Introduction
Raddy Velkov, Senior Vice President, Carrier Sales & Strategy
Freight Market Update
March 2026
As we move through March 2026, the freight environment continues to show gradual stabilization, with several indicators pointing to a market that is firming beneath the surface. While truckload tonnage and shipment activity suggest demand is still rebuilding rather than surging, recent operating conditions highlight that the network is becoming increasingly sensitive to disruption and seasonal pressure.
Under the surface, continued carrier discipline and muted fleet expansion are contributing to a structurally leaner capacity environment than headline demand alone would suggest. After multiple years of margin compression, carriers remain highly focused on network quality and cost control, and fleet growth across the for-hire market continues to be measured. The result is a network that can support current freight levels but is reacting more quickly as localized demand and seasonal patterns begin to build.
After two years of carrier consolidation and limited fleet expansion, the freight network now operates with less excess capacity than during the previous downturn, making it more sensitive to seasonal demand shifts and operational disruption.
Several signals stand out this month. Spot pricing has maintained year-over-year firmness and is beginning to show more consistent support in key lanes. Load-to-truck ratios have responded quickly to winter disruption and early seasonal flows, reinforcing the importance of real-time visibility and agile coverage strategies. Contract pricing has largely stabilized and is beginning to show early signs of firming in balanced lanes. At the same time, freight spend continues to outpace shipment activity, highlighting that execution friction and service-sensitive freight remain meaningful contributors to total transportation cost. Refrigerated markets have been particularly reactive, with seasonal pressure and weather effects increasing the potential for cross-equipment volatility as we move toward produce season.
While the market has not yet entered a broad demand-driven expansion, several indicators suggest the network is moving through the late stages of rebalancing. The margin for error across the truckload network is narrower than it was a year ago, and pockets of tightening are emerging more quickly when disruption or seasonal demand appears. For shippers, this environment places increasing importance on proactive planning, disciplined tender behavior, and close alignment with carrier networks in core lanes.
The first half of this report examines the core indicators shaping truckload conditions, along with my perspective on what they signal for pricing behavior, carrier positioning, and near-term risk. The second half brings together insights from BlueGrace subject matter experts across truckload, LTL, parcel, drayage, and cross-border freight to translate market signals into mode-specific implications for the month ahead.
As we progress through the second quarter, inventory behavior, seasonal produce flows, and sustained shipment trends remain among the most credible catalysts to watch for broader tightening. In the meantime, the data increasingly supports a more disciplined and dynamic approach to transportation planning. We invite you to use this perspective to guide carrier conversations and network strategy in the weeks ahead.