The $283 million acquisition of FirstFleet makes Werner the fifth-largest dedicated carrier and pushes more than half of its revenue into contract freight.
Werner Enterprises has expanded its dedicated fleet by nearly 50% with the acquisition of dedicated carrier FirstFleet, a move that positions the Omaha, Nebraska-based motor carrier as the fifth-largest dedicated carrier in the U.S. by power units.
Werner is acquiring the privately held First Enterprises Inc., parent company of FirstFleet, for $245 million in cash. A separate transaction to buy 11 real estate properties from FirstFleet for $37.8 million brings the total deal value to approximately $282.8 million.
The transaction will be funded using operating cash on hand and Werner’s existing revolving credit facility.
FirstFleet will operate as a business unit within Werner’s Truckload Transportation Services (TTS) segment, complementing Werner’s existing Dedicated division. Werner plans to retain the majority of FirstFleet’s management team and maintain its headquarters in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
FirstFleet Brings Long-Term Dedicated Contracts and Stable End Markets
FirstFleet was founded in 1986 and has sustained profitable growth for nearly four decades. Werner said the carrier has built deep, long-standing relationships with top-tier customers under multi-year contracts.
FirstFleet’s operations include:
Approximately 2,400 tractors and 11,000 trailers
An average 17-year tenure among its top 10 customers
Lower-than-average driver turnover
37 strategically located properties near 130 customer sites nationwide
The carrier serves durable end markets including grocery, bakery goods, and corrugated packaging.
“By uniting FirstFleet's expertise in complementary new verticals with our resources and nearly 5,000 dedicated trucks, we will improve our competitive position and accelerate profitable growth,” said Werner Chairman and CEO Derek Leathers in a news release.
Acquisition Pushes Dedicated to Majority of Werner Revenue
Over the past several years, Werner has been increasing the share of revenue generated by its higher-margin, long-term contractual dedicated business. With the addition of FirstFleet, Werner expects dedicated revenues to grow by approximately 50%, while increasing its reach into resilient categories such as grocery and baked goods.
“Importantly, our combined company mix shifts a larger portion of our portfolio toward Dedicated, which grows from roughly 43% of total revenues today to approximately 52% on a combined basis,” Leathers said during an investor conference call.
Werner's One-Way Truckload and logistics operations are expected to account for approximately 22% and 24% of total revenues, respectively.
“This transaction drives a 20% increase in our total revenues, a 30% increase in TTS, and almost a 50% increase in Dedicated,” Leathers said.
Following the acquisition, the combined company will operate more than 9,800 trucks within its TTS fleet. Dedicated operations will account for roughly three-quarters of that total, with approximately 7,365 dedicated trucks and about 2,480 One-Way Truckload units. As of Sept. 30, 2025, the combined fleet included nearly 40,000 trailers.
With FirstFleet’s complementary footprint across the eastern half of the U.S., Werner expects benefits from improved network density, greater fixed-cost absorption, enhanced purchasing power, and increased asset utilization.
Werner Targets $18 Million in Synergies From FirstFleet Deal
Company officials said FirstFleet has remained profitable across market cycles, though its margins are slightly lower than those typically seen in Werner’s Dedicated business.
Some of that reflects differences in mix, including more trailer pools and higher trailer intensity, as well as some operating leases, said Chris Neil, senior vice president of pricing and strategic initiatives, in an investor conference call.
Werner expects to generate approximately $18 million in synergies over the next 18 months, with opportunities to improve margins over time. Those synergies are expected to come from purchasing power, in-house maintenance, improved backhaul revenue, and enhanced surge capacity.
“Synergies don't come from changing driver pay or messing with people's W-2," Werner said. "It's about blocking and tackling — maintenance, tires, tractors, trailers, fuel. And that's the best kind of synergies. because we can just go out and have more purchasing power and ... improve the experience of the customer, driver and everybody in between."
Leathers said the acquisition improves density for the combined company.
In Dedicated, although the assets are dedicated to particular customers, he explained, the greater density the company has in an area provides an opportunity to provide additional capacity, giving the customer a better product while saving costs on the fleet end.
Werner plans to keep its traditional, one-way truckload fleet at roughly its current size, viewing it as both a standalone offering and a source of surge capacity for Dedicated operations.
“We believe One-Way is about the size it should be,” Leathers said. “It serves the over-the-road market and provides surge capability within Dedicated, which now has even more demand following the acquisition.”
Will FirstFleet Be Rebranded?
For now, Werner does not plan to rebrand FirstFleet.
“That’s a delicate thing,” Leathers said in response to a question on the conference call, noting FirstFleet’s long-standing customer relationships. “If you look at our prior four acquisitions, in two of the four, we rebranded and rebranded …. in short order."
Any future branding decisions, he said, will involve collaboration with FirstFleet leadership and customers.
“But if you think about some of the synergies and some of the efficiencies of more of a universal trailer fleet, the asset flexibility, if you will, of universal assets, It's certainly on the table.”