Road trip from Raleigh to Boston
Hi
I am relocating to Boston, MA from Raleigh, NC. I was thinking of driving there instead of shipping my car. This will be my first ever long distance road trip that I would drive myself. I am 29yo Indian Male, and not really bad at driving!
I am planning for March 8th and arrive there by March 9th afternoon. I am more than OK with taking rest break for the night of 8th, but not sure where.
I am still contemplating whether I should drive or ship the car and fly. Any advice will be appreciated - both for the route/safety and for the decision to drive/fly.
Thanks
-Divyakumar
Driving is a viable option.
Hello and welocme to the RTA forums !
It's a comfortable 2 day drive, so if you feel comfortable driving you should be fine. Stopping north of Philadelphia should split it into 2 comfortable days with the second not being quite so long. You should have no need to book lodgings so you can see how you feel as to where you end up the night. By staying North of any major City you should avoid the worst of the rush hour traffic heading into the City the following morning as you head away.
A Bit Farther for a Better Trip
Raleigh to Boston is just over 700 miles if you stick (roughly) to I-95 most of the way up, But that direct route, which is the way most mapping software will send you, is one of the worst drives in America with lots of traffic, lots of tolls, and not much in redeeming scenery. If you're willing to go a bit out of your way, you can have a much more relaxing and enjoyable trip and still make it in under two days by staying inland of I-95 and the major cities that it goes through. US-264 east out of Raleigh will get you to I-95 north. At Petersburg VA you'd switch over to I-295 thus bypassing downtown Richmond and returning to I-95 north of town. Just north of Fredericksburg, however, take US-17 north to US-15 north to Harrisburg. There get on I-81 all the way up to Scranton PA and I-84 east through Hartford to the Mass Pike (I-90) into Boston. All of that is about 100 miles longer, but lets you miss Washington, Boston, the MD DE and NJ Turnpikes, and (shudder!) New York City. Instead you get a scenic drive up some great surface roads through Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania; scenic Interstates through the Appalachians and Poconos; and far fewer tolls. With a relatively early start out of Raleigh, your overnight stop would be around Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, leaving you about 300 miles (or about 6hours) of driving on day 2.
AZBuck