Introduction
Raddy Velkov, Senior Vice President, Carrier Sales & Strategy
Freight Market Update
April 2026
As we move into April 2026, the freight market is navigating a more complex set of pressures than the month prior. The market continues to move through a gradual recovery phase, but a significant and rapid increase in diesel fuel costs has shifted the near-term calculus for carriers and shippers alike. National on-highway diesel prices moved above $5.00 per gallon in mid-March, driven by escalating Middle East tensions and a sharp rise in crude oil prices. That move alone is meaningful. When diesel climbs that fast, carriers become more selective, spot rate floors rise faster, and routing guide performance becomes more variable in operationally inefficient lanes.
The rate recovery that began in August 2025 continued through February, with DAT confirming the seventh consecutive monthly gain in truckload spot rates across all modes. Van averaged $2.41 per mile, reefer $2.88, and flatbed led at $2.72. The Cass Truckload Linehaul Index hit a new cycle high in February, with contract rates rising 2.2% year over year. These are not dramatic numbers, but directionally they confirm what the network has been signaling for months: the pricing trough is behind us, and the window to lock in favorable contract terms is narrowing. After two years of carrier exits and limited fleet expansion, the network is operating with less excess capacity than during the previous downturn.
Flatbed is the standout story heading into spring. Load-to-truck ratios exceeded 60-to-1 in late February, the highest since mid-2022. Data center construction, manufacturing reshoring, and tariff-driven front-loading of industrial materials are creating genuine equipment scarcity in open-deck markets. That tightness is beginning to create cross-equipment pressure in adjacent van markets in key regions.
For-hire freight volumes remain below year-ago levels, and retail sales softened in January. Inventory restocking has not yet begun at scale. But the combination of tighter capacity, rising diesel, and early seasonal produce demand creates a network that is increasingly sensitive to disruption. Pockets of tightening are forming faster than broad tonnage data would suggest. Markets typically move through this phase of localized tightening before broader pricing pressure develops, particularly as seasonal demand builds against a leaner carrier base.
The second quarter will be shaped by three variables: how high diesel climbs and how long it stays elevated; whether produce season and flatbed demand combine to pull meaningful capacity out of the van market; and whether inventory replenishment accelerates as shippers respond to tariff uncertainty. Each of those factors points toward more volatility, not less.
For shippers, the message is straightforward: in this environment, disciplined routing guide execution and proactive carrier engagement will cost significantly less than reactive spot procurement as conditions continue to tighten. The data increasingly supports getting ahead of this market rather than reacting to it.