Oh boy did you come to the right place! At the height of my *ahem* "obsession" I had 18 tanks, two ponds and some buckets (but those didn't count...they were just baby fish honest!)...and I seem to move about two-three times per year...at least.
I'm assuming from the size of your tank that we aren't talking about foot long frontosas and a three foot long pleco here....so easiest ways to move them. For under five-inch long non-spiny fish, go bribe your LFS (local fish store) into giving you appropriately sized bags and some of those itty-bitty rubber bands. If they are nearby, you can give the fishling a hit of oxygen right when you are about to move them, but for such a short move, they should be fine in the bags. Practice closing it and trapping air at same times a couple of times with just water. For larger fish and spiny fellas, like good sized plecostomus, use five gallon buckets or even a cooler. Only fill one third of the way up to allow for sloshage. (For very long trips there are even battery-powered airstones, but you'll be fine without)
Test the water where you're moving to, if it is very different, you'll want to bring some of your old water or else you'll need to drip line them or do fussy things involving opening bag, putting in a little water...then a little more...etc. If you can't take enough water, ask me how to do a dripline, it the easiest acclimation method for you and the fish.
On moving tank itself. It's tempting to leave some water in, but don't do it! It might be fine, although *really* heavy, but there is a chance you might break the seal and that would be a pain... Also, scoop out the gravel and toss it in a five gallon bucket (or two). Put some water in there with it. If you resist the urge to rinse it off, you should be able to preserve some of your friendly bacteria crew that way. Use your old filter too and don't change it for the first week if it can go that long with the messy cichlids.
HTH!




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