kevin G. Halpern Hall (science, engineering, and health sciences), William G. Rohrer Center (business/culinary/hospitality/visual arts), Taft Hall (nursing/dental hygiene/health professions), Regional Emergency Training Center, and Connector Building linking campus facilities. The college enrolls 8,000+ credit students and 14,000+ non-credit/workforce development participants annually across 100+ degree/certificate programs, educating Camden County residents in associate degrees, career certificates, workforce training, and transfer preparation for four-year institutions including partnerships with Rowan University, Rutgers–Camden, and Stockton University enabling seamless bachelor's degree pathways. CCC provides accessible higher education at community college tuition rates ($4,080 in-district full-time annual tuition versus $15,000+ at regional universities), creating economic opportunity for working-class families, career-changers, and traditional students beginning higher education affordably before transferring to bachelor's programs. The college's cultural programming—Cavaness Theater hosting performances and community events, art galleries featuring student/professional exhibits, athletic competitions (CCC Wolverines teams), continuing education courses serving senior citizens and lifelong learners—benefits Gloucester Township residents beyond enrolled students, creating intellectual and cultural vitality uncommon in suburban municipalities. Student housing demand generates apartment rental markets near campus, attracting investors and creating short-term lease turnover patterns during August/September (fall semester move-in) and May (spring semester conclusion) requiring specialized moving coordination with property managers implementing strict regulations, elevator reservations, and limited time windows when hundreds of students relocate simultaneously. **Gloucester Township Public Schools: Largest Elementary District in New Jersey** Gloucester Township Public Schools operates as New Jersey's largest elementary district by enrollment, serving Pre-K through 6th grade students across 11 schools with total enrollment of 6,644 students—Ann Mullen Elementary, Bells Elementary, Birches Elementary, Erial Elementary, Glendora Elementary, Glen Landing Middle School (grades 5-6), Hillcrest Elementary, Jeremiah Giles Elementary, Loring Flemming Elementary, Pine Oaks Elementary, and Robert R. Blinks Elementary. The district achieved notable recognition through Glendora Elementary's 2022 National Blue Ribbon School designation by the U.S. Department of Education, honoring exemplary academic performance and progress in closing achievement gaps—one of New Jersey's highest educational honors awarded to fewer than 5% of schools nationwide. Students transition to Black Horse Pike Regional School District high schools (Highland Regional, Timber Creek Regional, Triton Regional) serving Gloucester Township alongside Bellmawr and Runnemede, with Highland and Timber Creek located within township boundaries providing convenient access for most families. Per-pupil expenditures average $17,847 annually (solid funding supporting quality facilities, technology, staffing), student-teacher ratios maintain 13:1 at elementary levels enabling personalized instruction, and standardized test proficiency rates meet/exceed state averages across core subjects. The district's size creates economies of scale—specialized programming including gifted/talented education, comprehensive special education services, ESL/bilingual instruction, STEM initiatives, arts/music/physical education across all elementary schools—while maintaining neighborhood school assignments keeping students near homes and fostering community connections. Families relocating to Gloucester Township specifically for schools access identical quality education regardless of whether purchasing in Blackwood, Erial, Glendora, Chews Landing, Sicklerville sections, or Grenloch—all residential areas feed into the same elementary district and high schools, eliminating the attendance zone anxiety common in municipalities where school quality varies dramatically between neighborhoods. **Route 42 Corridor: 14.28-Mile North-South Freeway Through Township** Route 42 (North-South Freeway) runs 14.28 miles through Gloucester Township as the region's primary Philadelphia-to-Atlantic City corridor, creating exceptional commercial development and commuter accessibility while generating traffic congestion during peak periods requiring strategic moving logistics. The six-lane freeway connects Interstate 295 (Exit 13, northern terminus) through Gloucester Township and Washington Township southward to the Atlantic City Expressway (southern terminus), facilitating 20-25 minute Philadelphia commutes from central Gloucester Township addresses when traffic flows freely. Multiple exits serve township sections—Exit 9 (Blackwood-Clementon Road/CR 534), Exit 10 (Lakeland Road), Exit 11 (Greentree Road/CR 544)—providing direct residential neighborhood access and supporting continuous commercial development along the corridor. National retailers, supermarkets (ShopRite, Walmart Supercenter), restaurants (Chili's, Olive Garden, Panera Bread, Five Guys), automotive dealerships, medical offices, banks, professional services, and entertainment venues line Route 42's Gloucester Township sections, creating retail density handling daily needs without requiring travel to [Cherry Hill](/areas-we-serve/cherry-hill-08034), [Voorhees](/areas-we-serve/voorhees-08043), or Philadelphia. However, Route 42's importance creates persistent congestion—weekday morning commutes (6:30-9:00am) see heavy northbound traffic toward Philadelphia/Camden, evening commutes (4:00-7:00pm) reverse with southbound congestion, and weekend shopping periods (11:00am-6:00pm Saturday/Sunday) generate bidirectional delays as customers access corridor retail. We schedule Gloucester Township moves during optimal windows (mid-morning 9:30am-2:30pm weekdays, early morning 7:00-10:00am weekends) avoiding peak traffic, route via local roads (CR 544 Greentree Road, CR 673 Berlin-Cross Keys Road, CR 534 Blackwood-Clementon Road) when Route 42 jams, and communicate realistic timing expectations accounting for traffic variables affecting this busy commuter/commercial corridor. **Route 168 (Black Horse Pike): $15M Resurfacing Project Through Spring 2026** Route 168 (Black Horse Pike) runs 5.5 miles through Gloucester Township as a historic four-lane commercial thoroughfare connecting Philadelphia to Atlantic County, currently undergoing $15 million resurfacing and intersection improvement project (Spring 2026 completion) creating temporary traffic disruptions requiring careful moving coordination. The NJDOT project encompasses complete roadway resurfacing, 9 intersection upgrades with ADA-compliant curb ramps and crosswalk improvements, upgraded traffic signal systems with modernized controllers and LED signals, drainage system enhancements, and full pavement marking/signage replacement throughout the Gloucester Township corridor. Construction phases create lane restrictions, reduced speed limits, periodic detours, and variable traffic patterns as crews complete segments—active work typically occurs weekdays 9:00am-4:00pm when traffic volumes allow, with weekends reserved for major operations requiring full closures. The Black Horse Pike's commercial corridor features established businesses predating Route 42's development—local restaurants, automotive repair shops, small retailers, professional offices, residential properties intermixed with commercial uses—creating authentic older commercial character versus Route 42's newer big-box development. Long-term residents familiar with pre-Route 42 Gloucester Township maintain affinity for Black Horse Pike businesses, supporting local establishments despite competition from national chains along the freeway corridor. Moving logistics during the resurfacing project require monitoring NJDOT traffic advisories for active construction zones, adjusting routes to avoid restricted sections, anticipating delays when traversing work areas, and scheduling moves during optimal periods (early morning before 9:00am work initiation, late afternoon after 4:00pm crew departure) minimizing construction-related complications through Spring 2026. **Gloucester Township's Six Named Communities: Characteristics and Moving Considerations** **Blackwood** Blackwood functions as Gloucester Township's primary population center and historic village core, encompassing Camden County College's 320-acre campus, downtown business district along Route 168 (Black Horse Pike), mixed residential neighborhoods spanning 1950s-era ranches through contemporary townhouses, student apartment complexes serving CCC enrollment, and the established "Blackwood Center" identity referenced by longtime residents. The community attracts diverse demographics—college students in rental properties near campus, working families purchasing affordable housing ($250,000-$450,000 median range), first-time buyers entering Camden County real estate markets, and multi-generational households remaining in long-held properties. For comprehensive details about Blackwood's eight specific neighborhoods (Valleybrook, Blackwood Estates, Whitman Square, Hidden Mill Estates, Fox Chase, Chestnut Glen, Timber Cove, Knoll Run), housing characteristics, moving logistics, and property-specific considerations, see our dedicated Blackwood (08012) page providing detailed neighborhood-by-neighborhood analysis. Blackwood-specific moving challenges include Camden County College's academic calendar creating peak periods (August/September, May), apartment complex regulations near campus, downtown Black Horse Pike construction during resurfacing project, and Route 42 Exit 9 (Blackwood-Clementon Road) traffic congestion during commute hours. **Erial** Erial occupies Gloucester Township's central-western sections along Route 534 (Blackwood-Clementon Road) and CR 673 (Berlin-Cross Keys Road), maintaining distinct community identity through established residential streets, local shopping districts (Erial Plaza anchoring neighborhood retail), Erial Elementary School serving immediate families, strong neighborhood associations organizing community events, and multi-generational residential patterns where families remain long-term or adult children return to raise families near parents. Single-family homes range 1,600-2,800 square feet on quarter-to-half-acre lots, predominantly 1960s-1980s ranchers, split-levels, Cape Cods, and bi-levels with median values $280,000-$420,000 attracting working-class families, first-time buyers seeking Gloucester Township schools at accessible prices, and long-term residents who purchased decades ago and maintained properties through life stages. Erial's character reflects traditional suburban development—curvilinear streets with 24-26 foot widths, mature tree canopies, sidewalked neighborhoods, mix of on-street and driveway parking, and active pedestrian use as children walk to elementary school and residents utilize neighborhood businesses. Moving challenges in Erial center on 1960s-1980s housing stock featuring narrow doorways (30-34 inches), split-level floor plans with multiple half-story transitions, finished basements with 7.5-8 foot ceilings, and occasional exterior basement access via bulkhead stairwells requiring coordination. Street parking can be limited on blocks where multiple households compete for curbside spaces, requiring advance planning for moving truck staging. Erial residents value community atmosphere and expect respectful service from providers understanding the neighborhood's established character and multi-generational connections. **Glendora** Glendora encompasses Gloucester Township sections along Route 561 (Cross Keys Road) distinguished by Glendora Elementary School's 2022 National Blue Ribbon designation attracting education-focused families specifically purchasing within this school's attendance zone, convenient shopping access via Route 561 corridor retail, and mix of residential and light commercial development creating practical suburban character. Single-family homes range 1,700-3,000 square feet on quarter-acre lots, predominantly 1970s-1990s colonials, split-levels, and ranchers with median values $300,000-$480,000 reflecting National Blue Ribbon school premium—comparable homes outside Glendora Elementary attendance zones typically sell $30,000-$50,000 lower despite similar construction quality and lot sizes. Families relocating specifically for Glendora Elementary access drive sustained demand and rapid turnover, with homes often selling within 30 days and multiple offers common during peak spring/summer real estate periods when families coordinate moves around academic calendars. Route 561 provides convenient north-south connections through Gloucester Township, linking Route 42 (Exit 11 Greentree Road) northward through Glendora to [Washington Township](/areas-we-serve/washington-township-08080) and Sewell, facilitating commuter access and creating commercial corridor supporting daily shopping needs. Moving logistics in Glendora reflect suburban development patterns from the era—straightforward colonial floor plans with 32-36 inch doorways and 38-42 inch stairways easing furniture navigation, split-levels requiring multi-level coordination, attached two-car garages providing protected access, and streets with 26-28 foot widths accommodating moving truck staging. National Blue Ribbon recognition creates heightened expectations—families purchasing in Glendora specifically for schools maintain high standards for all service providers, expecting professionalism, punctuality, and quality execution meeting the community's educational excellence standards. **Chews Landing** Chews Landing occupies Gloucester Township's eastern sections along Chews Landing Road providing direct access to the Gloucester Township Municipal Complex (township administration, police headquarters, public works facilities), Gloucester Township Community Park (62.3 acres with sports fields, trails, playgrounds), and convenient connectivity to Route 42 (Exit 10) facilitating commuter access. The community features diverse housing stock—townhouse developments ($220,000-$350,000) attracting first-time buyers and downsizing empty-nesters, single-family colonials and ranchers ($320,000-$480,000) serving working families, and newer construction from 2000s-2010s providing contemporary amenities. Proximity to municipal services creates practical advantages—residents access township offices, police services, recreation programs, and community events within 5-10 minutes of most Chews Landing addresses, reducing travel time for administrative needs and fostering civic engagement. The Gloucester Township Community Park serves as regional recreational hub with youth sports leagues (baseball, softball, soccer organized through township athletics), walking/biking trails connecting neighborhoods, playground equipment for families, pavilions for community events/birthday parties, and open space maintaining connection to Gloucester Township's semi-rural heritage despite ongoing suburban development. Moving challenges in Chews Landing vary by property type—townhouse complexes enforce HOA regulations requiring advance notifications, parking restrictions (guest spaces often 50-100 feet from unit entrances), elevator reservations where available, and common area protection expectations, while single-family neighborhoods maintain straightforward suburban access patterns with driveway staging and reasonable street parking. Chews Landing Road itself experiences moderate through-traffic as residents access Route 42 and municipal facilities, with peak periods during weekday commute hours (7-9am, 4-6pm) creating brief congestion near major intersections. **Sicklerville Sections** Sicklerville sections of Gloucester Township occupy southern and southeastern areas near the Washington Township border, featuring newer suburban developments from 1990s-2010s construction periods with contemporary floor plans, two-car attached garages, subdivision amenities (community pools, walking trails, HOA-maintained landscaping), and family-oriented demographics. Note that "Sicklerville" itself functions as an unincorporated community spanning Gloucester Township AND Washington Township—the 08081 ZIP code covers both municipalities, creating postal geography where some "Sicklerville" addresses fall within Gloucester Township (08012 or 08081 ZIP) while others fall within Washington Township (08080 or 08081 ZIP). For residents purchasing "Sicklerville" addresses, verifying actual municipal jurisdiction proves essential as school districts, property taxes, municipal services, and governance differ between Gloucester Township and Washington Township despite shared Sicklerville identity and ZIP code. Gloucester Township's Sicklerville sections provide identical school access (Gloucester Township Public Schools elementary district, Black Horse Pike Regional high schools) as other township communities, differentiating these addresses from Washington Township's Sicklerville sections feeding into Washington Township Public Schools and Gloucester County Institute of Technology. Single-family homes in Gloucester Township's Sicklerville sections range 2,000-3,200 square feet on quarter-acre lots with median values $340,000-$520,000, attracting young families, professionals seeking newer construction with modern amenities, and residents prioritizing contemporary design over established neighborhood character. Moving logistics reflect subdivision development patterns—HOA communities requiring advance notifications and compliance with moving regulations, curved streets with 28-30 foot widths, cul-de-sac terminations requiring careful truck positioning, and contemporary homes with 34-36 inch doorways, 40-44 inch stairways, and 9-foot first-floor ceilings easing furniture movement compared to older housing stock in Erial or Glendora sections. **Grenloch** Grenloch occupies Gloucester Township's northeastern sections near the Blackwood border, maintaining separate 08032 ZIP code identity despite falling within Gloucester Township municipal boundaries. This small residential community features quiet suburban character—single-family ranches, Cape Cods, and split-levels from 1950s-1980s construction on quarter-to-half-acre lots, narrow streets (22-24 feet) with mature tree coverage, limited on-street parking, and established multi-generational residential patterns where families remain long-term. Grenloch Lake provides namesake landmark and limited waterfront recreation for adjacent properties, though public access remains restricted and most residential streets maintain standard suburban layouts without lake views. The community's positioning between Blackwood and Williamstown creates convenient Route 168 (Black Horse Pike) access while maintaining quieter residential atmosphere removed from commercial corridor traffic and density. Single-family homes range 1,200-2,200 square feet with median values $260,000-$380,000, attracting first-time buyers, working families seeking affordable Gloucester Township entry points, and residents valuing smaller-scale community character over newer suburban subdivisions' amenities. Moving challenges in Grenloch center on street widths (22-24 feet limiting moving truck staging), driveway-only parking on many blocks (40-60 foot driveways providing primary access), mature tree coverage creating overhead clearance considerations (10-12 feet above roadway), 1950s-1980s construction characteristics (30-32 inch doorways, compact room dimensions, tight staircases in Cape Cods and splits), and quiet residential expectations requiring respectful service meeting small-community standards where neighbors notice activities and service provider reputations matter. For detailed Grenloch-specific information, see our dedicated Grenloch (08032) page covering neighborhood characteristics and moving logistics. **Route 42 and Route 168 Traffic Patterns, Construction Updates, and Optimal Moving Windows** Route 42's 14.28-mile corridor through Gloucester Township experiences predictable congestion patterns requiring strategic move scheduling. **Weekday morning commutes (6:30-9:00am)** see heavy northbound traffic toward Philadelphia/Camden employment with backups near Exits 9, 10, 11 as residents merge onto the freeway. **Evening commutes (4:00-7:00pm)** reverse this pattern with southbound congestion as professionals return home. **Weekend shopping traffic (11:00am-6:00pm Saturday/Sunday)** creates bidirectional delays as customers access corridor retail. **Route 168** experiences similar patterns during the ongoing $15M resurfacing project (through Spring 2026) with additional construction-related disruptions—weekdays 9:00am-4:00pm see active work zones with lane restrictions and reduced speeds. **Optimal moving windows** fall mid-morning weekdays (9:30am-2:30pm) after morning commutes clear but before afternoon buildups and construction intensifies, or early weekends (7:00-10:00am) before shopping traffic and construction crews initiate. We route via local roads (Greentree Road, Berlin-Cross Keys Road, Blackwood-Clementon Road) when Route 42 jams, monitor NJDOT advisories for Route 168 construction zones, and communicate realistic timing expectations accounting for traffic variables affecting this township's busy corridors. **Why Gloucester Township Residents Choose Maloney's Moving** Our extensive Camden County experience encompasses detailed knowledge of Gloucester Township's six distinct communities—Blackwood, Erial, Glendora, Chews Landing, Sicklerville sections, and Grenloch—understanding unique characteristics, access patterns, and moving challenges specific to each section throughout this 23-square-mile municipality. We've worked in all township areas handling relocations across varied housing stock (Camden County College-adjacent apartments in Blackwood, Erial's established 1960s-1980s splits and ranchers, Glendora Elementary's National Blue Ribbon-attracting colonials, Chews Landing's townhouse communities and Municipal Complex vicinity, Sicklerville sections' newer subdivisions, Grenloch's quiet residential streets), coordinating with township-wide infrastructure realities (Route 42 commuter congestion, Route 168 resurfacing project through Spring 2026, Camden County College academic calendar peaks), and applying appropriate techniques matching each community's specific property characteristics and residential expectations. For detailed neighborhood-level information about Blackwood's eight communities (Valleybrook, Blackwood Estates, Whitman Square, and others), see our dedicated Blackwood (08012) page. Full licensing through the New Jersey Department of Transportation (License #39PM00502700) and comprehensive insurance coverage distinguish professional moving companies from unlicensed alternatives operating throughout Gloucester Township. HOA communities require certificates of insurance naming associations as additional insured, apartment complexes verify licensing credentials before authorizing moves, and homeowners benefit from liability protection and quality assurance proper credentials guarantee. Given Gloucester Township's size and housing diversity—property values spanning $220,000 townhouses through $520,000+ newer construction—professional licensing proves essential for protecting customers' investments and ensuring accountable service delivery. Transparent pricing eliminates surprises on moving day. Our written estimates explain all charges, account for property-specific factors (split-level configurations common in Erial, townhouse HOA requirements in Chews Landing, newer subdivision access in Sicklerville sections, narrow streets in Grenloch), and represent final pricing regardless of traffic delays on Route 42 or Route 168 construction complications. This straightforward approach respects customers' budgets while delivering honest professional service at competitive Camden County rates, particularly valuable in Gloucester Township where middle-class demographics ($95,161 median household income) create expectations for fair pricing without premium charges associated with affluent communities. **Testimonial from a Gloucester Township Customer** 'After purchasing our first home in Glendora specifically for the National Blue Ribbon elementary school, we needed movers experienced with Gloucester Township's layout and traffic patterns. Maloney's Moving handled our relocation from our [Bellmawr](/areas-we-serve/bellmawr-08031) apartment with complete professionalism—they arrived punctually despite Route 42 morning congestion, coordinated efficiently with our HOA's requirements, and worked carefully throughout the day treating everything with respect. The crew navigated our split-level stairways expertly, assembled our bedroom furniture, and positioned our sectional sofa exactly where we wanted despite the tight doorways typical of 1980s construction. The final cost matched the estimate precisely even though they arrived slightly later than planned due to Route 42 traffic delays outside their control. We've recommended them to neighbors in our Gloucester Township subdivision—they clearly understand this township's communities and moving challenges.' — Michael and Lisa T., Glendora **Get Your Free Estimate Today** Whether you're relocating to Gloucester Township for its comprehensive amenities (Camden County College, National Blue Ribbon elementary school, largest elementary district in New Jersey), diverse housing options across six distinct communities, and strategic Route 42 corridor positioning, moving between township sections as your family's needs evolve, or departing for opportunities elsewhere, Maloney's Moving LLC delivers professional, reliable service tailored to this large municipality's specific characteristics. We understand Gloucester Township's township-wide structure (six named communities sharing schools and governance), infrastructure challenges (Route 42 congestion, Route 168 resurfacing through Spring 2026), community-specific characteristics (from Blackwood's college town atmosphere to Erial's established neighborhoods to Glendora's Blue Ribbon school premium), and middle-class expectations for fair pricing and quality service. Contact us today at (856) 223-7940 for a free estimate and experience the difference comprehensive township knowledge and genuine customer focus bring to your move.

Why Choose Maloney's Moving in Gloucester Township

  • Local Expertise: We know Gloucester Township inside and out—from traffic patterns to building regulations
  • Fully Licensed & Insured: NJ Public Movers License #39PM00502700 with comprehensive coverage
  • Affordable Rates: Transparent hourly pricing with no hidden fees—ever
  • Family-Owned with 22+ Years Experience: Your neighbors, not a national chain

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Residential & Commercial Moving Services

Residential Moving

Professional home moving services in Gloucester Township. We handle apartments, houses, and condos with care.

Commercial Moving

Business relocation services in 08012. Minimal downtime, maximum efficiency for your company.

Packing Services

Expert packing and unpacking services. We bring supplies and handle everything professionally.

Local Moving

Efficient local moves throughout Camden County. Same-day service available.

Local Landmarks

  • Camden County College - 320-acre main campus with Kevin G. Halpern Hall ($30M science building), 20 academic/administrative buildings, 8,000+ credit students
  • Glendora Elementary School - 2022 National Blue Ribbon School designation by U.S. Department of Education, exemplary academic performance
  • Route 42 (North-South Freeway) - 14.28-mile corridor through township connecting I-295 to Atlantic City Expressway, major Philadelphia commuter route
  • Route 168 (Black Horse Pike) - Historic four-lane commercial corridor with ongoing $15M resurfacing project through Spring 2026, 5.5 miles with 9 intersection upgrades
  • Gloucester Township Municipal Complex - Administrative offices, police headquarters, public works on Chews Landing Road serving 66,034 residents
  • Gloucester Township Community Park - 62.3 acres with sports fields, walking trails, playgrounds, pavilions for community events
  • Highland Regional High School - Black Horse Pike Regional facility serving Gloucester Township students grades 7-12
  • Timber Creek Regional High School - Black Horse Pike Regional facility within township boundaries providing convenient access
  • Gloucester Township Public Schools - New Jersey's largest elementary district with 11 schools, 6,644 students Pre-K through 6th grade
  • Erial Plaza - Neighborhood shopping center anchoring Erial community retail with local businesses and services
  • Grenloch Lake - Namesake landmark providing limited waterfront recreation for adjacent properties in Grenloch community

Neighborhoods We Serve

  • Blackwood - Historic village core with Camden County College 320-acre campus, downtown Route 168 businesses, mixed residential, student apartments, established center (see dedicated Blackwood page for 8 detailed neighborhoods)
  • Erial - Central-western sections along Route 534/CR 673, distinct community identity, Erial Elementary School, local shopping (Erial Plaza), 1960s-1980s ranchers/splits/Cape Cods ($280K-$420K), strong neighborhood associations
  • Glendora - Route 561 corridor sections, Glendora Elementary 2022 National Blue Ribbon School, education-focused families, 1970s-1990s colonials/splits/ranchers ($300K-$480K), school premium pricing
  • Chews Landing - Eastern sections along Chews Landing Road, Municipal Complex proximity, Community Park (62.3 acres), diverse housing (townhouses $220K-$350K, single-family $320K-$480K), convenient municipal services
  • Sicklerville Sections - Southern/southeastern near Washington Township border, newer 1990s-2010s construction, contemporary floor plans, subdivision amenities, family demographics ($340K-$520K), verify municipal jurisdiction (08012 or 08081 ZIP spans townships)
  • Grenloch - Northeastern sections near Blackwood border, 08032 ZIP identity, quiet character, 1950s-1980s ranches/Cape Cods/splits ($260K-$380K), Grenloch Lake landmark, narrow streets (22-24 feet), established multi-generational patterns

Local Moving Tips

  • Township encompasses six distinct communities—Blackwood, Erial, Glendora, Chews Landing, Sicklerville sections, Grenloch—each with unique characteristics requiring familiarity with specific section access patterns and residential expectations
  • Route 42 (14.28-mile corridor) experiences heavy northbound congestion 6:30-9:00am weekdays (Philadelphia commuters), southbound 4:00-7:00pm (return traffic)—we schedule moves mid-morning 9:30am-2:30pm avoiding peak periods
  • Route 168 $15M resurfacing project through Spring 2026 creates construction zones with lane restrictions weekdays 9:00am-4:00pm—we monitor NJDOT advisories and route via local roads (Greentree, Berlin-Cross Keys, Blackwood-Clementon) when necessary
  • Camden County College academic calendar creates peak moving periods August/September (fall semester) and May (spring conclusion) when student apartments implement strict scheduling—advance booking essential near campus
  • Gloucester Township Public Schools (largest elementary district in NJ with 6,644 students) draw families coordinating moves around academic calendar—summer relocations (June-August) most popular for families with school-age children
  • Glendora Elementary's 2022 National Blue Ribbon designation creates premium pricing and rapid turnover—homes often sell within 30 days with multiple offers during spring/summer peak real estate periods
  • Erial's established 1960s-1980s housing stock features narrow doorways (30-34 inches), split-level floor plans, tight staircases—experienced crews required for maneuvering contemporary furniture through mid-century access points
  • Chews Landing townhouse complexes enforce HOA regulations including advance notifications, parking restrictions (guest spaces 50-100 feet from entrances), elevator reservations—we handle all documentation and coordination
  • Sicklerville sections' newer subdivisions require HOA compliance, feature curved streets with cul-de-sacs requiring careful truck positioning, contemporary homes with generous doorways (34-36 inches) easing furniture movement
  • Grenloch's narrow streets (22-24 feet), mature tree coverage, limited parking require driveway staging and careful overhead clearance planning—we use appropriately-sized equipment for compact residential environments

We Also Serve Nearby Communities

In addition to Gloucester Township, we provide professional moving services to surrounding areas:

BlackwoodTurnersvilleSewellRunnemedeBellmawrWashington Township

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Serving All of Camden County

While we specialize in Gloucester Township (08012), we also serve communities throughoutCamden County and surrounding areas in South Jersey.

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