Truckload average length of haul hits new lows
Chart of the Week: Outbound Average Length of Haul – USA SONAR: OALOHA.USA
The national average length of haul index (OALOHA) has been running at or near all-time lows in 2025 as the truckload market has lost a significant share of transcontinental moves to intermodal. It may also reflect broader shifts in supply chain strategies. The OALOHA bottomed in August at around 522 miles but has since recovered to more than 571 miles. The question now is whether the truckload market is beginning to regain long-haul share or if this is simply a seasonal blip in a longer-running trend.
According to SONAR’s tender data, the average length of haul in the truckload market was about 8% higher year-over-year in the most recent data, a modest recovery from the 13% decline in August. Still, the sharp drop in the OALOHA in 2025 marks the steepest decline in the data set, which goes back to 2018.
The primary driver of this decline has been the sharp reduction in long-haul demand.
Breaking the tender data into mileage bands, the long-haul segment (loads moving more than 800 miles) has deteriorated the most. The tweener band (TOTVI), covering 450- to 800-mile moves, is a close second, with the other bands falling in sequence. The only exception is the shortest-haul band (COTVI), which measures loads under 100 miles and is the only category showing year-over-year growth.
Short-haul loads are typically tied to upstream manufacturing and intra-warehouse moves, as well as downstream distribution into storefronts and fulfillment centers for retailers.
Longer-haul loads, by contrast, compete directly with intermodal container shipping, particularly when tied to imports. Every major U.S. port has a nearby railhead, making it easier and more cost-effective for shippers to move goods inland via rai l— especially when speed is not critical.
Geopolitical uncertainty and trade disputes have further reshaped strategies. Many shippers now bring inventory into the U.S. earlier than usual to avoid disruptions or sudden tariffs. While this has pushed up inventory carrying costs and warehousing prices, shippers see it as preferable to risking stockouts or absorbing extreme duties — such as the now-paused 145% tariff on Chinese imports.
The Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) shows warehousing and inventory costs rising at their fastest pace since the pandemic. Carrying higher inventory levels gives shippers more flexibility to spread out transportation needs, which helps keep freight rates lower.
Rail remains 15–30% cheaper than trucking, but with a trade-off: slower service and vulnerability to congestion at touchpoints. During the pandemic, these bottlenecks severely limited rail performance and pushed volume back to trucks.