Wednesday, May 13, 2026
7:00 AM CST
The spot market has breached a critical threshold today, with total available volumes surging 10.1% to 203,559 loads as CVSA Roadcheck week triggers a severe capacity contraction across all equipment types. The most explosive dynamic is unfolding in the temperature-controlled sector, where paid rates have skyrocketed to $3.53/mile against posted rates of $3.00/mile—a massive $0.53 premium driven by accelerating produce harvests and compliance-related equipment sidelining. With the national diesel average sitting at a punishing $5.659/gallon, carriers are aggressively shrinking deadhead radiuses and rejecting cheap freight. Brokers must be prepared to pay significant premiums to secure reliable, compliant capacity, particularly for reefer and flatbed freight moving through flood-impacted corridors in the South and Midwest.
The Roadcheck squeeze should be most acute through Thursday morning, particularly on one-day freight that relies on owner-operators and small fleets. Van and flatbed capacity may loosen modestly once inspections clear, but reefer is unlikely to reset with Florida and South Georgia harvest volumes still pulling equipment south and keeping northbound produce freight elevated into the weekend.
Dry, sunny conditions across Louisiana and Mississippi through Friday will improve driving conditions, but they will not quickly reopen flooded local approaches near the Vermilion and Calcasieu basins. The operational problem now is per sistent detours, missed same-day turns, and longer dwell times around the I-10 and I-59 network even without additional rainfall.
Gusts up to 60 mph from the Utah-Nevada line into the northern Rockies are likely to park empty trailers and other high-profile equipment through tonight, especially on repositioning moves. If winds ease Thursday morning as forecast, expect a brief rebound in transcon activity as delayed trucks re-enter the network and chase reloads.
With produce values climbing, the exposure is no longer just higher linehaul but materially larger claims when appointments are missed or temperatures drift. Carriers with documented reefer maintenance, recent washouts, and stronger cargo limits are winning the first-call freight, leaving the cheapest capacity concentrated in the riskiest part of the market.
The Southeast and Gulf Coast region is currently the most volatile and profitable market for freight brokers. The collision of accelerating produce harvests in Florida and Southern Georgia with severe, ongoing flooding along the I-10 corridor in Louisiana and Mississippi has created a massive capacity imbalance. Reefer demand is skyrocketing just as flatbed capacity is being trapped by detours and weather delays. Furthermore, CVSA Roadcheck week is causing a significant percentage of regional owner-operators to park their trucks, artificially constraining supply in a high-demand environment.
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing extreme volatility as outbound Florida produce demand sucks capacity south, while carriers demand heavy premiums to enter the state due to limited outbound dry freight. The $5.66/gallon diesel average is making the long deadhead out of South Florida unpalatable for carriers without a guaranteed reefer reload.
New Orleans, LA → Houston, TX: Severe flooding along the I-10 and I-59 corridors has fractured this critical freight artery, causing massive transit delays and trapping open-deck capacity. Flatbed demand for construction and industrial materials remains high, but carriers are rejecting loads that require navigating the flooded zones.
Atlanta-to-Miami dry van freight is increasingly being used as paid repositioning by carriers chasing weekend produce reloads, which supports aggressive pricing only when delivery windows are tight and reload plans are clear. Northbound reefer is a separate negotiation altogether: carriers want confirmed pickup timing, commodity details, and washout status before committing, and late changes are being repriced immediately.
The temperature-controlled sector is currently exhibiting one of the most extreme pricing anomalies seen this year. Real-time load board data reveals a staggering $0.53/mile spread between average posted rates ($3.00/mile) and actual paid rates ($3.53/mile). This indicates a total breakdown in initial price discovery—shippers and brokers are posting loads based on historical or contracted expectations, but carriers are wielding absolute pricing power at the point of booking. This dynamic is being driven by a perfect storm: accelerating southern produce harvests, the lingering effects of late-season northern freezes requiring Protect From Freeze (PFF) service, and CVSA Roadcheck week sidelining marginal capacity. Brokers must immediately adjust their quoting models; relying on posted rate averages for reefer freight today will result in severe margin loss or complete failure to cover the load.
The 10.1% surge in total available spot loads to 203,559 is a direct reflection of carrier behavior during CVSA Roadcheck week, compounded by punishing operating costs. With diesel sitting at $5.659/gallon, carriers were already operating on razor-thin margins. The added risk of inspection delays, potential out-of-service violations, and the associated maintenance costs have pushed many owner-operators to simply park their equipment for the week. Those who remain active are hyper-selective, demanding significant premiums (as seen in the $2.76/mile paid van rate vs $2.64/mile posted) and refusing loads that require extensive deadhead or route them through high-enforcement zones. Brokers must prioritize carrier relationships and compliance vetting over aggressive rate negotiation to ensure freight moves this week.
Today's news highlighting surging tomato and produce prices due to tariffs and rising diesel costs underscores a critical shift in cargo liability and shipper urgency. As the underlying value of agricultural commodities increases, shippers become more sensitive to transit delays and temperature excursions. The $3.53/mile paid rate for reefer capacity isn't just a reflection of tight truck supply; it's a premium paid to mitigate the risk of losing highly inflated cargo. Furthermore, with air cargo spot rates surging 30% globally, we may see an increase in high-value, time-sensitive freight being pushed to the domestic expedited ground market. Brokers should proactively review carrier cargo insurance limits and position themselves to capture urgent freight that has been priced out of the air cargo market.
This is a carrier-led market, but not a uniform panic market: 203,559 total available loads are up 10.1% from 184,923, while the national average rate is $2.96/mile. The important read is where pricing power is showing up: reefer first, van second, flood-affected open-deck third.
Reefer is the biggest underquote trap on the board: 10,655 reefer loads are showing $3.00/mile posted versus $3.53/mile paid, a +$0.53/mile spread. That is not normal negotiation slippage. That is posted pricing failing to reflect executable capacity.
Open-deck freight is still setting carrier psychology: Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 154,180 loads, or roughly 75.7% of visible volume. Of the 80,159 loads moved today, those same three categories account for 65,558, or about 81.8%. Even brokers covering vans are negotiating in a market emotionally led by construction, industrial, and weather-friction freight.
Dry van has moved from “manageable” to “timing-sensitive”: 27,538 van loads are posting $2.64/mile and paying $2.76/mile, a +$0.12/mile spread. That is a meaningful shift. Waiting for cheap same-day van coverage is becoming a losing habit.
There are still two broker-friendly pockets: Specialized is at $3.08/mile posted versus $3.06/mile paid, and LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial is at $1.85/mile posted versus $1.82/mile paid. In a market this hot, those are real margin-defense tools.
Fuel, compliance, and route friction are reducing practical capacity faster than visible truck counts suggest: Diesel is $5.659/gallon, CVSA (Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance) Roadcheck is filtering out marginal trucks, and flooding plus wind are making some trucks look available but not truly usable.
The board is bigger than the usable truck pool: A truck 100 miles away matters less when diesel is $5.659/gallon and the carrier is worried about inspection exposure, deadhead loss, and whether the reload market justifies the move.
This is not just a one-day spike: The market has been building. Total loads are 203,559 today, versus 172,704 one week ago, and the market average rate is $2.96/mile versus $2.77/mile a week ago. That tells you this is broader tightening, not random noise.
Carriers are pricing four things more aggressively than usual:
Shippers are likely to make two mistakes today:
The real market split is execution quality: Cheap trucks are increasingly concentrated in the highest-risk part of the market—weaker compliance, weaker equipment condition, weaker service consistency. In reefer, that becomes a claims problem, not just a rate problem.
What it means: Van is no longer a “shop it all afternoon” market. It is still coverable, but the best outcome is earlier, not later.
Best freight to pursue:
What to avoid underpricing:
Desk tactic:
What it means: Reefer is the clearest example of posted market fantasy versus paid market reality. The +$0.53/mile spread is large enough that bad quoting discipline will erase margin quickly.
Why reefer is this tight:
Best reefer strategy today:
What carriers want before committing:
Biggest mistake:
What it means: The paid-posted spread is only +$0.08/mile, but that understates the pain. The bigger issue is operational drag from flood detours, route disruption, loading delays, and reduced same-day turn capability.
Quote flatbed with:
Best flatbed freight today:
Broker caution:
What it means: Heavy haul is not a runaway rate market. It is an error-intolerant planning market.
Where brokers win:
Best tactic:
What it means: This is one of the few places where brokers still have a small but real edge. The opportunity is not in beating carriers up. It is in matching the right trailer and specs quickly.
Best use of time:
Broker advantage:
What it means: This is your cleanest margin-preservation valve when shippers resist full truckload premiums.
Best uses today:
Sales tactic:
What is happening: Produce pull in Florida and South Georgia, flood-driven routing friction in Louisiana and Mississippi, and Roadcheck-related parking are colliding in the same geography.
Broker takeaway:
Southbound van into Florida:
Northbound reefer out of Florida:
Best tactic:
Operational reality: Even with improving weather, flood impacts are now a network drag, not just a storm headline.
What to do:
Current issue: High winds are likely to park empty trailers and high-profile equipment.
Broker opportunity:
Lead with execution facts, not just money:
Best carrier pitch today:
When to push on rate:
When not to push:
Do not let posted rates define the conversation
Sell certainty, not just price
Use two-option quoting
For produce and temp-sensitive customers
1) Tighten first-use carrier vetting immediately
2) On reefer, vet equipment quality before rate concessions
3) Reconfirm access in flood-affected zones
4) Add transit cushion to appointment freight
5) Lock in accessorial language before dispatch
6) Shorten quote validity
Base case — 60%
Risk case — 25%
Opportunity case — 15%
Cover urgent reefer before noon
Requote all Gulf Coast and Lower Midwest open-deck freight
Move van freight earlier in the day
Bundle Florida headhaul and backhaul whenever possible
Offer LTL / Partial immediately when customers resist truckload premiums
Use specialized as a precision-margin market
Pre-call transcon carriers for Thursday wind-recovery opportunities
Audit first-use carrier compliance harder than usual
"The purpose of life is the life of purpose."
— Robin Sharma