Trucking Costs Are Near All-Time Highs in 2026. Here’s Why That’s Not an Accident

Trucking Costs are wearing down this owner operator at a truck stop
May 18,2026

Running a truck in 2026 costs more than it has at almost any point in the history of this industry. That’s not opinion. The April 2026 Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) Transportation Prices component hit 95.0, one of the highest readings ever recorded. The only time it was higher was in early 2018, when it briefly touched 95.8.

For owner ops, that number isn’t just a data point. It’s the math behind why your fuel receipts sting, why your insurance renewal was painful, and why the rates you need to stay profitable keep moving up.

Here’s what is actually driving it.

Fuel Did the Most Damage, Fast

The biggest single trigger for the 2026 cost spike is diesel. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, particularly the Strait of Hormuz crisis in early 2026, sent fuel prices sharply higher in a short window. National diesel averaged $4.86 per gallon on March 9, up 22 cents in a single week. By April, the national average had climbed to around $5.50.

According to FTR via Cass Freight, that kind of overnight diesel jump adds roughly 14 cents per mile in operating cost. For an owner-op running 10,000 miles a month, that’s $1,400 in additional fuel expense every single month, on top of what you were already paying. We broke down what that diesel surge looked like in real time in our April 2026 Freight Market Update.

Diesel was already $0.80 higher per gallon in March 2026 compared to March 2025. Fuel typically represents 15 to 20 percent of an owner-operator’s total cost structure. When it moves that fast, you feel it before the load board catches up. If you want the week-by-week breakdown of how that shock moved through the spot market, the March 2026 freight market update covers it in detail.

Driver Pay Is Up, But So Is the Pressure Behind It

The labor market for CDL holders is tighter than the numbers suggest. ATA estimates a current driver shortfall of approximately 82,000 in 2026, according to PLS Logistics. A March 2026 DHS rule that bars many non-citizen applicants from obtaining CDLs is projected to remove up to 200,000 additional potential drivers from the labor pool.

ATRI data show total driver compensation already reached $0.967 per mile in 2023, with wages alone at $0.779 and benefits adding another $0.188. That was a 7.6 percent increase year over year. In 2026, with the labor pool shrinking further, carriers competing for qualified drivers are paying even more.

This isn’t a new trend. The structural erosion of driver purchasing power goes back decades. We covered the full history of how driver pay got here in our deep-dive: Truck Driver Pay Is Worth 60% Less Than in 1980. The wage floor has moved up, but for a lot of operators, so has the ceiling on what it costs to keep a seat filled.

Month LMI Transportation Prices Index Month-Over-Month Change
October 2025 61.7
November 2025 64.9 +3.2
December 2025 66.7 +1.8
January 2026 71.4 +4.7
February 2026 76.7 +5.3
March 2026 89.4 +12.7
April 2026 95.0 +5.6 ⚠ Near All-Time High

Source: Logistics Managers' Index (LMI), April 2026 report. All-time high: 95.8 (early 2018).

Equipment and Financing Are No Bargain Either

Class 8 truck orders jumped 159 percent year over year in February 2026, according to Cass Freight. That sounds like a growth story, but what it actually reflects is strong replacement demand from fleets that deferred purchases during the soft freight years of 2023 and 2024.

Those replacement trucks cost more than the ones they replaced. ATRI data show truck and trailer payments averaged $0.360 per mile in 2023, up 8 to 9 percent from the year before. Fleets that bought iron at 2021 and 2022 prices are still paying elevated monthly notes. Financing costs have stayed elevated with the Fed holding rates near 5 percent into early 2026.

Maintenance is another part of the equipment cost picture that compounds quietly. Tires alone can swing your monthly numbers significantly depending on how you manage replacement versus retread decisions. We went deep on that in Replace, Retread, or Run It? – worth reading if you haven’t made a tire plan for 2026 yet. And if the summer is approaching and you haven’t thought about your HVAC system, that’s another expensive surprise waiting to happen: 10 Summer HVAC Problems That Kill Your Margins.

Insurance Has Been Quietly Bleeding Operators Dry

Commercial auto insurance costs rose 8.8 percent in Q2 2025 and 5.8 percent in Q1, based on quarterly surveys reported by Trucking Dive. ATRI put insurance cost at $0.099 per mile in 2023, a 12.5 percent jump from 2022.

The culprit is a combination of factors: rising nuclear verdict awards from truck-related litigation, higher liability settlement values, and insurers repricing risk across the board. Carriers with clean safety records still got hit. The increases aren’t performance-based. They’re structural.

At 4 to 5 percent of total operating cost, insurance doesn’t look like the headline number. But it’s a cost that has compounded every year for the past several years with no sign of reversing.

Detention Is Costing the Industry More Than Most Operators Track

ATRI calculated that driver detention cost the trucking industry $15.1 billion in 2023 combined: $11.5 billion in lost driver productivity and $3.6 billion in direct cost. Individual drivers are losing 117 to 209 hours per year sitting at docks waiting on loads that should have been ready.

For an owner operator, that’s unpaid time. It’s fuel burned idling. It’s wear on equipment. It’s potential loads you couldn’t take because you were stuck at a shipper two hours past your appointment.

The detention problem doesn’t show up on a fuel receipt or an insurance bill. But it shows up in your net earnings at the end of the month. If you want to actually put a number on what your operation costs per mile across all of these categories, the Keynnect CPM Calculator is a fast way to do it.

The Gap Between Capacity and Prices Is the Largest Ever Recorded

The LMI doesn’t just track prices. It also tracks transportation capacity. In April 2026, the spread between the collapsing Transportation Capacity index and the exploding Transportation Prices index was 66.6 points, the largest gap ever recorded in the survey’s history.

What that means in plain language: there are fewer available trucks relative to demand than at any point the LMI has measured. When supply tightens and demand holds, prices go up. Carriers and owner ops with capacity can command better rates. Shippers without established carrier relationships are scrambling.

Freight volumes are also recovering. Cass Freight reported February 2026 shipments up 10.4 percent versus January. DAT data show spot and contract truckload rates in early May 2026 running roughly 25 to 30 percent higher than a year ago, with van rates approximately 27 percent above year-ago levels.

What the Numbers Add Up To

Based on ATRI’s 2023 cost breakdown, here’s where every dollar of trucking cost roughly goes:

  • Driver wages and benefits: ~43%
  • Truck and trailer payments: ~16%
  • Fuel: ~15%
  • Maintenance: ~10%
  • Insurance: ~4%
  • Permits, tires, overhead, and other: ~12%

In 2026, fuel is up approximately 20 percent year over year. Wages are up 7 to 8 percent. Insurance has been climbing for three consecutive years. Equipment costs remain elevated. Every major cost category moved in the same direction at the same time.

That’s not a temporary bump. That’s a structural reset of what it costs to keep a truck rolling.

What Owner Operators Should Take from This

The market is rewarding operators who have their cost structure dialed in. If you don’t know your exact cost per mile on fuel, insurance, and equipment payments, this environment will punish you faster than a soft freight market will. Use the CPM Calculator to get your real number – not an estimate from two years ago.

Rate negotiations need to reflect the current cost floor. Carriers and brokers quoting last year’s prices are asking you to absorb cost increases that aren’t yours to absorb.

Capacity is tight. That’s leverage, but only if you understand the numbers behind your operation.

To Sum it Up

The April 2026 LMI near-record reading isn’t a surprise to anyone who has been watching fuel prices, insurance renewals, and equipment costs over the past 18 months. It’s the data finally catching up with what owner-operators have been feeling at the pump, in the mailbox, and on the rate confirmation.

Everything that could get more expensive got more expensive at once. That’s the story behind the number.

If you’re an owner operator trying to make sense of your lane economics right now, knowing where the cost pressure is coming from is step one. Knowing what to do about it is the next conversation.

At Keynnect Logistics, we work with independent operators navigating a market that doesn’t forgive weak cost awareness. If you want a clearer picture of how current market conditions affect your lanes, reach out. No pitch, no pressure.

Frequently Asked Questions (The Stuff You’re Probably Still Wondering)

1. What is the LMI Transportation Prices index and why does it matter for trucking?

The Logistics Managers' Index (LMI) is a monthly survey that measures supply chain and logistics activity across the U.S. The Transportation Prices component tracks whether shipping costs are rising or falling. A reading above 50 means costs are increasing. April 2026's reading of 95.0 is the second highest ever recorded, meaning costs are rising at near-maximum intensity across the industry.

2. Why did trucking costs spike so sharply between February and April 2026?

The rapid increase was triggered mainly by a fuel price shock linked to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, specifically instability around the Strait of Hormuz in early 2026. National diesel prices jumped from around $3.75 per gallon in late 2025 to approximately $5.50 by April 2026. That kind of fuel move, happening over six months, pushed operating costs per mile significantly higher for every carrier and owner operator in the country.

3. What percentage of an owner operator's costs is diesel fuel?

Fuel typically represents 15 to 20 percent of total per-mile operating costs for a Class 8 owner operator. Based on ATRI's 2023 operational cost data, fuel averaged approximately $0.15 per mile as a standalone cost category. At 2026 diesel prices, that number is considerably higher.

4. How much has driver pay increased in recent years?

According to ATRI's most recent data, total driver compensation reached $0.967 per mile in 2023, with wages at $0.779 per mile and benefits at $0.188 per mile. That represented a 7.6 percent year-over-year increase. With the ATA estimating a driver shortfall of approximately 82,000 in 2026, and new CDL restrictions projected to remove up to 200,000 potential drivers from the market, wage pressure is expected to remain elevated.

5. Why are trucking insurance costs going up even for safe operators?

Insurance costs in trucking are being driven by structural industry factors, not individual performance. Nuclear verdict awards in truck-related litigation have increased significantly, pushing liability exposure higher across the board. Quarterly surveys showed commercial auto premiums up 8.8 percent in Q2 2025 and 5.8 percent in Q1. ATRI reported a 12.5 percent jump in insurance costs per mile in 2023 alone. Even operators with clean safety records are absorbing these increases at renewal.

6. What is the largest cost category for a Class 8 owner operator?

Driver wages and benefits are the largest cost category at approximately 43 percent of total per-mile cost, based on ATRI data. Equipment payments (truck and trailer) are second at around 16 percent. Fuel is third at roughly 15 percent. These three categories alone represent approximately 74 percent of total operating cost, and all three have increased significantly in 2025 and 2026.

7. Are freight rates keeping pace with the cost increases?

Rates are moving up in 2026, but the trajectory varies by lane and mode. DAT data from early May 2026 show spot and contract truckload van rates running approximately 27 percent above year-ago levels. The LMI's Transportation Capacity index has been collapsing while prices surge, creating the widest spread ever recorded between available capacity and freight prices. That dynamic is generally favorable for owner-operators who have trucks available and are positioned in active freight corridors.

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