From freight class to accessorials, from LTL quotes to truckload costs — understand US trucking rates and get real-time multi-carrier comparisons online.
Get LTL Quote Get FTL QuoteThe two modes have entirely different pricing logic — choosing the wrong one can cost 20–40% more
| Dimension | 🔵 LTL Less-Than-Truckload | 🟢 FTL/TL Full Truckload |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing Model | By weight, freight class, and lane | Per truck, regardless of load weight |
| Ideal Cargo Volume | 150 lbs – 15,000 lbs (1–10 pallets) | 15,000+ lbs, or 12+ linear feet |
| Transit Time | 1–7 business days (lane dependent) | Typically faster, direct no-hub |
| Cargo Safety | Shared with others, multiple handling | Exclusive truck, no intermediate transfers |
| Quoting Method | Online instant quote (by NMFC class) | Online instant quote (lane/weight/equipment) |
| Best For | Small-medium batches, regular restocking, multi-drop | High-volume, time-sensitive, fragile/high-value |
Understand every line on your invoice — no surprise charges
Calculated by weight, freight class, and origin-destination lane. Heavier weight and lower class (denser cargo) means lower base rates. This is the largest line item.
55–70% of total costCharged as a percentage of base rate, adjusted weekly based on the EIA diesel fuel index. Typically 20–35%. Higher with peak demand and seasonal spikes.
Weekly floating, ~20–35%Charged based on actual service requirements. Common accessorials:
As neededNMFC freight class is the core of LTL pricing — wrong class means post-shipment rebilling
Freight Class is an industry standard set by NMFC (National Motor Freight Classification), with 18 classes from 50 to 500. Higher class = higher rates. Class is determined by 4 factors:
① Density — lbs/cubic ft, the most important factor
② Stowability — can it be stacked?
③ Handling — ease of handling (shape, hazards)
④ Liability — damage/loss liability risk
Not sure what freight class your cargo is? Use our NMFC lookup tool — search 4,000+ commodity categories and get a recommended class instantly.
NMFC Lookup Tool →Understanding these factors helps you make smarter shipping decisions
Intrastate is much cheaper than interstate. High-volume lanes (e.g., LA→NYC) are more competitive; remote lanes carry premiums.
LTL bills by "billable weight" — the higher of actual vs. density-based weight. Denser cargo → lower class → lower rates.
Class 50 is cheapest; Class 500 can be 5–8× more expensive. Incorrect class declarations trigger re-weigh/re-class, and you pay the difference.
Residential, limited access (job sites, farms, churches), and dock-free locations all incur surcharges. Commercial dock addresses save money.
Peak season (Sep–Dec pre-Thanksgiving/Christmas) tightens capacity by 30–50%. Winter storms and summer heat also affect certain lanes.
Fuel surcharge adjusts weekly per the EIA diesel index, applied on top of base rate. A 10% oil price increase → ~3–5% higher freight cost.
Strategies used by experienced shippers to cut freight spend
Under-declaring class leads to re-weigh/re-class fees plus admin charges that often exceed the original difference. Use our NMFC lookup tool to confirm the correct class upfront.
Higher density (lbs/cu ft) = lower NMFC class. Tighter packing and smaller box dimensions can drop class from 100 to 85 or even 70, saving 10–25%.
If timing is flexible, avoid peak season (pre-Thanksgiving, Christmas). Peak rates run 30–50% above base. Mid-week (Wed/Thu) pickups are often cheaper than Monday/Friday as carriers need to fill trucks.
The same shipment can vary 20–40% across carriers depending on the lane. ShipOnlines shows TQL, CHR, Echo, and GTZ quotes simultaneously — pick the best price or transit time in one search.
When multiple LTL shipments go the same direction, consolidating into one FTL or Volume LTL move can save 20–40%. Businesses shipping regularly to the same customer or warehouse benefit most from fixed weekly consolidation cycles.
Enter your shipment details and get live quotes from TQL, CHR, Echo, and GTZ in under 30 seconds — automatic best-price comparison.