Sunday, June 07, 2026
7:00 AM CST
The domestic spot market is experiencing a typical Sunday contraction today, with total available loads dropping 4.1% day-over-day to 141,885. Despite this volume decline, the national average spot rate remains highly firmed at $2.88/mile, up from $2.86/mile one week ago. High operating costs, anchored by a verified AAA national diesel average of $5.341/gallon, continue to establish a rigid floor for carrier rate negotiations and restrict empty deadhead miles. Equipment-specific dynamics show a significant shift today: temperature-controlled reefer capacity has firmed significantly, yielding a $0.09/mile carrier premium ($3.25 paid vs $3.16 posted) as peak summer produce season keeps equipment exceptionally tight. Conversely, dry van and flatbed capacity show substantial broker advantages of $0.44/mile and $0.25/mile respectively, offering lucrative arbitrage windows for alert brokers. Active river flooding in the Midwest and flash floods in Texas continue to disrupt key transit corridors, trapping open-deck capacity and forcing routing detours.
The unusually wide broker edge in dry van and specialized freight looks tactical rather than durable. With tender rejections still above 17% and diesel holding above $5.341/gal, carriers taking discounted repositioning freight today are likely to raise asks again once Monday routing-guide fallout hits. The best margin window is freight that can be covered now for Monday pickup or Tuesday delivery, especially on longer-haul Midwest and Southeast lanes where empty miles are hardest to absorb.
North Texas should see the sharpest impact from late morning through early evening, with rain around the Dallas-Fort Worth metro before conditions improve tonight and turn mainly dry Monday. The main risk is missed pickup windows, yard delays, and local appointment slippage around I-20, I-30, I-35E, and I-45 rather than a prolonged statewide tightening.
The stickier weather problem remains along northwest Missouri and the Oklahoma side of the I-44 network, where active river flooding and another round of storms keep secondary-road detours in play through Monday. That matters most for flatbed, heavy haul, and ag-related freight, where route changes quickly turn into per mit issues, longer drive times, and missed reloads.
The pull into South Texas is no longer just a refrigerated story. As reefers chase produce and food imports through Laredo and other border gateways, swing capacity that normally flips between reefer and dry van work is being absorbed southbound, tightening reload options in the Southeast and lower Midwest. Mixed food networks are increasingly see ing cheap inbound van coverage paired with expensive outbound reloads once product is ready.
Stronger identity controls should improve carrier quality over time, but the near-term effect is likely slower activation of brand-new capacity, especially on weekends and after hours. In a market already running above 17% tender rejections, repeat carriers and already-vetted small fleets gain value because they can be deployed immediately when a contract load falls out.
The Southeast is currently the highest-yielding region for brokers due to the collision of peak summer produce harvests (Georgia peaches, South Carolina peaches, Florida tomatoes) and surging import volumes at regional ports. This seasonal demand has driven reefer rates to premium levels, while dry van capacity is being pulled into agricultural support roles, tightening the overall capacity pool and creating lucrative arbitrage opportunities on outbound lanes.
Atlanta, GA → Chicago, IL: This high-volume corridor is experiencing intense seasonal pressure as peak Georgia produce harvests compete with general freight for outbound capacity. Reefer demand is at its annual maximum, which is pulling dry van equipment into agricultural support roles and tightening overall capacity. The rate environment is highly volatile, with outbound rates firmed significantly compared to historical averages.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This short-haul regional corridor is seeing a surge in volume driven by early peak import activity at the Port of Savannah. Dry van and flatbed capacity are in high demand to move containerized and industrial freight inland. The short transit time makes this lane highly attractive to regional carriers, but high fuel costs are limiting empty deadhead miles.
On Savannah-to-Charlotte and similar port turns, detention is becoming a larger margin swing than linehaul. Daily or roundtrip pricing better reflects gate queues, warehouse dwell, and the reduced number of turns a driver can complete when import volume spikes. Inland consignees with fast unloads will keep pulling the best regional trucks even when their posted linehaul is not the highest.
Today's real-time spot market data reveals a typical Sunday contraction, with total available loads dropping 4.1% day-over-day to 141,885. This volume decline is standard for weekend operations, yet the national average spot rate remains highly resilient at $2.88/mile, firmed from $2.86/mile one week ago. This rate resilience, despite lower weekend volumes, indicates that high carrier operating costs—anchored by the AAA national diesel average of $5.341/gallon—are establishing a rigid floor for rate negotiations. Equipment-specific data highlights significant divergence across trailer types. Dry van available loads fell 6.1% to 21,571, but the rate spread shows a massive $0.44/mile broker advantage, with posted rates averaging $2.65/mile while paid rates averaged $2.21/mile. This wide spread suggests that while carriers are posting high rates to cover fuel costs, actual transaction rates are softening as carriers accept lower-paying loads to avoid weekend deadhead. Conversely, temperature-controlled reefer capacity remains exceptionally tight, with paid rates averaging $3.25/mile against a posted average of $3.16/mile, representing a $0.09/mile carrier premium. This premium is driven by peak summer produce demand, which is keeping reefers highly utilized and giving carriers strong pricing leverage. Flatbed capacity firmed slightly, with available loads dipping 2.1% to 59,341, but the rate spread shows a healthy $0.25/mile broker advantage (posted $3.59/mile vs paid $3.34/mile). This indicates that while open-deck volume remains robust, brokers are successfully negotiating lower transaction rates on weekend repositioning lanes.
Today's real-time rate data reveals highly profitable arbitrage windows for alert brokers, particularly within the specialized and dry van sectors. The specialized equipment sector shows an extraordinary $0.74/mile broker advantage, with average posted rates at $3.23/mile and average paid rates at $2.49/mile. This massive spread indicates that carriers are aggressively discounting their rates to secure backhauls and avoid empty miles, allowing brokers to capture substantial margins by matching these repositioning trucks with high-paying specialized shipments. Similarly, the dry van sector offers a highly lucrative $0.44/mile broker advantage today (posted $2.65/mile vs paid $2.21/mile). This wide spread is a direct result of weekend capacity repositioning. While carriers are holding out for high posted rates on load boards to offset the AAA diesel price of $5.341/gallon, they are highly receptive to lower paid rates when offered immediate, concrete booking opportunities that minimize deadhead. Brokers should aggressively target dry van lanes today, securing capacity at the $2.21/mile paid average and locking in high margins before weekday demand firmed. In contrast, the reefer and heavy haul sectors require cautious pricing. Reefer paid rates ($3.25/mile) command a $0.09/mile premium over posted rates ($3.16/mile), while heavy haul paid rates ($3.87/mile) command a $0.15/mile premium. In these tight sectors, brokers must price their customer quotes aggressively to ensure they can source reliable capacity without eroding their margins.
Carrier operating economics remain under severe pressure today, driven by a high AAA national diesel average of $5.341/gallon. This elevated fuel cost acts as a rigid floor for carrier rate negotiations, making empty deadhead miles financially ruinous for small fleets and owner-operators. As a result, carrier behavior is highly focused on securing immediate backhauls, even at discounted rates, which explains the significant broker advantages observed in the dry van ($0.44/mile) and specialized ($0.74/mile) sectors today. On the regulatory front, the FMCSA's launch of the 'Motus' commercial vehicle registration platform represents a major shift in carrier compliance and oversight. By consolidating multiple legacy systems into a single digital portal, Motus enhances identity verification and data management, making it significantly harder for fraudulent or unsafe 'chameleon' carriers to operate. For brokers, this system will ultimately improve the safety and reliability of the carrier pool, but the transition may cause temporary administrative delays in new carrier onboarding. Furthermore, with tender rejections sitting at multi-year highs above 17%, carriers are demonstrating a high willingness to reject contracted freight in favor of lucrative spot market opportunities, particularly in peak agricultural and cross-border regions. Brokers must maintain strong, transparent relationships with reliable carriers and offer fast payment terms to secure consistent capacity in this highly volatile environment.
This is a Sunday contraction, not a true market break.
Dry van and specialized are the best tactical buy windows on the board.
Reefer has flipped from opportunity to protection mode.
Open-deck still dominates the board and still carries execution risk.
Monday will likely feel tighter than today’s screens suggest.
The market is sending two simultaneous messages:
Message one: weekend activity is lighter.
Message two: operating costs are enforcing discipline.
That is why the board is not uniformly soft.
Dry van is buyable, but mostly where you can offer:
Specialized is the best margin pocket, but only if the load is fully defined.
Reefer is not soft at all.
Flatbed looks soft on spread, but not on execution.
The veteran takeaway: - Buy screen softness where the load is simple. - Protect service where productivity is impaired. - Do not assume Sunday paid rates survive Monday routing-guide fallout.
Dry van
Reefer
Flatbed
Heavy haul
Specialized
LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial
Dallas-Fort Worth
Oklahoma and Missouri corridor
Upper Midwest north-south freight
The key distinction: - Texas flooding is a timing problem. - Missouri/Oklahoma flooding is a turn-loss problem. - The second one usually costs more money.
Shippers are likely to misread the board.
Carriers discount more on Sundays for certainty than for weakness.
Trusted carriers just gained value.
With shippers on dry van and specialized
With shippers on reefer
With carriers on weather-exposed open-deck
With regional carriers around Savannah
Carrier vetting
Quote validity
Accessorial discipline
Reload logic
🟢 First priority: Buy Monday dry van and specialized now
🟡 Second priority: Protect reefer margin and service
🟠 Third priority: Re-audit open-deck freight touching TX/OK/MO
🔵 Fourth priority: Use LTL/partial as a margin-defense valve
Today’s screen softness is tactical, not structural. The best brokers will separate “cheap to post” from “cheap to execute.”
If you want the highest-probability win: - buy van and specialized today - protect reefer aggressively - treat open-deck as a productivity market - get ahead of Monday before Monday gets ahead of you
"Don't think money does everything or you are going to end up doing everything for money."
— Voltaire