Dispatch Experts helps you find loads, negotiate rates, complete broker setup, handle paperwork, and stay loaded. Dispatching starting at 7% — plus no-percentage unlimited options.
Active Load: Atlanta, GA → Dallas, TX
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Rate Negotiated
$3,450
No contractsNo forced dispatchDedicated dispatcherDirect broker setup
Carriers Supported
Or No-% Flat Fee
Back Office & Invoicing
Driver Support
Equipment We Dispatch
Find Freight For Your Truck
We search load boards and broker networks specifically for your equipment type, ensuring you get the right loads at the right rate.
Dry Van
Dry van dispatch services for owner operators looking for better lanes, consistent freight, and fewer empty miles.
Reefer
Reefer dispatch services for refrigerated carriers hauling temperature-controlled freight across the U.S.
Box Truck
Box truck dispatch services for regional, dedicated, and over-the-road box truck owner operators.
Flatbed
Flatbed dispatch services with rate negotiation, broker setup, and support for open-deck freight.
Step Deck
Step deck dispatch support for heavy freight, oversized freight, and specialized lanes.
Power Only
Power only dispatch services for trailer moves, load-outs, tow-aways, and drop-and-hook opportunities.
Starting at 7%
ReeferDispatch Services
Keep your reefer loaded with high-paying temperature-controlled freight.
$3.00+/mi good rate floor
We Understand Reefer
The challenges reefer operators face every day. and how we help.
Temperature Compliance Risk
One degree off and the receiver rejects the entire load. Pharma cargo can mean $100K-$1M+ claims from a single excursion. We verify temp specs, mode settings, and pre-cool requirements in writing before you accept any load.
Higher Operating Costs
Reefer fuel burns $15,000-$20,000/year on top of tractor diesel. Add washouts ($50-$80 each, FSMA required), breakdown coverage ($1,000-$2,000/year), and maintenance PMs every 1,500 hours. We factor all of this into every rate we negotiate for you.
Lumper Fees & Detention
Lumper fees of $100-$500 hit you at the dock with no warning. Cold storage facilities average 4-8 hour waits while your reefer unit burns fuel the entire time. We verify lumper costs upfront, confirm detention terms, and file claims with documentation.
How We Dispatch Reefer Differently
Produce Season Strategy
We track seasonal corridors. California Central Valley in spring, Florida citrus in winter, Washington apples in fall. and position you ahead of demand surges when rates jump from $2.70 to $4.00+ per mile.
Pre-Load Verification
Before you accept any reefer load, we confirm temperature specs, continuous vs cycle sentry mode, pre-cool requirements, lumper fees at delivery, washout needs, and trailer age requirements. No surprises at the dock.
Reload Planning
We plan your next load before you deliver the current one. Empty reefer miles cost more than empty dry van miles because the unit keeps burning fuel. Every hour without a reload is money lost.
Detention & Claims Documentation
We file detention claims with gate-in times, dock times, temperature logs, and fuel receipts. For reefer, the running unit adds a fuel cost argument on top of standard detention. Less than half of claims get paid. documentation is the difference.
$3.00+
Good Rate Floor/Mi
15-20%
Premium Over Dry Van
$15-20K
Extra Annual Reefer Fuel
Apr-Sep
Peak Produce Season
WhyReeferDispatching is Different
Reefer freight commands higher rates but carries higher risk. You need a dispatcher who understands temperature compliance, perishable freight urgency, and reefer-specific broker requirements.
Common Reefer Dispatching Questions
What rates can I expect for reefer freight?
Reefer spot rates average $2.62-$3.13/mile, with contract rates around $2.80/mile. During produce season (April-September), rates on key lanes like Salinas to Chicago can hit $4.00-$4.80/mile. Pharma freight pays $3.50-$5.00+/mile year-round. The minimum profitable rate for reefer is higher than dry van. around $2.60-$2.80/mile after factoring in reefer fuel, maintenance, and washouts.
How much more does reefer cost to operate than dry van?
Reefer adds roughly $25,000-$40,000/year in costs: reefer unit fuel ($15,000-$20,000), unit maintenance and PMs ($3,000-$5,000), washouts ($5,000-$8,000), breakdown insurance ($1,000-$2,000), and higher cargo insurance. The good news is reefer revenue runs $40,000-$60,000 higher, so the net advantage is typically $15,000-$35,000/year for operators who run efficiently.
What happens if my reefer unit breaks down mid-transit?
Call a mobile reefer tech immediately. there are 25,000+ service providers nationwide. Document the breakdown time, temperature at failure, and all repairs. If cargo is compromised, notify your dispatcher and insurance right away. Carrying spare belts and fuses handles the most common quick fixes. This is why reefer breakdown insurance is not optional. without it, one spoiled load can cost $50,000-$500,000.
Do you handle lumper fees and detention claims?
Yes. We verify lumper costs before you accept a load so there are no cash surprises at the dock. For detention, we confirm terms in writing before booking, and when you wait beyond free time we file claims with full documentation. gate-in times, temperature logs, fuel receipts. Reefer detention is worse than dry van because your unit burns 0.5-1.5 gallons/hour while you wait.
When is the best time to run reefer?
April through September is money season. California produce fires up in spring, multiple regions harvest simultaneously in summer, and Washington apples carry through fall. Q1 (January-March) is the slowest. rates drop to $2.40-$2.70/mile. Smart reefer operators save aggressively during peak season to survive winter. We help plan around these cycles so you are in the right lanes at the right time.
Professional freight dispatchers for truck drivers
The goal is the same: better freight decisions, stronger broker communication, and less time wasted chasing bad loads.
Load Search FTL/LTL
We search load boards and broker networks for full truckload and LTL freight based on your truck type, lane preferences, and schedule.
Rate Negotiation
Our freight dispatchers negotiate with brokers, help protect your rate per mile, and book only the loads you approve.
Broker Setup
We handle carrier packets, broker setup, rate confirmations, and dispatch paperwork so you can focus entirely on driving.
Detention & Layover
We help request and follow up on detention, layover, and truck ordered not used (TONU) payments when issues happen at the facility.
Invoicing Support
Back-office support is included, helping you submit paperwork, organize invoices, and get paid directly by brokers or factoring.
24/7 Support
Our dispatch team supports drivers before, during, and after active loads — including after-hours communication when needed.
No-Percentage Unlimited Dispatch
We also offer no-percent unlimited dispatch options for carriers who prefer a flat-fee dispatching model. Keep 100% of your negotiated rate.
Dispatching services starting at 7%
Prefer not to pay a percentage? We also offer NO % unlimited dispatch options. Request a call to learn how our flat-fee dispatch model works.
%
Standard Dispatching
Traditional pay-per-load model
7%/ load
Pay only on accepted loads
No monthly fees
Full back-office support included
No contracts or forced dispatch
$
Popular for Active Carriers
NO % Unlimited
Flat-fee dispatch option
Flat Fee
No percentage removed from loads
Keep 100% of your gross pay
Unlimited load searching options
Designed for active owner operators
Request a callback
Fill out the short form and book your appointment now. Our onboarding team will call you and explain our services and how to start getting loads in less than 24 hours.
Fill out a short form and our onboarding team contacts you.
2
Send Documents
We review your carrier packet and operating needs.
3
Get Dispatcher
A dedicated dispatcher learns your lanes and preferences.
4
Start Booking Loads
We search, negotiate, and book loads you approve.
What Carriers Say
Real drivers. Real results.
"It's a pleasure to work with Dispatch Experts. I want to continue working with Dispatch Experts. They handle the details so I can drive."
Jose Gonzalez
Dispatch Experts Carrier
"They have great experience in transportation and are reliable, transparent, and professional. It's rare to find dispatcher operations this clear."
Edgar Araya
Dispatch Experts Carrier
"I am glad to work with Dispatch Experts. They always find good loads for me and communication is fast."
Luis Castro
Dispatch Experts Carrier
FAQ
Everything you need to know
Clear answers for carriers before they request a callback.
How much does dispatching cost?
Standard dispatching services start at 7%. We also offer no-percentage unlimited dispatch options for carriers who want a flat-fee model. Request a call to learn which option fits your operation.
Do I have to sign a contract?
No. There are no long or short-term commitments, no minimum number of loads, and no obligations. You can stop at any time with a phone call or email.
Can I decline a load?
Yes. You can decline as many loads as you want. There are no minimum fees or obligations. You only move freight you approve.
Do you provide dispatch services for new MCs?
Yes. We work with new MC authority holders and help them get set up with brokers, understand the process, and start booking loads.
What equipment do you dispatch?
Dry Van, Reefer, Box Truck, Flatbed, Step Deck, and Power Only.
Do I need my own MC authority?
Yes. You need your own MC authority to work with Dispatch Experts. We follow strict FMCSA compliance policies.
Does Dispatch Experts help with invoicing?
Yes. Invoicing and collection support is included at no additional cost. You get paid directly from shippers and brokers.
What is a factoring company?
Brokers and shippers can take up to 60 days to pay invoices. Factoring companies purchase your invoices and provide funding in as little as the same day.
Let's Keep You Moving.
Get load search, broker setup, rate negotiation, and a dispatcher who understands your business. Ask about standard dispatching starting at 7% or our NO % unlimited option.
Updated
Trucking Equipment Knowledge Base
Rates, lanes, pain points, and real numbers for dry van, reefer, box truck, flatbed, step deck, and power only. Built for owner operators who want straight answers.
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Trucking Calculators
Free tools to help owner operators understand their costs and maximize profitability.
Starting at 7%Dispatch ServicesWhyDispatching is DifferentSomething went wrong. Please call us at (213) 277-5534.We also dispatchPlease selectPlease enter an MC or DOT number.Carrier not found. Your MC authority must be active to use our dispatch services. If you recently activated, try again in a few days or call us at (213) 277-5534.Lookup failed. Please fill out the form manually.Your MC authority must be active to use our dispatch services. If you recently activated, try again in a few days or call us at (213) 277-5534.MC #DOT #AuthorityEntityFleetUnitsCargoInsuranceLocationpowerdriver(s)ActiveInactiveGood load. {margin}% margin at ${rpm}/mi. Take it.Decent but tight. {margin}% margin. Check if there's a better option before committing.You'd lose money on this load. Negotiate a higher rate or pass.Barely worth it at {margin}% margin. Push for a higher rate.FuelDispatch Feecapped at $300TollsOtherTotal CostsTotalFlat fee insight:At {pct}% you're paying ${fee} dispatch on this load{cap}. With our No % Unlimited plan, that goes to $0 per load. Over 4 loads/week, that's ~${monthly}/month back in your pocket.Truck PaymentInsuranceMaintenanceTiresPermits & LicensesPhone, ELD & SoftwaremoMin rate to accept includes a 15% profit cushion above your operating cost.Weekly projection:At {net}/load, doing 3 loads/week = ${w3}/week (${m3}/month). Doing 4 loads/week = ${w4}/week (${m4}/month).Dry VanConsistent freight, better lanes, and fewer empty miles for dry van operators.Dry van is the most common equipment type, which means competition for loads is high. An experienced dispatcher matters more here to secure consistent lanes and avoid deadhead miles.$2.52/mi avg spot rateWe Understand Dry VanThe challenges dry van operators face every day. and how we help.Deadhead & Rate Pressure15-35% of miles driven are empty industry-wide. At $2.26/mile operating costs and spot rates around $2.30-$2.60, every bad load decision costs real money. We plan return loads before you deliver, targeting under 15% deadhead.Broker Risk & Slow PayDouble-brokering is the #1 concern for owner-operators. We verify broker credit ratings on DAT and Truckstop, check FMCSA authority, and prioritize brokers with quick-pay options over slow-pay high rates.Detention & Dock Time94.5% of carriers charge detention but fewer than half collect. Dry van gets lowest dock priority at warehouses and distribution centers. We confirm detention terms before booking and document everything to fight for your money.How We Dispatch Dry Van DifferentlyLane OptimizationWe focus on corridors with strong two-way freight flows. SoCal to Midwest, Southeast to Northeast, Texas Triangle. to minimize deadhead and maximize your revenue per week.Data-Driven Rate NegotiationWe negotiate during peak broker hours using real-time market data. We counter low offers with DAT comps, value-stack your safety record and on-time percentage, and push for above-market rates on every load.Seasonal PlanningQ1 is always the slowest period for dry van. We plan around produce season corridors in spring, pre-holiday inventory builds in fall, and position you in strong freight markets before seasonal spikes hit.Broker & Shipper RelationshipsDirect shipper relationships pay 15-30% more than the spot market. We build long-term broker and shipper contacts that give you access to premium loads and consistent freight that load boards never see.$2.52Avg Spot Rate/Mi15-35%Industry Avg Deadhead$41,600What $0.40/Mi Adds Yearly+8-9%2026 Rate ForecastCommon Dry Van Dispatching QuestionsWhat rates can I expect for dry van freight?National average dry van spot rate sits around $2.30-$2.60/mile as of 2026. Contract rates average $2.20-$2.50/mile. Premium cargo like electronics or medical supplies can push $3.00-$4.50/mile. Your actual rate depends on lane, season, and the broker relationships your dispatcher has built.How do you reduce my deadhead miles?We search for return loads before your current delivery is complete and focus on lanes with strong two-way freight flows so you are not repositioning empty. Our target is under 15% deadhead. Every 10% reduction in deadhead saves roughly $8,000-$12,000 per year.What happens when freight slows down in Q1?January through March is the slowest period for dry van. rates can dip 10-15% below annual average. We plan around this by diversifying lane selections, tapping broker relationships for off-market loads, and positioning you in markets that stay active through winter. Produce season starting in April brings rates back.How do you handle detention and accessorial pay?We confirm detention terms in writing before booking any load. When you sit beyond free time, we document arrival and departure times and file claims immediately. Dry van gets lowest dock priority, so having someone fight for detention pay matters more for your equipment type than any other.Do you work with new authority operators?Yes. New authority operators often benefit the most from dispatch services because they lack established broker relationships. We use our existing contacts to get you loads at rates you would not find on your own while you build your operating history and reputation.ReeferKeep your reefer loaded with high-paying temperature-controlled freight.Reefer freight commands higher rates but carries higher risk. You need a dispatcher who understands temperature compliance, perishable freight urgency, and reefer-specific broker requirements.$3.00+/mi good rate floorWe Understand ReeferThe challenges reefer operators face every day. and how we help.Temperature Compliance RiskOne degree off and the receiver rejects the entire load. Pharma cargo can mean $100K-$1M+ claims from a single excursion. We verify temp specs, mode settings, and pre-cool requirements in writing before you accept any load.Higher Operating CostsReefer fuel burns $15,000-$20,000/year on top of tractor diesel. Add washouts ($50-$80 each, FSMA required), breakdown coverage ($1,000-$2,000/year), and maintenance PMs every 1,500 hours. We factor all of this into every rate we negotiate for you.Lumper Fees & DetentionLumper fees of $100-$500 hit you at the dock with no warning. Cold storage facilities average 4-8 hour waits while your reefer unit burns fuel the entire time. We verify lumper costs upfront, confirm detention terms, and file claims with documentation.How We Dispatch Reefer DifferentlyProduce Season StrategyWe track seasonal corridors. California Central Valley in spring, Florida citrus in winter, Washington apples in fall. and position you ahead of demand surges when rates jump from $2.70 to $4.00+ per mile.Pre-Load VerificationBefore you accept any reefer load, we confirm temperature specs, continuous vs cycle sentry mode, pre-cool requirements, lumper fees at delivery, washout needs, and trailer age requirements. No surprises at the dock.Reload PlanningWe plan your next load before you deliver the current one. Empty reefer miles cost more than empty dry van miles because the unit keeps burning fuel. Every hour without a reload is money lost.Detention & Claims DocumentationWe file detention claims with gate-in times, dock times, temperature logs, and fuel receipts. For reefer, the running unit adds a fuel cost argument on top of standard detention. Less than half of claims get paid. documentation is the difference.$3.00+Good Rate Floor/Mi15-20%Premium Over Dry Van$15-20KExtra Annual Reefer FuelApr-SepPeak Produce SeasonCommon Reefer Dispatching QuestionsWhat rates can I expect for reefer freight?Reefer spot rates average $2.62-$3.13/mile, with contract rates around $2.80/mile. During produce season (April-September), rates on key lanes like Salinas to Chicago can hit $4.00-$4.80/mile. Pharma freight pays $3.50-$5.00+/mile year-round. The minimum profitable rate for reefer is higher than dry van. around $2.60-$2.80/mile after factoring in reefer fuel, maintenance, and washouts.How much more does reefer cost to operate than dry van?Reefer adds roughly $25,000-$40,000/year in costs: reefer unit fuel ($15,000-$20,000), unit maintenance and PMs ($3,000-$5,000), washouts ($5,000-$8,000), breakdown insurance ($1,000-$2,000), and higher cargo insurance. The good news is reefer revenue runs $40,000-$60,000 higher, so the net advantage is typically $15,000-$35,000/year for operators who run efficiently.What happens if my reefer unit breaks down mid-transit?Call a mobile reefer tech immediately. there are 25,000+ service providers nationwide. Document the breakdown time, temperature at failure, and all repairs. If cargo is compromised, notify your dispatcher and insurance right away. Carrying spare belts and fuses handles the most common quick fixes. This is why reefer breakdown insurance is not optional. without it, one spoiled load can cost $50,000-$500,000.Do you handle lumper fees and detention claims?Yes. We verify lumper costs before you accept a load so there are no cash surprises at the dock. For detention, we confirm terms in writing before booking, and when you wait beyond free time we file claims with full documentation. gate-in times, temperature logs, fuel receipts. Reefer detention is worse than dry van because your unit burns 0.5-1.5 gallons/hour while you wait.When is the best time to run reefer?April through September is money season. California produce fires up in spring, multiple regions harvest simultaneously in summer, and Washington apples carry through fall. Q1 (January-March) is the slowest. rates drop to $2.40-$2.70/mile. Smart reefer operators save aggressively during peak season to survive winter. We help plan around these cycles so you are in the right lanes at the right time.Box TruckRegional, dedicated, and OTR opportunities for box truck carriers.$2.85/mi spot avgBox truck dispatching requires tapping into different broker networks than 18-wheelers. We focus on regional routes, last-mile opportunities, and dedicated lanes to keep you moving.Common Pain PointsChallenges box truck operators face dailyFinding Freight Is HarderDAT and Truckstop are built for 53-foot trailers. Box truck loads exist but they are thinner, mixed in with semi freight, and full of dimension mismatches. You need to search multiple boards and read fine print on every posting to avoid wasted trips. Relying on one source means sitting empty.Insurance Sticker ShockNew-venture box truck operators budget $500/month for insurance and get quoted $1,500-$2,600. Interstate authority with $1M liability in a metro area runs $18,000-$31,000/year. This kills more new operators than any other single expense. The first 2-3 years are the most brutal.Payload Traps & OverloadingA 26ft truck at 26,000 GVWR looks like it can carry anything, but after curb weight, liftgate (800-1,200 lbs), and equipment you are down to 8,000-10,000 lbs of actual payload. Shippers used to loading 44,000 lbs on a 53-footer do not understand this. You eat the scale ticket fine, not them.How We Dispatch Box Trucks DifferentlyMulti-Board Freight SourcingWe search DAT, Truckstop, 123Loadboard, Amazon Relay, Direct Freight, and specialty boards simultaneously. Box truck freight is scattered across platforms. no single board covers it all. We also maintain direct broker relationships for loads that never hit the boards.Short-Haul Rate OptimizationBox trucks earn differently than semis. per stop, per route, and per day, not just per mile. We factor in liftgate surcharges ($50-$150), inside delivery fees, detention pay ($25-$100/hr), and multi-stop premiums. A $2.00/mile load with 5 liftgate stops often beats a $2.50/mile dock-to-dock run.Backhaul Before You DeliverDeadhead kills box truck margins faster than semis because you run fewer total miles. We line up your next load before the current one delivers so you are not running empty back to base. Every empty mile at $0.60-$0.80/mile fuel cost is money you never recover.Payload-Aware Load MatchingWe know your actual payload capacity after liftgate, shelving, and equipment. not just the GVWR on paper. We filter loads by what your truck can legally carry so you never show up overweight at a scale. One fine at $500+ wipes out the margin on multiple loads.$2.85Spot Rate Avg/Mi150-300Mile Sweet Spot$150-250KAnnual Gross Range12-16Pallets in 26ftBox Truck FAQsWhat loads can you get for a 26ft box truck with liftgate?Liftgate-equipped 26ft trucks access the widest freight pool: last-mile retail replenishment, multi-stop LTL partials, Amazon Relay metro transfers, white-glove furniture and appliance delivery ($300-$800/stop), expedited freight ($2.00-$3.00+/mile), and dedicated store routes. Without a liftgate you can only deliver to loading docks, which cuts out 60-70% of available stops. We match loads to your specific equipment. truck size, liftgate type, and actual payload capacity.Do I need a CDL to run box truck freight?Not if your truck is at or below 26,000 lbs GVWR. Manufacturers build trucks at exactly this number to maximize capacity without requiring a CDL. Going even one pound over triggers CDL requirements, higher insurance, drug/alcohol clearinghouse enrollment, and more DOT scrutiny. Most successful box truck freight operations run Class 6 trucks at exactly 26,000 lbs. it is the sweet spot of payload versus regulatory burden. Note: if you operate interstate above 10,001 lbs, HOS rules still apply regardless of CDL status.Can you get me dedicated or contract work instead of spot loads?Yes. Dedicated contracts are where box trucks really shine. Amazon Relay for consistent 50-300 mile runs, JB Hunt or XPO final-mile for Home Depot and Lowe's (10-15 stops per route), LTL carrier overflow for Old Dominion or Estes, and direct retailer routes. Contract rates run about $3.20/mile versus $2.85/mile spot, with predictable schedules and less time hunting for loads. We build toward dedicated lanes while keeping spot market options open for revenue optimization.How do you handle accessorials and detention pay?We bill for everything you are owed: detention ($25-$100/hr after 2 free hours), liftgate surcharges, inside delivery, and lumper fees. Industry data shows carriers who track accessorials earn $5,000-$15,000 more per year. Most new operators do not know they can charge for these. We confirm all terms in writing before you accept the load and file claims with full documentation when brokers push back.Do you work with new-authority carriers?Yes. New authority is when dispatch matters most. you lack broker relationships, your insurance is at peak cost ($1,500-$2,600/month), and you are learning the business. We use our existing broker network to get you loads at rates you would not find on your own. That said, we recommend operating for at least a few months first so you understand your lanes and costs before evaluating whether dispatch is working for you.FlatbedOpen-deck freight support, rate negotiation, and specialized lane planning.$3.32/mi contract avgFlatbed hauling involves open-deck freight complexity, tarping requirements, and seasonal demand shifts. We understand the rate premiums required for specialized freight.Common Pain PointsChallenges flatbed operators face dailyPhysical Demands & Unpaid LaborTarps weigh 50-100+ lbs each. Securement adds 30-90 minutes of physical labor per load that dry van drivers never do. Complex lumber loads can take 3+ hours to tarp. The tarp fee ($75-$150) barely covers the time, and 60+ flatbed workers die annually from loading falls. This is not a sit-and-steer job.Winter Volume Drops 30-40%Construction-driven flatbed freight slows from Thanksgiving to Valentine's Day. Rates can drop to $1.86-$2.30/mile on spot. Drivers describe "never seeing so many empty skateboards at truck stops." Without dedicated relationships or non-construction freight, you can sit for a week searching for loads.Securement Compliance RiskFMCSA fines run $1,000-$16,000 per violation. Insufficient tie-downs are the #1 violation found at roadside inspections. Unmarked straps get automatically downgraded to the lowest strength rating. Out-of-service orders mean you cannot move until corrected, and every violation damages your CSA score and broker relationships.How We Dispatch Flatbed DifferentlySecurement-Aware BookingBefore you roll, we confirm exact load dimensions, weight, commodity, securement method needed, tarp requirements, site safety gear (hard hat, vest), crane availability, and delivery windows. Equipment mismatch. wrong trailer, load too heavy, load too tall. wastes entire days. We confirm every detail before booking.Tarp Pay NegotiationWe negotiate tarp fees ($75-$150 per tarp) on every load that requires them. Tarping adds 30-60 minutes minimum of physical labor, and some dispatchers let shippers skip the fee entirely. That adds up to $10,000/year you leave on the table. If they do not want to pay tarp fees, they do not get their load tarped.Winter Freight StrategyWe maintain relationships with year-round shippers. steel mills, industrial equipment movers, data center construction, energy infrastructure. When building materials slow down in winter, non-construction flatbed freight keeps moving. Southern markets (TX, FL, AZ) operate year-round. We pivot your lanes before the slowdown hits.Premium Freight AccessSteel coils at $3.25-$4.00+/mile, data center materials at $4.00-$5.00+/mile, oversize loads at $3.50-$10.00+/mile. The highest-paying flatbed freight goes to carriers with established relationships and proper equipment. We build those relationships and match loads to your specific trailer type and securement capability.$3.32Contract Rate Avg/Mi19-22%Premium Over Dry Van$180-250KAnnual Gross Range73:1Load-to-Truck RatioFlatbed FAQsWhat rates can I expect for flatbed freight?Flatbed spot rates average $2.85-$2.95/mile nationally, with contract rates around $3.32/mile. Specialty freight pays significantly more: steel coils at $3.25-$4.00+/mile, data center materials at $4.00-$5.00+/mile, and oversize loads at $3.50-$10.00+/mile. Rates are seasonal. peak summer runs $2.80-$3.50/mile while winter can drop to $2.30-$2.70/mile on spot. The flatbed premium over dry van is consistently 19-22%, and we negotiate to capture that premium on every load.How do you handle tarp pay and accessorials?We negotiate tarp fees ($75-$150 per tarp) in writing on the rate confirmation before you accept any load. Same for driver assist, detention ($25-$100/hr after free time), layover, and construction site surcharges. These accessorials are documented upfront, not argued about after delivery. Flatbed has more accessorials than any other equipment type. carriers who track them earn significantly more per year.Can you keep me busy in winter?Yes. Winter volumes drop 30-40% for construction materials, but flatbed freight is not all construction. Steel, industrial machinery, manufactured goods, and energy equipment move year-round. Data center construction runs through winter. Southern markets (Texas, Florida, Arizona) build 12 months a year. We maintain year-round shipper relationships so you have freight when load boards thin out.Do you handle oversize and permit loads?Yes. Oversize is the highest-paying flatbed freight ($3.50-$10.00+/mile) but requires state permits for every state on the route, escort vehicles, travel time restrictions, and detailed route planning around low bridges and narrow roads. We handle the permit coordination and route planning. This freight goes exclusively to carriers with established relationships and proper equipment. we build those relationships for you.How do you minimize deadhead?Deadhead typically runs 10-20% of total miles for flatbed. We start planning your reload before you deliver the current load, targeting pickups near your delivery point. Running 200 empty miles to chase a high per-mile load often pays less than a closer load at a lower rate. We factor deadhead into every rate calculation and prioritize lanes with consistent backhaul opportunities.Step DeckHeavy haul, oversized freight, and specialized dispatch support.$5-15/mi oversize loadsStep deck freight often means fewer loads but higher value per load. Your dispatcher needs to understand dimensional requirements, oversized permits, and heavy equipment hauling.Common Pain PointsChallenges step deck operators face dailyHarder to Find LoadsStep deck freight is thinner than flatbed on every load board. Many loads posted as "flatbed" could go on a step deck, but brokers reject step deck carriers even when the load fits. You need both DAT and Truckstop, plus direct broker relationships, and you need to post your truck so brokers find you. not just hunt for loads.Dispatchers Who Do Not Understand the EquipmentThe #1 complaint from step deck operators: dispatchers who book loads without verifying total loaded height, book step deck freight at flatbed rates, do not check if the pickup has crane or forklift reach, and do not understand weight distribution on a two-level deck. Equipment mismatch wastes entire days and burns broker relationships.Permit & Escort ComplexityMulti-state oversize loads can require permits in 5-8 states ($200-$500+ in fees), escort vehicles at $1.75-$2.50/mile, route surveys, and daylight-only travel restrictions. Processing takes hours to 10 business days depending on the state. A load paying $12-$14/mile can net $8-$9/mile after $3/mile in escorts and $1/mile in permits.How We Dispatch Step Deck DifferentlyStep Deck-Specific Load SourcingWe filter for loads that require your lower deck height. tall machinery, construction equipment, ag equipment over 8'6". not just flatbed loads at flatbed rates. The whole point of owning a step deck is the premium. We search DAT and Truckstop (strongest for open-deck freight), post your truck for broker visibility, and maintain relationships with heavy equipment shippers.Height Math Before BookingBefore you accept any load, we verify: cargo height plus deck height (42" lower, 60" upper) plus securement hardware (4-6") equals total loaded height. Two inches over 13'6" triggers permits, escorts, route restrictions, and travel time limits. We do this math on every load so you never show up to find out you need a $500 permit you do not have.Permit & Escort CoordinationWe handle all oversize permitting: single-trip and annual permits, multi-state route planning, escort vehicle coordination, travel restriction scheduling, and bridge/clearance verification. We apply 1-2 business days ahead minimum and factor all permit and escort costs into rate negotiations so the load still makes financial sense.Premium Rate NegotiationStep deck commands $0.10-$0.23/mile more than standard flatbed on legal loads, and significantly more on oversize ($5-$15/mile). Posted rates are 10-20% below what experienced carriers negotiate. We push for the step deck premium on every load, negotiate tarp pay separately ($50-$150), and educate brokers who try to book step deck at flatbed rates.$3.18Contract Rate Avg/Mi18-20"Extra Legal Height$5-15Oversize Rate/Mi$60-120KAnnual Net RangeStep Deck FAQsHow is step deck freight different from flatbed?Step deck's lower deck sits at 42 inches versus 60 inches for a standard flatbed, giving you 18-20 extra inches of legal cargo height. That means loads 8'6" to 10' tall ride legally on your lower deck without permits, while the same load on a flatbed would be oversize. This opens up construction equipment, ag machinery, tall palletized freight, and industrial components that flatbeds cannot haul legally. Fewer carriers have step decks, so the rates are higher. $2.68/mile spot versus $2.58/mile for standard flatbed, with the spread widening on specialized loads.Do you handle oversize permits and escort coordination?Yes. We handle all permitting for loads exceeding 8'6" wide, 13'6" high, 53' long, or 80,000 lbs. This includes single-trip permits ($25-$75 per state), multi-state route planning, escort vehicle coordination ($1.75-$2.50/mile per escort), travel restriction scheduling (most states restrict oversize to daylight hours), and bridge/clearance verification. We apply early and factor all costs into rate negotiations. Oversize loads pay $5-$15/mile but only make sense if permit and escort costs are covered.What rates can I expect for step deck?Step deck spot rates average $2.68/mile nationally with contract rates around $3.18/mile. Legal loads (under 13'6" total height) run $2.55-$3.20/mile. Oversize loads requiring permits jump to $5-$15/mile depending on dimensions. After permits ($200-$500+ for multi-state) and escorts ($1.75-$2.50/mile each), your effective net on oversize drops but still well exceeds standard rates. Seasonal peak is August through November when harvest and construction push rates highest.Should I get a 48-foot or 53-foot step deck?Most owner-operators prefer 48 feet. It is lighter (more payload), easier to maneuver on construction sites, and legal on all roads without length permits. The 53-foot is only worth it if you frequently haul long freight that will not fit the 37-foot lower deck of a 48-foot trailer. A 48-foot step deck with ramps (rated for 23,500 lbs per axle) gives you the most load flexibility. New step decks run $35,000-$55,000, about 10-15% more than a comparable flatbed.Do you find step deck-specific loads or just flatbed loads?We specifically target loads that require your lower deck height advantage. Booking a step deck on a flatbed load at flatbed rates defeats the purpose of owning specialized equipment. We search for tall machinery, construction equipment, ag equipment, and industrial freight where the step deck is the right tool. and we negotiate the premium your equipment deserves. When step deck-specific freight is thin, we also run standard flatbed loads to keep you moving, but always at rates that account for your higher equipment cost.Power OnlyTrailer moves, load-outs, and drop-and-hook opportunities.200-600 extra mi/wkPower only offers versatility and lower overhead. We find load-outs, tow-aways, and drop-and-hook opportunities across a wide variety of freight types.Common Pain PointsChallenges power only operators face dailyTrailer Condition RiskYou have zero control over the last driver. Blown tires at 2 AM, stuck tandems, busted airbags, no DOT inspection decal. all on someone else's trailer. CSA violations go on YOUR record regardless of who owns it. If the trailer arrives damaged and the receiver rejects it, you may haul it back at your own expense.Deadhead After Every DropYou drop a trailer and there is nothing waiting. Forum consensus: "distinct possibility that you will have nothing at the other end." Every bobtail mile burns fuel with zero revenue. This is the fundamental challenge of power only and where bad dispatching costs you the most money.Insurance ComplexityTrailer interchange coverage, non-owned trailer coverage, bobtail insurance. power only has insurance layers that regular trucking does not. Without interchange coverage, you are personally liable for a $30,000-$60,000 trailer. Total insurance runs $15,000-$25,000/year for a single truck. New authority operators get quoted $1,200-$2,500/month.How We Dispatch Power Only DifferentlyReturn Load Before OutboundWe plan your backhaul before you accept the outbound load. Dropping a trailer 800 miles from base with no return is how operators lose money. We position you on lanes with consistent two-way freight and build relationships with shippers who have trailers moving in both directions.Trailer Condition AdvocacyWe verify trailer condition expectations with brokers before you commit and negotiate your right to refuse at hookup without penalty. If the trailer fails your pre-trip, we find an alternative. not pressure you to roll with a bad trailer. One CSA violation from a junk trailer costs more than any single load is worth.Drop-and-Hook Route OptimizationDrop and hook saves 3-12 hours per load versus live loading. That translates to 200-600 extra revenue miles per week. $510-$1,530 more gross at $2.55/mile. We build routes around facilities with drop trailer programs (Amazon, Walmart, major retailers) to maximize your driving hours and minimize dock time.Dedicated Account BuildingSpot market power only is volatile. Dedicated accounts (Amazon Relay, USPS linehaul, retail distribution) provide consistent lanes, predictable schedules, and reliable pay. We build toward dedicated contracts while using spot loads to fill gaps. Contract rates average $2.95/mile versus $2.55/mile spot. that spread matters over a year.$2.95Contract Rate Avg/Mi200-600Extra Miles/Week$9-21KAnnual Trailer Savings30-45minDrop & Hook TimePower Only FAQsHow does power only compare financially to owning a trailer?Per-mile rates run 10-15% lower ($2.55/mile spot versus $2.68/mile for dry van with your own trailer). But you save $8,800-$21,000/year in trailer costs (payment, insurance, maintenance, registration, storage) and gain 200-600 extra revenue miles per week from drop-and-hook efficiency. At $2.55/mile, those extra miles add $510-$1,530 per week in gross revenue. For most operators, the net profit is comparable or better than owning a trailer.Do I need trailer interchange insurance?Yes. Almost every broker and shipper requires it for power only work. Without it, you are personally liable for a trailer worth $30,000-$60,000 if it is damaged while in your possession. Interchange coverage costs $400-$2,000/year and requires a signed trailer interchange agreement. If no agreement exists, you need non-owned trailer coverage instead. Large brokers increasingly require both on your policy.What happens if the trailer fails my pre-trip inspection?Do not take it. Call dispatch immediately and report the issues. We find a different trailer or a different load. Never roll with a bad trailer. one roadside inspection failure ruins your CSA score, and CSA violations go on YOUR record regardless of who owns the trailer. We negotiate the right to refuse at hookup without penalty before booking any load.How do you prevent deadhead after I drop a trailer?This is the core of what we do for power only operators. We plan your return load before you accept the outbound, position you near high-freight distribution hubs, and build relationships with shippers who have consistent two-way lanes. We also leverage load-outs. where you get paid a modest rate to reposition a trailer but can load freight into it en route, earning revenue on both the trailer move and the cargo.Can I run power only with new authority?Yes, but expect higher insurance costs ($1,200-$2,500/month for full coverage). Some brokers will not work with authority under 6-12 months. Amazon Relay is accessible to newer carriers and provides consistent work while you build operating history. We also recommend setting up factoring before you need it. brokers pay in 30-45 days but your fuel and insurance are due now. 85-90% of new O/O businesses fail in 2 years, primarily from cash flow. Planning prevents that.