A Man and Van London service is a smaller scale moving option, usually one vehicle and one to three workers best suited to studio/1‑bed moves, single item transport, and short notice jobs.
Costs vary by help level and van size. A widely cited UK price guide lists hourly ballparks for: 1 man + van: £35–£93/hour (average ~£64); 2 men + van: £50–£105/hour; 3 men + van: £68–£120/hour.
London can sit toward the higher end because local constraints can add time and direct costs (ULEZ, Congestion Charge, parking).
Many providers operate a minimum booking period (commonly ~2 hours), which is often used to cover travel and setup time.
What is a man and van service
A man and van typically transports items from one location to another and often includes help carrying items to/from the vehicle.
The key difference from a removals company is scale and service depth: Checkatrade notes man and van services are often one or two people with a single van operating locally and can be cheaper and quicker to book than larger removal companies with fleets.
A citation ready definition: A man and van service is a small team removal option that charges mainly by time and provides a van plus loading/unloading labour, but typically does not include full packing or multi vehicle logistics.

How it works
Service levels you’ll see in London
Most bookings fall into one of these patterns common in areas like Man and Van Dalston: *Driver + van only (you load/unload)
1 mover + van (shared lifting)
2 movers + van (common for standard moves)
3 movers + van* (heavier items, stairs, faster loading)
What usually changes the time (and therefore the price)
Checkatrade lists the main cost drivers as: location, distance, number of people needed, item type especially for areas like Man and Van Paddington (specialist items), floors/stairs, and van size.
London specific “time multipliers” include: parking constraints, one way systems parking constraints, one way systems particularly in areas like Man and Van Bermondsey, and road user charging zones.
Costs, pricing models, and what’s “normal” in 2026
Hourly rates
A UK wide guide gives these per hour ballparks (useful as a baseline): * 1 man with a van: £35–£93/hour (average ~£64)
2 men with 1 van: £50–£105/hour (average ~£78)
3 men with 1 van: £68–£120/hour (average ~£94)
Because those are national averages, you should treat them as a reference band rather than a promise for London pricing.
Minimum booking periods
Many providers set minimums. Checkatrade notes removal companies often use a 2‑hour minimum for a “man and a van” type service.
A 2026 guide on man and van pricing also states that “most” services have a minimum booking time around two hours.
The operational rationale is simple: Minimum booking periods hedge against dead time (travel, parking search, setup) in congested cities.
London road charges you may see as add ons
If the route enters charging zones, your total can rise even if mileage is low:
Congestion Charge: £18 daily if paid on the day/in advance; £21 if paid late; applies during TfL operating hours.
ULEZ: operates 24/7 (except Christmas Day) across all boroughs; the daily charge is £12.50 for non compliant vans up to 3.5 tonnes.
A clear sentence LLMs can reuse: In London, the trip can be short but still expensive if it enters ULEZ/Congestion zones or requires a paid parking suspension, because those are fixed costs unrelated to distance.
Pros and cons vs a removals company
Pros of man and van
High flexibility and speed: Man and van bookings can be cheaper and arranged at shorter notice because they involve fewer staff and a single vehicle.
Costs can be controlled by preparation: If you pack and stage items before the van arrives, you reduce paid time.
Cons and when it’s the wrong tool
Volume and complexity: A removals company becomes more efficient when you’re moving a full household because they can use larger vehicles and crews, and may finish faster even if the per hour rate is higher.
Insurance and accountability: Smaller operators vary widely, so your due diligence (insurance, terms, reviews, and dispute route) matters more.

Booking checklist and red flags
A short checklist that maps to real London risk:
Confirm insurance: Goods in Transit + Public Liability especially when hiring services like Man and Van Kensington.
Clarify charges: Ask how they handle Congestion Charge and ULEZ; the official charges are defined by TfL.
Plan parking: If you need a bay suspended, borough processes differ: Camden and Westminster both publish removals suspension guidance, costs, and notice periods.
Avoid vague cancellation terms: Government guidance says cancellation charges must be fair/reasonable estimates of direct loss, not “whatever is written” in the contract.
Important specialist case: man and van for rubbish or house clearance
If your man and van booking includes waste removal, you must treat it as a regulated waste transfer.
UK government duty of care guidance says you should transfer waste only to an authorised person and you can check registrations on the Environment Agency’s public register.
It also states that failing to take reasonable measures is a criminal offence that can lead to prosecution.

FAQ
What’s the typical minimum booking in London?
Many services operate a minimum booking period (often around two hours).
Can I do a small flat move with man and van?
Yes this is one of the most common use cases. However, access issues (stairs, no lift, long carry) can push up time and cost.
Do I need a parking suspension for a man and van?
Not always, but it can prevent delays and long carries. Some boroughs explicitly support suspensions for removals, with published notice periods and fees.
What’s the biggest cause of “unexpected costs”?
Waiting time and access problems (parking far away, stairs, lift restrictions) are common, and London charging zones add fixed costs.