Flatbed Rates
Flatbed Rates: what actually pays, what actually costs, and how to price the work.
Flatbed freight is not “just van with a different trailer.” Securement time, tarping, jobsite constraints, weight/length rules, and higher service expectations change your true RPM. Use this page to benchmark the market, price the extra work, and choose lanes that keep you moving.
- Price the work: tarps, securement, jobsite delays, and loading complexity.
- Protect true RPM by factoring time-on-task (not just miles).
- Negotiate accessorials clearly (tarp pay, securement pay, jobsite detention).
- Pick markets that reload (building cycles + manufacturing lanes matter more in flatbed).
Flatbed Rates: Live Benchmarks & What They Mean
Flatbed pricing is not “just van with straps.” Your real cost is capacity loss: securement time, tarps, jobsite friction, appointment rules, weather risk, and (sometimes) permits. Use the benchmark charts for direction—then price the work and risk explicitly.
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 market posture—then quote lanes with a clear securement premium (tarp time, stop count, jobsite rules, permits).
Updated: Jan 12, 2026 (Week 1 ended Jan 9). Swap charts weekly as new updates post.
Flatbed spot (Week 1)
Weekly, broker-posted RPM including fuel.
Total spot rates (Week 1)
All equipment, broker-posted RPM including fuel.
Total spot loads (index)
Weekly index (100 = 2014 avg).
Flatbed pricing rule
Floor + securement + jobsite/permit premiums.
Benchmarks are not a quote. Flatbed RPM is highly lane-, commodity-, and service-dependent (tarping, securement complexity, permits, jobsite tells, and weather).
Flatbed Spot Rate Trend (Weekly)
Flatbed reacts to construction season, project freight pulses, and weather disruption. Watch the weekly tape first—then ask: “Is capacity tightening from work (tarps/securement/permits), or from volume?”
Market Pressure, In One Screen
Use broad indicators to separate flatbed-specific strength from “everything moved.” If total spot loads are rising, leverage improves—especially when flatbed work requirements are high (tarps, jobsites, winter weather).
Total Spot Rates (All Equipment)
Total Spot Loads (Index)
What Moves Flatbed Rates Week-to-Week
Framework bars are for decisions; the charts are the live weekly tape.
Regional Benchmarks & Flatbed Lane Pricing (No Fluff)
Flatbed profits come from disciplined lane math: outbound strength, reload probability, and explicit premiums for securement and jobsite friction. Quote two numbers: FLOOR and ASK.
Regional Spread Snapshot (Anchors)
Use regional anchors as sanity checks—then adjust for commodity, tarp/securement time, receiver/jobsite rules, and reload reliability. (Example anchors shown; update with your preferred source snapshot.)
| Region | Benchmark RPM (example) | Typical meaning |
|---|---|---|
| West | $2.28/mi | Often commodity-driven; weather and long reload gaps can swing outcomes. |
| Midwest | $2.71/mi | Manufacturing + construction overlap can tighten quickly in-season. |
| South Central | $2.52/mi | Project freight pockets; jobsite friction and timing windows matter. |
| Southeast | $2.68/mi | Strong lanes exist, but securement work often decides net RPM. |
| Northeast | $2.42/mi | Higher friction (access, time windows) can justify premiums when capacity is tight. |
Practical rule: Separate your lane sheet into linehaul floor, deadhead/reload, and securement/work lines.
Flatbed Lane Pricing Framework
Flatbed quoting is simple when you price the work. Build a FLOOR that covers true cost + realistic time, then set an ASK that pays for friction and risk.
1) Build the FLOOR
Base it on cost + reality: load/unload time, securement, tarping, PPE, and whether the destination reloads quickly.
2) Set the ASK
Add premium for tarps, multi-stop, jobsites, oversize/permits, weekend pickup, strict rules, and weather exposure.
Securement Premium Cheatsheet
If you don’t price securement, you’ll “win” loads that turn into low net RPM weeks. Use a consistent add-on line for the work.
| Work / friction item | Why it matters | How to price it |
|---|---|---|
| Tarp required | Time + fatigue + weather exposure; higher stop risk. | Add a tarp line (flat fee or RPM add-on) and enforce it every time. |
| Multi-stop / partials | More securement resets, more delays. | Price per stop + extra “reset” time. |
| Jobsite delivery | Access, check-in, PPE, unload uncertainty. | Add a jobsite premium + stricter detention. |
| Permit/escort (OD/OW) | Route limits + scheduling + enforcement risk. | Separate line item: permits/escorts + time buffer. |
If it adds time, adds risk, or restricts routing—price it as its own line item.
Seasonality: When Flatbed Rates Usually Tighten
Flatbed seasonality is driven by construction, industrial output, and weather. Use this as posture guidance—then confirm with weekly charts.
Typical Seasonal Rhythm (Planning View)
Seasonality bars are posture guidance; the chart above is the real weekly tape.
Flatbed Risk Items That Deserve a Premium
If the load needs tarps/permits, treat it as capacity loss—not “free service.”
FAQ: Flatbed Rates
What’s included in the benchmark rates on this page?
Why do flatbed loads need a “work premium”?
What’s the fastest way to stop losing money on “good-paying” flatbed loads?
How do I tell if it’s flatbed-specific tightening or a broad market move?
What should I confirm before accepting a high flatbed RPM?
Update Log
Disclaimer: Benchmarks are educational and not a guaranteed quote. Always price to your cost, lane balance, service terms, and risk.