Illinois to Florida Car Shipping

Illinois to Florida Car Shipping

If you need to transport your cars, motorcycles, bikes, and vehicles from state to state all over the USA safely, be sure that we will do our best to supply you with the best services. Tempus Logix offers its customers open and enclosed vehicle transportation. Our company is certified in the vehicle shipping industry and bonded with FMCSA and USDOT. All the drivers are licensed. 

Due to our friendly and dedicated staff, we gain the customers’ faith, so that they will surely turn to us again. Our main aim is that our all customers be satisfied with the beneficial services we do for them.

You can also get acquainted with Tempus Logix TERMS AND CONDITIONS for more details.

You can contact Tempus Logix through live chat on the website or call +1(818)942-7030.

From Illinois (IL) to Florida (FL) the driving distance is 1,116 miles / 1 796 km


Illinois

Illinois is the Midwest region of the United States, and is located in Illinois and ranks sixth in terms of population and 25th in area. Chicago is the largest city in Illinois and the fifth-largest city in North America. The capital of Illinois is Springfield, located in the state’s center; other major metropolitan areas include Metro East (Greater St. Louis), Peoria, and Rockford.

Illinois has a very diverse economy.

The state is a central transportation hub: the Port of Chicago has access to the Atlantic Ocean via the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Island, and the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi River via the Illinois waterway. The Mississippi, Ohio, and Wabash rivers form part of the state’s borders.

O’Hare International Airport has been one of the top 10 busiest airports.

It has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfa) with hot summers and cold winters.

In Chicago, there was built the first nuclear reactor. Illinois has six nuclear power plants: Braidwood, Byron, Clinton, Dresden, LaSalle, and Quad City.

Aurora is a satellite city of Chicago and the second-most populous city in Illinois.

Located in Winnebago County in the north-central part of Illinois, Rockford is the state’s third-biggest city.

Joliet, located in metropolitan Chicago, is the fourth largest city in the state, with a population of 147,433.

Naperville, a Chicago suburb, ranks fifth with 141,853 residents. Naperville and Aurora share a common boundary along Illinois State Highway 59.

Springfield, the state capital, is the sixth most populous city with a population of 117,352.

Peoria, the second-most populous city in the state decades ago, ranks seventh with 115,007 people.

The eighth-largest city is Elgin, a northwestern suburb of Chicago with a population of 108,188.


  Florida 

 Florida is a state located in the Southeastern region of the United States. The state borders the Gulf of Mexico, Alabama, Georgia, the Bahamas, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Straits of Florida and Cuba.

Florida – is the only state in the U.S. that borders the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.

Florida(65,758 square miles) ranks 22nd in the area among the 50 states.

With a population of over 21 million, it is third-most populous.

The capital is Tallahassee.

The most populous city is Jacksonville.

The Miami metropolitan area(almost 6.2 million) is Florida’s most populous urban area.

It is the seventh-most populous in the United States.

The other urban conurbations with over one million people are Tampa Bay, Orlando, and Jacksonville.

1. The largest metropolitan area in the United States is the Miami metropolitan area, with about 6.06 million people.

2. The Tampa Bay Area is the second-largest; with more than 3.02 million,

3. The Orlando metropolitan area is third, with more than 2.44 million,

4. The Jacksonville metropolitan area is fourth., with more than 1.47 million.

Florida has 22 Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs).

Forty-three of Florida’s 67 counties are in the MSA.

The official name for a city, town, or village in Florida is “municipality,” There is no legal distinction between towns, villages, and towns in Florida.

Florida is a highly urbanized state: in 2000, 89 percent of the population lived in urban areas compared to 79 percent nationally.

The highway system contains 1,495 mi (2,406 km) of interstate highways and 10,601 mi (17,061 km) of non-interstate roadways, such as state highways and U.S. Highways.

Before constructing routes under the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, Florida began building a long cross-state toll road, Florida’s Turnpike.

Florida’s primary interstate routes include:

· I-4 (133 miles), connecting Tampa, Lakeland, Orlando, and Daytona Beach, connecting with I-75 in Tampa and I-95 in Daytona Beach.

· I-10 ( 362 miles ), connecting Pensacola, Tallahassee, Lake City, and Jacksonville, interchanges with I-75 in Lake City and I-95 in Jacksonville; and the southernmost east-west Interstate in the United States, terminating in Santa Monica( total length of 2460 miles).

· I-75 ( 470 miles), enters the state near Lake City (45 miles (72 km) west of Jacksonville); and south through Gainesville, Ocala, Tampa’s eastern suburbs, Bradenton, Sarasota, Fort Myers, and Naples, from the “Alligator Alley” to Fort Lauderdale having interchanges with I-10 in Lake City and I-4 in Tampa.

It is the second-longest north-south Interstate with a total length of 1786 miles and terminates at the Canadian border at Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.

· I-95 (382 miles), enters the state near Jacksonville. I-95 has interchanges with I-10 in Jacksonville and I-4 in Daytona Beach.

There are four utility routes associated with the Interstate. It is the longest north-south interstate highway with 1,924 miles and ends at the Canadian border northeast of Houlton, Maine.

The states in which we operate

AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DE FL GA HI ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA WV WI WY DC