Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

What Does Inflation Mean For Trucking?

Driver costs, equipment costs, insurance costs, travel and food costs may have longer-term legs of reducing the purchasing power of your budget, says HDT's Contributing Economic Analyst Jeff Kauffman.

Jeff Kauffman
Jeff KauffmanContributing Economic Analyst
Read Jeff's Posts
June 24, 2021
What Does Inflation Mean For Trucking?

Driver costs, equipment costs, insurance costs, travel and food costs may have longer-term legs of reducing the purchasing power of your budget.

Source: Truckstop.com, FTR, company reports

4 min to read


We’re hearing the word “inflation” a lot these days, a term we haven’t used much in the economic world for some time — decades, in fact.

Ad Loading...

I’m not talking about the air in your tires, or when someone inflates a grade from a B to a B+. It’s not about seeing higher fuel prices caused by a specific situation or that are otherwise short-term in nature (the better term in this case would be “headwind.”)

No; the type of inflation I am going to discuss this month is the scary type of inflation. Here I’m talking about a sustained increase in the overall general level of prices that results in a decline in the purchasing power of money. Those three elements make this different from a cost headwind.

Ad Loading...

It’s a little like the Matrix for you movie fans. You can’t see it, feel it, or touch it, but it is all around you — raising the cost of everything in your life, from the food you eat and the things you buy to expectations about your future ability to afford the things that are important to your company. 

How did we get here?

What is going on right now was created by a series of events. It started with global shutdowns across multiple economies due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This forced a change in consumption patterns that resulted in an unanticipated acceleration in demand for certain goods above normal levels. 

Then there was a sharp resumption of broad demand as economies began to reopen. But there was not a like-kind resumption of productive capacity, making the shortages more acute and affecting more industries, such as microchips, lumber, and steel. This created a bottleneck in supply chain efficiency, forcing shippers to seek expensive and creative solutions. Add to that the impact of extended social programs and challenges such as the need to find child-care when schools were shut down, which have reduced the number of job seekers, and you now have labor shortages that have led to a rapid increase in low-end wages.  

Jeff Kauffman

All this has affected the cost of almost every commodity. The measure much of the financial world follows is the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which rose by a higher-than-expected 5% in May — the fastest rate since 2008, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. There is hope that as extended unemployment benefits end, workers will come back to jobs, reducing labor cost inflation, but I am not so sure of that. 

Commodity inflation seems like it is going to be here for a while. This means that eventually, companies will have to further raise their prices. The same income will buy fewer things, reducing spending power.

Ad Loading...

What does this mean for trucking?

Equipment costs will rise, and probably meaningfully. By our numbers, it’s about an $8,000 to $9,000 increase on what used to be a $30,000 trailer because of higher lumber, aluminum, steel, and polyethylene costs. The worker shortage will also force direct labor costs to rise, so your capital budget won’t go as far. 

This, in our view, is why recent equipment orders are dropping — not because OEMs are sold out, but because they are repricing backlog and fleets can afford fewer vehicles.

In terms of operations, driver costs will continue to rise (they’re already up about 9-10% right now). Staffing costs will rise with higher minimum wages and skilled worker shortages (total labor expense averages about one-third of revenues, so that would require a 3-4% rate increase to cover). 

Fuel costs are up 34% year-over-year, implying another 3-4% rate increase needed (although many companies surcharge for this). 

Spot rates are still about 60% higher, implying purchased transportation costs could remain elevated. Many carriers are absorbing about 40-50% higher insurance costs, so another 1-2% rate increase is needed there. 

Ad Loading...

Overall, that’s about a 10-12% rate increase required to offset higher costs (less for less-than-truckload fleets). Right now, the market is allowing carriers to recover that, so margins are rising. But recall, our definition of inflation emphasizes sustained increases. How long can fleets continue to price at these levels? Maybe for the next year. But driver costs, equipment costs, insurance costs, travel and food costs may have longer-term legs of reducing the purchasing power of your budget.

This commentary appears in the July 2021 issue of Heavy Duty Trucking.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fleet Management

TEN disaster prep.
Fleet ManagementMay 1, 2026

How Fleets Can Avoid Equipment Blind Spots in Disaster Response

When the unexpected happens, how you react to, and deal with operational blind spots is critical. Here’s how to keep you recovery on track, when nothing is normal.

Read More →
Illustration of cybersecurity images with "The Cyber Stop" text
Fleet Managementby Ben WilkensApril 30, 2026

AI Security Risks for Trucking Fleets: What to Know About Deepfakes and Agentic AI

As fleets adopt artificial intelligence for routing, maintenance, and load matching, new security risks are emerging. Learn where the vulnerabilities are and how to put the right controls in place.

Read More →
Mobile tablet showing Motus screen against highway background with Motus logo

FMCSA’s Motus System Is Coming. What Fleets Need to Know Now

The long-awaited registration system promises a single portal — and tighter fraud controls.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
CargoNet 2026 Qi report.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 24, 2026

Cargo Theft Incidents Fall in Q1, but Organized Crime and Impersonation Drive New Risks

CargoNet reports fewer supply chain crime events to start 2026. But losses hold steady as organized crime shifts tactics toward impersonation schemes and high-value goods.

Read More →
Graphic with light bulbs, HDT Truck Fleet Innovators logo, and the word Nominations
Fleet ManagementApril 24, 2026

Nominations Open for HDT Truck Fleet Innovators 2026

Heavy Duty Trucking is searching for forward-looking leaders at trucking fleets as nominations for HDT’s Truck Fleet Innovators 2026. Deadline is May 15.

Read More →
Illustration with trojan horse and lock with inside of cargo container in background
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 23, 2026

New Trojan Driver Cargo Theft Scam Bypasses Carrier Vetting Systems

Cargo theft rings plant operatives as drivers inside legitimate, fully vetted carriers, then execute coordinated thefts that look like a traditional straight theft from the outside.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
ATA Truck Tonnage Index March 2026.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 22, 2026

March Truck Tonnage Posts Strongest Annual Gain Since 2022

A modest sequential increase capped the strongest quarterly performance in years, signaling continued freight momentum in early 2026.

Read More →
Toll road.
Fleet Managementby Jack RobertsApril 22, 2026

Ohio Turnpike Targets $5.2 Million in Unpaid Tolls from Trucking Firms

More than 300 carriers across 26 states have been sent to collections as the Ohio Turnpike cracks down on toll evasion and delinquent payments.

Read More →
Illustration with ATRI logo and square blocks spelling out "research"
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeApril 20, 2026

'Beyond Compliance,' Regulations, Driver Coaching on ATRI’s 2026 Research List

The American Transportation Research Institute will examine driver coaching, regulatory impacts — including the "Beyond Compliance" concept —and weather disruptions that shape trucking operations.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Brian Antonellis, senior vice president, fleet operations, Fleet Advantage.
Fleet Managementby Jack RobertsApril 17, 2026

Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis on the Growing Need to Replace Old Trucks

Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis says it's time for fleets to get back to the fundamentals of good maintenance practices. And that includes replacing older, inefficient equipment.

Read More →