A driver in Wallace, NC spends 20 minutes comparing auto transport quotes online. They book the one that looked most reasonable. Pickup is confirmed for a specific date. They plan around it.
The pickup date passes. They call. The carrier had "a route change." New date proposed. A few days later: the rate has changed. The driver is already in their destination city, already past the point where "no" is a realistic answer. The final invoice is 45% over the original quote. The car arrives a week late.
Most people who've been through this describe it the same way afterward: "I didn't know that was possible." It's possible because the auto transport spot market allows for it — brokers quote low to win the booking, then renegotiate when the client is locked in. It's a documented practice with a documented name.
Corna's auto transport service was structured to make each of those failure points structurally impossible. Not through promises — through process.
The industry-standard method for most vehicles on most routes. Cost-effective and appropriate for the vast majority of shipments. Corna vets carriers before assignment — FMCSA registration, insurance coverage, route history, vehicle class compatibility.
For vehicles where condition during transit is the priority: classic cars, luxury vehicles, low-clearance models. Full protection from road debris, weather, and direct exposure throughout the route.
Carrier comes to your address in Wallace, NC and delivers to the destination address. No terminal drop-off. No meeting at a distribution point. Logistics coordinated around your actual addresses.
Confirmed routes with milestone updates throughout transit. Long haul doesn't mean out of contact. Corna tracks progress and communicates at key points.
For time-sensitive situations where standard carrier timelines don't work. Expedited rates are disclosed upfront — not revealed after booking as a "necessary upgrade."
Non-running vehicles shipped with appropriate loading equipment. Condition and access confirmed at booking. The right carrier and loading method assigned before pickup day.
A family relocating from Wallace, NC gets a quote that looked good. They book without asking whether the rate is confirmed or estimated. Pickup is scheduled for a Tuesday. By Thursday, no carrier. A new carrier is assigned two days later with a revised rate. They're already in another state, paying for a rental car, unable to push back. The vehicle arrives 10 days after the original window. The invoice is 48% over what they were quoted.
Same route, same vehicle, same timeline. Corna builds the quote from confirmed variables — origin and destination address access, vehicle type, transport mode, current route demand, timing window. The number reflects actual service cost. Carrier assignment follows vetting: FMCSA status checked, insurance verified, route experience confirmed. Pickup window communicated 24–48 hours in advance with a specific timeframe. Delivery within the committed window at the confirmed rate.
Nothing about Scenario B is magical. It's the result of a booking process built around delivery rather than acquisition.
Corna quotes from route-specific variables, not placeholder estimates. Origin and destination address access, vehicle type, transport mode, route demand, timing — all factored before a number is given. The rate you're quoted is the rate on the invoice.
Before Corna assigns a carrier to your vehicle, the carrier's FMCSA registration status, insurance coverage, vehicle class suitability, and route history are confirmed. This step exists to protect your vehicle — not to slow the booking.
You receive carrier name, driver contact information, and a specific pickup window the day before pickup. Not a "sometime this week" range. A specific window.
Photograph every panel, wheel well, and glass surface in good lighting. Documentation resolves disputes before they become arguments.
Most carriers request a quarter tank or less. Added weight translates to compliance and safety considerations across a loaded carrier.
A security alarm that triggers during transport creates complications at every stop. Disable it or provide clear disarm instructions.
A full-size carrier cannot always reach narrow residential streets. Identify an alternative pickup point if clearance is an issue.
The single most impactful action: photograph the vehicle before it loads. Everything else can be managed. Undocumented condition at pickup is the one gap that creates the most difficult situations at delivery.
A: It's a confirmed rate built from specific route variables. The number changes only if the scope changes — and that's disclosed before it changes, not after.
A: Before pickup day — 24–48 hours in advance. You'll receive carrier name, DOT number, and the specific pickup window.
A: Yes. Inoperable vehicles require specific loading equipment and disclosure at booking. Corna confirms the appropriate setup before assignment.
A: The pre-transport condition record is the baseline. Any difference found at delivery is documented immediately and addressed through Corna — not left for the driver to manage independently.
"Corna's intake process — the questions they asked before quoting — made me feel like the number I was given was actually real. It was. Invoice matched exactly."
— Ifeoma D., Wallace"Previous experience: missed pickup, rate renegotiated. Corna: carrier confirmed the day before pickup, car arrived on time. The difference was entirely in the intake."
— Derek A."Corna walked me through photographing the vehicle, explained why it mattered, and confirmed it was on file. Delivery was smooth. They protect the customer."
— Zainab L.