Premium 3 BHK proof checklist before loading
A heavy 3 BHK deserves proof before the first carton leaves your flat. This is not overthinking. It is how you protect expensive furniture and keep the mover accountable.
Walk through your home with the supervisor. Point out the large TV, glass tops, mirrors, decor, crockery, appliances, wardrobes, hydraulic beds and any item that already has a scratch. Take photos on your phone before packing. Ask the supervisor to mark fragile cartons and number high-value boxes. If you have art, idols or imported furniture, mention that before the material is opened.
Your quote should also say how unloading and placement will happen. A 3 BHK delivery is not complete when goods reach the lobby. Beds need to go into rooms, cartons need to land in the right area, appliances need careful placement and fragile cartons need slower handling. If you need unpacking or debris removal, write that separately.
Our team prefers one named supervisor for heavy 3 BHK moves because a large home has too many moving parts for a casual crew. You should know who is responsible at pickup and who will answer the phone at delivery. That one name saves a lot of shouting later.
If your 3 BHK has two balconies, a servant room, loft storage or a box bed full of goods, mention it during the quote. These corners are easy to miss in a video call. They add cartons, carrying time and sometimes a second loading sequence. A mover who prices only visible furniture will almost always revise the bill.
For premium homes in Sector 93, Sector 128, Sector 150 or Jaypee-side societies, ask for lift protection and lobby protection too. Some societies hold residents responsible for lift scratches and lobby damage. The mover quote should mention careful movement through common areas, not only protection of your goods.
At delivery, do one room-by-room check before the crew leaves. Count carton groups, inspect the TV, check glass tops, check appliance dents and confirm bed fittings. The final payment should happen after this basic inspection, not while the truck is still being unloaded.