Spot Freight Rates Hold as Load Volume Gains Slightly
The final week of any month usually means a bump in freight activity as shippers move goods prior to closing their books. However, the number of loads posted on the DAT network of load boards edged up just 2% for the the week ending April 29, according to DAT Solutions.
The final week of any month usually means a bump in freight activity as shippers move goods prior to closing their books. However, the number of loads posted on the DAT network of load boards edged up just 2% for the the week ending April 29, according to DAT Solutions.
With truck posts rising 8%, load-to-truck ratios fell with the biggest declines seen by reefers, down 13% to 5.8 loads per truck. Flatbeds fell 7% but still at a very healthy 44.5 to 1 level, while vans slipped 4% to 3.4 loads per truck.
Ad Loading...
While April may have ended quietly, rates rose for all trailer types during the month and load-to-truck ratios were above seasonal norms, signaling a strong start to the second quarter, according to DAT.
The national average van rate dipped 1 cent to $1.67 per mile, but that rate is still 4 cents higher than the March average while the national reefer rate remained at $1.94 per mile for the third straight week, but that’s 7 cents better than the March average. The average flatbed rate was unchanged at $2.07 per mile throughout April, but 4 cents better than the March average
Reefer load posts declined 5% while truck posts increased 10%. But compared to the same period in 2015 and 2016, reefer load-to-truck ratios are solid.
If you looked at the national average reefer rate, you might think that there wasn’t much happening in the spot market. But there was an influx of produce crossing the Mexican border last week, said DAT, and reefer load-to-truck ratios surged in Nogales, Laredo, and especially McAllen, where volumes soared 64%.
After wildfires interrupted traffic in Florida, produce started moving out of the state again last week. Key outbound lanes there are:
Ad Loading...
Miami-Northern New Jersey reefer rates were up 17 cents to $2.26 per mile
Lakeland-Baltimore added 24 cents to $2.24 per mile
A higher load count out of the Fresno area was offset by declines farther south in California. In fact, California was behind Texas, Florida, and Georgia for reefer load availability.
DAT said it has been hearing a lot about shipping gaps in California due to delays in planting because of an unusually wet winter, which explains the flat volumes last week. The upside, it believes, is that the best is yet to come, as the multi-year drought is mostly finished, and California produce should be gaining strength in the coming weeks.
Meantime, in the van sector, load posts increased 4% while truck posts increased 8%. On the top 100 van lanes, 50 were down in volume, 41 were up, and 9 were neutral. Most changes were slight, though:
Los Angeles outbound jumped 3 cents to $2.00 per mile
Seattle-Spokane hit $2.48 per mile, up 6 cents
Houston-New Orleans rose 8 cents to $2.28 per mile
Houston-Oklahoma City added 10 cents for $1.91 per mile, a springtime high
Ad Loading...
Outbound freight volume and rates declined in Philadelphia, $1.68 per mile, down 6 cents, giving up gains made earlier in the month. Philadelphia-Boston tumbled 22 cents to an average of $3.12 per mile.
Finally, in the flatbed market, after a 20% gain last week, the flatbed load-to-truck ratio settled down 2% to 44.5. Flatbed load posts increased 2% while truck posts were up 10%. Initial numbers show the flatbed load to truck ratio in April increased 19% when compared to March and is 102% better than it was in April of 2016.
Cargo theft has shifted from parking-lot break-ins to organized international schemes using double brokering, phishing, and even spoofing tracking signals. In this HDT Talks Trucking video podcast episode, cargo-theft investigator Scott Cornell explains what’s changed and what fleets need to do now.
Daimler Truck’s David Carson sees early signs of tightening capacity — yet buyers remain wary, extending trade cycles and resisting a pre-2027 emissions surge.
The American Transportation Research Institute's annual analysis of truck speeds through congested interchanges yielded a new worst bottleneck this year.
From pricing intelligence and compliance tools to charging infrastructure, diagnostics, tires, and AI, HDT’s 2026 Top 20 Products recognize the new tools, technologies, and ideas heavy-duty trucking fleets are using to run their businesses.
Artificial intelligence is evolving faster than fleets can keep up, and telematics must evolve with it, Cawse said during Geotab Connect. The future? A single AI coordinating every system — and leaders who know how to guide it.
Geotab launches GO Focus Pro, an AI-powered 360-degree dash cam designed to reduce collisions, prevent fraud, and protect fleets from nuclear verdict risk.
Knowledge Hub is designed to turn scattered tribal knowledge into execution-ready intelligence and help logistics teams make faster, more consistent decisions.
Quester’s AI-driven maintenance insights aim to help fleets reduce unplanned downtime, improve repair planning, and better understand the true cost of maintenance decisions.