Walk into any Google search for "packers and movers" in India and roughly 80% of the top results will display the magic phrase IBA-approved. Many of them are not, in fact, on the Indian Banks' Association's approved transporter list. This guide explains what IBA approval actually is, what it isn't, and how to verify a moving company's credentials before you hand over your life's belongings.
What is "IBA-approved"?
The Indian Banks' Association (IBA) maintains a list of transporters approved to handle the relocation of bank employees who are eligible for reimbursement under bank transfer-policy circulars. Banks reimburse only invoices issued by IBA-approved transporters. The list is curated, audited annually, and limited — fewer than 500 transporters nationwide carry the certification.
Important: IBA approval is about reimbursement eligibility for bank employees, not a general consumer-safety certification. A non-IBA mover can still be excellent. But for any household where a member is a public-sector banker, IBA approval is required to claim transfer expenses.
How to verify IBA approval (the 60-second method)
- Visit the official IBA website (iba.org.in) and search the latest transporter list PDF.
- Match the company's full legal name (not the marketing brand) against the PDF.
- Confirm the approval is valid for the current financial year — older list PDFs may show lapsed entries.
- Ask the mover for a copy of the approval letter on IBA letterhead, with the validity date.
- For a bank-employee transfer move, ask the mover to invoice in the bank's preferred billing format.
If a mover refuses to share the IBA approval letter, walk away. The phrase on a website footer means nothing without the underlying document.
The 7-point credential checklist for ANY mover (not just IBA)
- GST registration certificate — every legitimate Indian mover must have a 15-digit GSTIN. Verify it on the government GST portal (gst.gov.in). A "no-GST" mover is operating illegally and you have no recourse if anything goes wrong.
- Udyam / MSME registration — most established movers are registered as MSMEs. The certificate has a unique Udyam number you can verify.
- Shop and Establishment certificate — issued by the state municipal corporation. Confirms the company has a registered office.
- Transit-insurance policy partnership — ask which IRDAI-licensed insurer underwrites their transit policies. Common partners include Bajaj Allianz, ICICI Lombard, HDFC ERGO. Ask to see a sample policy issued in the last 30 days.
- Fleet ownership versus subcontracting — does the mover own the trucks and employ the crew, or do they subcontract? Subcontracted moves are the #1 reason for damage and theft. Confirm in writing.
- Google Business Profile with 50+ reviews — a real, claimed GBP with verified review history. Beware of companies with only website testimonials and no Google reviews — those testimonials are likely fabricated.
- Physical office at the listed address — drive or call the listed address. A virtual address or PG-mailbox operation is a red flag for an inter-state move.
Common misleading claims to watch for
- "ISO 9001 certified" — easy to obtain from many private certification bodies. Not a quality guarantee. Confirm the certifying body is internationally accredited.
- "Government-approved" — generic and meaningless. There is no single "government approval" for packers and movers in India outside of IBA.
- "Insurance up to ₹10 lakhs" — meaningless without seeing the policy. Ask which insurer, what is covered, what the claim process is.
- "Pan-India network" — typically subcontracted. Ask which locations they actually own warehouses or offices in.
- "20 years of experience" — verify with the GST registration date and the company's MCA filing on mca.gov.in.
Documents to collect before move day
- Signed quotation on company letterhead with GST number printed
- Inventory list signed by both parties
- Transit insurance policy document with your name and inventory value
- Truck registration certificate copy (RC) and driver's licence copy
- Supervisor's photo, name and phone number
- Receipt for the advance payment with company stamp
When to walk away
If any one of these is true, find a different mover:
- The quote is given over phone without a physical survey, for a 2 BHK+ move
- The mover asks for more than 25% upfront, or requires the entire payment before delivery
- The "office address" turns out to be a residential apartment or a virtual office
- The company has no Google Business Profile or fewer than 10 Google reviews
- The GST number doesn't validate on gst.gov.in
- The mover refuses to put insurance, scope and price in a single written contract
Choosing a mover should take 3–5 days of comparison work, not 30 minutes. The time you spend vetting credentials is the most important insurance you'll buy for your move.
