Reefer Rates

REEFER RATES Temperature-Controlled Freight Better decisions: seasonality + rejection signals + accessorial math

Reefer Rates: market benchmarks, seasonal pressure, and how to price risk.

Reefer freight pays differently because it carries more constraints: appointment windows, temperature requirements, higher service expectations, and stronger seasonal swings. Use this page to benchmark the market, plan lanes around produce cycles, and protect your true RPM after reefer-specific costs.

  • Account for reefer realities: dwell time, appointments, detention risk, and service expectations.
  • Plan around produce and seasonal demand (when and where rate pressure shows up first).
  • Negotiate with leverage: communicate temp requirements + appointment constraints + accessorial terms.
  • Protect margins by pricing risk — not just miles (especially on tight windows and multi-stops).
What to track
RPM after dwell
Seasonal driver
Produce cycles
High-impact risk
Appointments
Best next click
Spot (broker-posted RPM incl. fuel) Current charts (weekly) Temp-controlled lane framework

Reefer Rates: Live Benchmarks & What They Mean

Use reefer benchmarks to set floors that respect service risk (appointments, dwell, rejects), seasonality (produce cycles), and reload certainty. Reefer pricing is often less forgiving than van—because failure costs more.

How to Read This Page (Fast)

The charts are weekly and include fuel. Teal is the current year, orange is last year, and the dotted line is the five-year average. Use the chart for direction and market posture—then price lanes with risk premiums that match reefer reality.

Use for rate floors
Yes
Lane-by-lane quoting
Add lane data
Timing leverage
Strong

Updated: Weekly (swap in your current reefer Week # / date).

Reefer spot (Week 1)

$3.01 /mi

Weekly, broker-posted RPM including fuel.

Signal: seasonal reefer demand

Total spot rates (Week 1)

$2.46 /mi

All equipment, broker-posted RPM including fuel.

Context: market baseline

Total spot loads (index)

169.7

Weekly index (100 = 2014 avg).

Why: volume / tightness cue

Reefer pricing rule

Risk+

Floor + service + temp-control risk premiums.

Stops: “claims week”

Benchmarks are not a quote. Reefer RPM is highly lane-, season-, and service-dependent (appointments, dwell, produce surges, receiver history).


Reefer Spot Rate Trend (Weekly)

Reefer moves with seasonality and service pressure. Watch the weekly tape first, then ask: “Is this a broad market move—or just a produce / cold-chain pocket tightening?”

Refrigerated spot rates — weekly broker-posted RPM including fuel (FTR / Truckstop).
Teal = 2026 • Orange = last year • Dotted = 5-year average. Week 1 value shown: $3.01/mi.

Market Pressure, In One Screen

Use broad indicators to separate reefer-specific tightness from “everything moved.” If total spot rates and loads are rising, you usually have more leverage.

Total Spot Rates (All Equipment)

Total Spot Rates — weekly broker-posted RPM including fuel (FTR / Truckstop).
Replace with the current week’s total spot rate chart as needed.

Total Spot Loads (Index)

Total Spot Loads — weekly index, 100 equals 2014 average (FTR / Truckstop).
Replace with the current week’s total spot loads chart as needed.

What Moves Reefer Rates Week-to-Week

Produce / seasonal surge
High impact
Appointment / dwell / rejects
High impact
Reload certainty (backhaul)
High impact
Cold-chain risk premium
Lane-dependent

Framework bars are for decision-making; the charts are the live weekly tape.


Regional Benchmarks & Reefer Lane Pricing (No Fluff)

Reefer profits come from disciplined lane math: outbound strength, reload probability, and explicit premiums for service + temperature risk.

Regional Spread Snapshot

Use regional anchors as sanity checks—then adjust for produce seasons, receiver standards, appointment tightness, and backhaul reliability.

Region Benchmark RPM (example) Typical meaning
West $2.73/mi Often supported by long-haul demand + seasonal produce cycles.
Midwest $3.13/mi Can tighten quickly when food + retail replenishment overlaps.
South Central $2.64/mi Highly lane-specific; reload quality determines whether outbound holds.
Southeast $2.37/mi Seasonality matters; strict receivers and appointment density drive premiums.
Northeast $2.34/mi Lane-dependent: premiums appear when service is constrained or backhaul is weak.

Practical rule: Separate your lane sheet into outbound, backhaul, and cold-chain service risk lines.

Reefer Lane Pricing Framework

Quote reefer lanes with two numbers: FLOOR and ASK. The floor covers cost + minimum service risk; the ask prices the hassle and liability.

1) Build the FLOOR

Base it on cost + realistic assumptions: empty miles, appointment dwell, temperature requirements, and whether the destination reloads fast.

Cost coverage Dwell risk Deadhead exposure Temp requirements

2) Set the ASK

Add premium for tight windows, strict receivers, weekend pickup, high reject risk, claims exposure, and weak reload markets.

Service premium Disruption premium Reload premium Cold-chain risk

Reality Check (Round Trip)

A strong outbound reefer number can still produce a bad week if the return leg is weak (or if service failures create rework / delays). Price the round trip, and don’t treat “reefer hot” headlines as lane math.


Seasonality: When Reefer Rates Usually Tighten

Reefer seasonality is driven by harvest cycles, holiday demand, and cold-chain capacity. Use this as posture guidance—then confirm with weekly charts.

Typical Seasonal Rhythm (Planning View)

Jan–Feb (post-holiday)
Soft / steady
Mar–May (spring produce ramp)
Firming
Jun–Aug (peak produce)
Tight
Sep–Nov (harvest overlap)
Firming
Dec (holiday food + retail)
Firm

Seasonality bars are posture guidance; the chart above is the real weekly tape.

Cold-Chain Risk Items That Deserve a Premium

Tight temp band (±2°F)
High
Multi-stop handling
High
Strict receiver QC / inspections
High
Weekend / after-hours exposure
Medium

If the receiver is strict, treat paperwork and inspection time as real capacity loss.

FAQ: Reefer Rates

What’s included in the benchmark rates on this page?
The primary charts are weekly broker-posted RPM including fuel. Lane quotes can differ due to distance, imbalance, receiver standards, dwell, deadhead, and cold-chain risk.
Why do reefer lanes need a separate risk premium?
Reefer failure costs are higher. Appointments, dwell, rejects, strict receivers, multi-stop handling, and temperature exposure increase claims probability and delay risk. Price it explicitly.
What’s the fastest way to stop losing money on “good-paying” reefer loads?
Price the round trip. If the backhaul market is weak, your outbound must carry more of the weekly cost—and the risk line must cover service and claims exposure.
How do I tell if it’s reefer-specific tightening or a broad market move?
Compare reefer to total spot rates and watch the total loads index direction. If totals move with reefer, it’s broader. If reefer separates, it’s equipment/season/service pressure.
What should I confirm before accepting a high reefer RPM?
Appointment windows, receiver rules, lumper/washout policy, temperature band requirements, multi-stop structure, and detention/layover terms. High RPM without terms can still be a bad load.

Update Log

Jan 2026: Added current weekly charts (reefer rates, total rates, total loads) + refreshed snapshot KPIs.
Dec 2025: Added regional benchmark anchors + reefer lane pricing framework.