Last week, the freight market did what it loves to do: it told two completely different stories depending on what you were hauling and where you were standing.
If you were a reefer carrier parked near the border in South Texas? You were eating good. If you were a dry van driver trying to figure out why rates felt sticky even though the load board was lighting up? Welcome to the diesel tax nobody officially announced. And if you were still quoting Florida reefer runs based on numbers from two weeks ago? Well, somebody out there had a rough week.
Let’s break it all down.
The Big Picture: Capacity Tightened, But Rates Didn’t All Follow
The headline from Truckstop/FTR’s week 11 spot market report is that total all-in spot nationally hit $2.86/mile, up 2.4% week over week and 11% year over year. That sounds clean. But the moment you split it by mode, the story gets a lot more interesting.
Reefer and flatbed pushed hard. Dry van basically flatlined.
DAT’s weekly equipment report showed the dry van load-to-truck ratio jumped 34% in a single week, landing at 10.4. That’s a meaningful tightening signal. More loads, fewer trucks. And yet the all-in rate barely moved. That’s not a freight market mystery, that’s a diesel story. More on that in a second.
Here’s the quick scorecard for the week:
| Mode | All-In Spot Rate | Week-Over-Week | Year-Over-Year | Load-to-Truck Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reefer | $2.95/mile | +4.1% | +20.2% | 21.38 (+38% w/w) |
| Flatbed | $2.92/mile | +4.4% | +16.4% | ~70.3 (mid-Mar baseline) |
| Dry Van | $2.39/mile | -0.2% | -1.2% | 10.4 (+34% w/w) |
| Sources: Truckstop/FTR Week 11 Spot Market Benchmarks; DAT Weekly Equipment Report, March 24, 2026. | ||||
Reefer is the clear winner of the week. Flatbed is expensive and staying that way. Dry van has tightness on the capacity side but hasn’t found its pricing legs yet, and the reason is sitting in your fuel tank.
The Invisible Hand: Diesel Just Sucker-Punched the Spot Market
Before you talk rates, you have to talk about diesel right now, because diesel is having a moment. A very expensive moment.
According to EIA’s weekly retail diesel data, here’s what on-highway diesel did in just three weeks:
- March 2: $3.897/gallon
- March 9: $4.859/gallon
- March 16: $5.071/gallon
- March 23: $5.375/gallon
That’s a 38% spike in three weeks. Three. Weeks.
DAT’s analysis puts it plainly: spot freight often doesn’t have automatic fuel surcharge mechanisms baked in. So when diesel moves like this, carriers absorb the hit first, and the linehaul rate catches up later, if it catches up at all. DAT tracked fuel surcharges climbing from $0.44/mile to $0.64/mile in three weeks, a 44% jump. But linehaul stayed flat. That gap is where carrier margin is quietly getting eaten.
If you’re negotiating “all-in” right now without separating linehaul from fuel, you are, respectfully, flying blind. The smart move this week is to price them separately, every single time. Check out our breakdown on how carriers are managing diesel cost spikes for a deeper look at what levers actually work.
The Florida vs. South Texas Reefer Divide: A Tale Worth Telling
Here’s a story that pretty much sums up the reefer market last week.
Picture two owner-operators, both running 53-foot reefers. Marco is set up in Hidalgo, Texas, working the Mexico produce crossings. Diana is coming off a load in Central Florida, trying to decide her next move.
Marco gets a call for Dallas. Two weeks ago that lane was $1,900 all-in. This week? DAT’s reefer produce report shows it’s quoting at $2,800. That’s a 47% jump in three weeks. He also has a broker trying to book him to Chicago at $5,200, up from $3,700 not long ago. South Texas just became the tightest produce origin in the country, with all nine tracked lanes flagged as Slight Shortage. For the first time in 2026 tracking, every single lane out of that region is under pressure at the same time.
Diana, meanwhile, is staring at an Atlanta quote of $1,100 to $1,300. That’s down 4% week over week, despite Florida technically being tagged Slight Shortage too. The catch? Reduced crop output means fewer actual loads available. When production is down, “Slight Shortage” on a report doesn’t automatically mean “good rates on the phone.” The market can look tight on paper and still pay like a backhaul. Diana ends up running the load because she needs to keep moving, but she didn’t love the number.
Same mode. Same tight-market label. Very different weeks.
The lesson here is not subtle: South Texas and Florida reefer are two different markets right now. If you have flexibility in where you position, treat South Texas like the pricing-power zone it is. If you’re in Florida, plan your exit before you commit to the load.
Dry Van: Tight but Stuck in First Gear
The dry van picture this week is almost frustrating to read. The fundamentals are there. Load posts jumped 17% week over week. Equipment posts dropped 13%. That is a real tightening. And yet all-in spot landed at $2.39/mile, essentially unchanged week over week and slightly down year over year.
The explanation goes back to diesel. Carriers are absorbing fuel cost increases faster than linehaul is adjusting. According to DAT’s dry van report, carriers were only recapturing less than 50% of the diesel cost increase in negotiated linehaul until very recently.
On Florida and Texas lanes specifically, the positioning logic this week favors carriers who have solid reload plans. Florida outbound dry van is risky if you don’t have a clear move out. Texas networks, with access to border freight, metro distribution, and industrial loads, have more options to stay productive without chasing cheap freight across state lines.
For dispatchers managing dry van assets right now, this is a week to tighten quote windows, sharpen appointment discipline, and not chase loads that don’t clear fuel at current prices. The tightening is real. The pricing will follow. Just not all at once.
Flatbed: Expensive and Worth It (If You’re Selective)
Flatbed is quietly having a strong run. Truckstop/FTR shows flatbed all-in at $2.92/mile, up 4.4% for the week and 16.4% year over year. That’s not an accident. Construction and industrial freight keep pulling on flatbed capacity, and exit rates from the mode have thinned the available pool.
The practical advice here is simple: the market is paying enough that you don’t have to take cheap freight to stay busy. A bad reload decision that burns a day repositioning costs real money when the national flatbed benchmark is this strong. Be selective. Focus on geometry: where is the next load coming from, and is the reload plan solid before you commit the first one?
For a deeper look at how to approach load selection and positioning in flatbed markets, check out our post on flatbed dispatching strategy.
The Week in Plain English
Here’s the short version for anyone who skimmed to the bottom:
South Texas reefer is printing money right now. Florida reefer needs a reality check before you commit. Dry van tightened hard but linehaul hasn’t moved to match, because diesel ate the margin first. Flatbed is expensive and worth being selective about. And diesel just did something in three weeks that usually takes a quarter. If you’re not separating fuel from linehaul in every negotiation, you’re leaving money on the table or absorbing risk you didn’t agree to.
The Trinity Logistics March 2026 freight market update and DAT’s weekly reports are both pointing in the same direction: this market rewards people who move on current data, not last week’s numbers.
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