
Founded to end the surprise-fee move
Daniel Seah started Anchor in 2009 after watching friend after friend get a cheap moving quote, then a shock invoice — “manpower”, “staircase”, “bulky item”, all stacked on once the truck was loaded and they had no choice.
Anchor’s answer was simple and it hasn’t changed: survey the move first, fix the price in writing, and stand by it. Employ and train our own crews rather than rotating casual hires. Wrap everything, insure everything, and turn up on time.
Fifteen years on, that’s still the whole company — tens of thousands of moves later, the quote still holds.
What a move with Anchor means
A quote that holds
After a free survey we lock the price in writing. The day-of “manpower” and “staircase” surprises that plague this industry simply don’t happen with us.
In-house, trained crews
Our movers are employed and trained by us, in Anchor uniform — not a rotating cast of casual hires who’ve never met your sofa before.
Wrapped & insured
Everything that can be wrapped is wrapped, everything is accounted for, and transit insurance sits behind it. Your things are handled like they’re ours.
Timing we keep
Lift slots and key handovers run to the minute in Singapore. We build the move around your window and turn up on time to honour it.
Responsible disposal
The old goes somewhere sensible — e-waste to licensed recyclers, usable items routed for donation — not just dumped to be your problem.
One coordinator, real answers
A single person runs your move and answers the phone. No call-centre runaround on the one day you can’t afford it.
Meet the team
Daniel Seah
Started Anchor after one too many friends got stung by surprise moving bills. Built the company on a fixed-price-after-survey promise, and still reviews the tricky quotes himself.
Ravi Chandran
Runs the yard, the lorries and the crew roster. The reason the right truck and the right number of movers turn up at the right address, on time.
Marcus Lim
The single point of contact on big residential and office moves. Known for plans so detailed the actual move feels like an anticlimax — which is the point.
