Weekly Digest — Week of June 15, 2026

Standard dry-van and reefer rates are cooling slightly into a normal post-holiday plateau, while flatbed holds firm on industrial demand and diesel ticks up for a second straight week. The week rewards operators who price to real fuel cost and plan for southern-corridor congestion.

Executive Summary

The freight market this week is a story of divergence, not decline. Dry-van and reefer spot averages have softened marginally as the post-holiday season settles, but both remain well above historic baselines. Flatbed continues to run strong on sustained industrial and infrastructure demand. On cost, the national average diesel price has risen for a second consecutive week, pushing baseline cost-per-mile higher and making accurate fuel surcharges more important than usual.

Bottom Line: Protect your margin this week. Recalculate your baseline cost-per-mile against the higher fuel average, peg fuel surcharges to your destination region rather than the national number, and build extra clock time into any plan that routes through congested southern border corridors.

Freight Market Snapshot

Frank “The Ledger” DeLuca

Spot rates below are approximate national averages drawn from public freight-rate data and are directional, not a quote for any specific lane.

Equipment Avg Rate (approx.) Prior Week Change
Dry Van $2.74 / mi $2.75 / mi ↓ $0.01
Reefer $3.05 / mi $3.06 / mi ↓ $0.01
Flatbed $3.30 / mi $3.29 / mi ↑ $0.01

Approximate load-to-truck ratios: Flatbed 18.4:1, Reefer 5.6:1, Dry Van 3.2:1.

Frank’s analysis: Do not mistake a one-cent pullback for a market crash. Van and reefer are easing off late-spring peaks in a textbook seasonal plateau, while flatbed demand stays structurally strong on industrial and infrastructure work. The risk to watch is the narrowing spot-to-contract spread on generic lanes; the opportunity is in regional flatbed and southern corridors where demand is firmest.

What you do: Stop chasing cheap miles on oversaturated long-haul van lanes; bias toward regional flatbed and the strongest southern markets if your equipment allows.

Fuel Watch

Frank “The Ledger” DeLuca

Figures are approximate averages from public diesel-price data and vary significantly by region.

Measure Approx. Average
National average diesel $5.21 / gal
Prior week (approx.) $5.18 / gal
Week-over-week change ↑ about $0.03
Highest region (West Coast, approx.) $5.78 / gal
Lowest region (Gulf Coast, approx.) $4.82 / gal
Gulf Coast$4.82
National$5.21
West Coast$5.78

Why it matters: At roughly a $5.21 national average, a truck averaging about 6.5 MPG is burning in the neighborhood of $0.80 per mile in fuel alone. Booking spot freight without accounting for regional fuel variance is a quiet way to lose money on backhauls.

What you do: Peg your fuel surcharge to the real pump price in your destination zone, not the national average.

Equipment & Maintenance

Manny “The Wrench” Vargas

Two seasonal items worth your attention as ambient temperatures climb. Rising road heat expands tire air pressure, which raises the risk of tread separation on under-maintained tires, and sustained heat puts extra load on cooling systems and auxiliary power units, especially during long idling stops.

Manny’s Recommendations

Check tire pressure cold, before the tires heat up on the highway, so you are setting against the right baseline.

Service cooling systems now: flush the radiator and test A/C and APU performance before you get parked in a multi-hour border-crossing delay.

What you do: Run a cold tire-pressure check and a cooling-system service before dispatching into hot southern lanes.

Infrastructure & Traffic

Cross-border freight hubs along the southern corridor, including Laredo and Otay Mesa, are reporting heavy commercial congestion, with reported wait times running several hours during peak periods. Conditions vary day to day; treat any single figure as a planning estimate, not a guarantee.

What you do: Build extra idle and wait time into your Hours-of-Service planning on border lanes so a long queue does not push you into a rest-break violation.

Numbers That Matter

Dry Van (avg)$2.74/mi
Diesel (natl avg)$5.21/gal
Reefer (avg)$3.05/mi
Flatbed (avg)$3.30/mi
Van load ratio3.2:1
Flatbed load ratio18.4:1
Border delaysSeveral hrs
TrendFlatbed firm

Frank’s Take

Frank “The Ledger” DeLuca

Here is the angle that matters this week, past the headline rate numbers: the spread is where your money lives. A one-cent move in the average van rate is noise. What is not noise is the gap between what fuel actually costs you in a given region and what your surcharge is set to recover. With diesel climbing a second week and the West Coast running nearly a dollar over the Gulf, a flat national-average surcharge quietly eats your margin every time you run into an expensive zone.

Look at where demand is firm, run the real cost on each load before you accept it, and let the soft lanes go to the operators who do not do the math. Discipline beats volume in a divergent market.

What you do: Re-run your cost-per-mile this week with the higher diesel average baked in before you quote anything.

Action Items

  • Recalculate your baseline cost-per-mile using the higher national diesel average, and confirm your fuel surcharges absorb destination-zone variance.
  • Bias your booking toward regional flatbed and the strongest southern markets where demand is firmest; avoid oversaturated long-haul van lanes.
  • Run a cold tire-pressure check before dispatching into hot southern corridors.
  • Service cooling systems now: radiator flush and A/C and APU test before long border idling.
  • Build extra idle and wait time into Hours-of-Service planning on border lanes.
Editorial Notice
HaulSmarterHQ Weekly Digest is general market intelligence compiled from public data sources, industry reporting, and government publications. This publication is not legal, tax, insurance, financial, compliance, or safety advice. Industry news and legal matters may involve allegations, ongoing investigations, or developing events that have not been fully adjudicated. Readers should independently verify any regulation, court decision, business relationship, load opportunity, or compliance requirement before acting.

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