Monday, July 13, 2026
7:00 AM CST
On Monday, July 13, 2026, the domestic spot market experienced a significant post-weekend volume surge, with total available loads jumping 16.8% to 132,773. The market average rate firmed to $2.91/mile, supported by a verified AAA national diesel average of $4.875/gallon, which continues to act as a hard floor for carrier operating costs. Extreme heat warnings across the Upper Midwest and Northern Plains are threatening driver safety and equipment performance, while active river flooding in Missouri and Illinois is forcing detours on key freight corridors like I-44. For freight brokers, the widening spread in the dry van and flatbed sectors presents high-margin arbitrage opportunities, while the reefer sector remains highly competitive with paid rates commanding a premium over posted rates due to peak summer produce demand.
The cleanest brokerage margin window is likely Monday into early Tuesday, especially in dry van and flatbed. Once flood detours start absorbing driver hours and Midwest produce reloads pull reefers and support trucks deeper into agricultural lanes, replacement costs can rise faster than shipper pricing updates.
Dry conditions in Missouri and Illinois should limit any major expansion of flooding, but that does not translate into an immediate capacity reset. Local closures and staging disruptions typically linger a day or two after water levels stabilize, so transit commitments through the St. Louis and southern Missouri orbit still need extra buffer through Tuesday.
In Minnesota and North Dakota, the operational risk is less about a single hot day and more about repeated afternoon stress on drivers and refrigeration units through midweek. Pickup windows after lunch will be the most expensive to cover as carriers favor pre-dawn and evening loading to protect fuel burn, maintain setpoints, and avoid unscheduled breaks.
The pause in USDOT inactivations keeps marginal capacity available during a high-volume week, which helps on paper but puts more weight on carrier vetting. Registry transition per iods tend to create slower data refreshes and more ambiguity around operating status, so the practical edge is with brokers that can verify insurance, authority history, and contact integrity before tendering.
The Midwest is currently the most strategically important region for freight brokers due to a combination of high volume, active weather disruptions, and strong seasonal demand. The post-weekend volume surge has flooded the region with available loads, particularly in the flatbed and dry van sectors. However, active river flooding in Missouri and Illinois has disrupted key corridors like I-44, trapping equipment and forcing lengthy detours. Additionally, extreme heat warnings in Minnesota and North Dakota are placing severe stress on reefer equipment and drivers. This combination of high demand and capacity disruption is driving significant rate volatility, creating excellent arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
Chicago, IL β Kansas City, MO: This key Midwest corridor is experiencing high volume and significant disruption today. Active flooding along the Meramec River and other regional waterways is forcing detours off major routes like I-44, extending transit times and tightening available capacity. Shippers are eager to move freight early in the week, driving a 20.4% surge in dry van volume. Flatbed demand is also strong due to ongoing construction and industrial activity, but open-deck equipment is physically constrained by the flooding.
Minneapolis, MN β St. Louis, MO: This North-South corridor is heavily impacted by extreme heat warnings in the north and flooding in the south. The extreme heat in Minnesota is placing severe stress on reefer equipment, while the flooding in Missouri is disrupting final-mile deliveries. Despite these challenges, volume is strong, driven by seasonal agricultural shipments and retail replenishment. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight as carriers prioritize short-haul or less-risky lanes to protect their equipment.
Even though the core Chicago-Kansas City run is not fully dependent on the flooded corridor, carriers are increasingly pricing the lane with downstream uncertainty in mind. Trucks headed into Kansas City want confidence on the next move, and any reload exposure toward southern Missouri or the St. Louis orbit is now being embedded into the first leg.
The best chance to control cost on this lane is to sell the entire trip, not just the first move. Reefer carriers are far more willing to accept the heat and timing risk when there is a credible follow-on load or a fast turn into another dense Midwest market, which means one-way spot buys will keep paying the steepest premium.
The spot market experienced a powerful post-weekend volume surge today, with total available loads jumping 16.8% to 132,773. This influx of freight has firmed the market average rate to $2.91/mile, supported by a high national diesel average of $4.875/gallon. The equipment-specific data reveals a highly active market, with dry van available loads climbing 20.4% to 23,866 and flatbed loads rising 16.0% to 52,112. This surge in volume indicates that shippers are aggressively moving freight early in the week, creating a highly competitive environment for capacity. For freight brokers, the rate spread between posted and paid rates offers critical intelligence. In the dry van sector, posted rates averaged $2.67/mile while paid rates settled at $2.61/mile, representing a $0.06/mile broker advantage. This suggests that despite the volume surge, brokers still hold negotiating power on general freight. Conversely, the reefer sector has flipped to a carrier-favorable premium, with paid rates averaging $3.24/mile against posted rates of $3.18/mile. This $0.06/mile carrier advantage is driven by peak summer produce demand and extreme heat warnings, which have made temperature-controlled equipment exceptionally scarce. Flatbed rates also show a healthy $0.12/mile broker advantage, with posted rates at $3.27/mile and paid rates at $3.15/mile. This spread indicates that while industrial and construction demand is strong, brokers can still negotiate favorable margins by leveraging the high volume of available flatbed equipment (52,112 loads). However, specialized and heavy haul sectors remain highly competitive, with heavy haul paid rates commanding a massive $0.37/mile premium ($3.84/mile paid vs $3.47/mile posted) due to tight capacity and complex routing requirements.
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile and challenging segment of the spot market. Available reefer loads surged 27.7% today to 7,858, driven by the peak summer produce harvest. Commodities like watermelons from Texas and Georgia, corn from Illinois, and blueberries from Michigan are moving in high volumes, requiring immediate, temperature-controlled transportation. This seasonal demand has collided with extreme heat warnings across the Upper Midwest and Northern Plains, where heat index values are expected to reach up to 110 degrees. This extreme heat is placing severe stress on reefer units, which must work twice as hard to maintain tight temperature controls. Consequently, many owner-operators are hesitant to accept long-haul loads that risk cargo spoilage or equipment breakdown, severely tightening available capacity. This capacity constraint has driven reefer paid rates to a premium, averaging $3.24/mile compared to posted rates of $3.18/mile. Brokers must be prepared to pay this premium to secure reliable equipment, but they can leverage the urgency of perishable shipments to command higher rates and healthy margins from shippers. Geographically, the tightest reefer capacity is concentrated in the Midwest and Southeast. Active river flooding in Missouri and Illinois is further complicating operations, forcing reefer carriers to take lengthy detours that extend transit times and increase fuel consumption. To navigate this challenging environment, brokers should focus on securing backhaul opportunities for carriers returning to high-demand agricultural zones, offering them consistent miles in exchange for reliable service on temperature-sensitive loads.
Small carriers and owner-operators continue to face severe financial and operational pressure, which is actively shaping spot market capacity. The verified AAA national diesel average firmed at $4.875/gallon today, continuing to act as a hard floor for carrier operating costs. This high fuel cost severely restricts deadhead miles, as carriers cannot afford to run empty search miles for higher-paying freight. Consequently, carriers are increasingly selective, prioritizing lanes with guaranteed return freight or demanding high fuel surcharges to cover their expenses. On the regulatory front, the FMCSA's temporary suspension of USDOT number inactivations during the transition to the new Motus registration system has prevented a sudden capacity shock. Had the inactivations proceeded, thousands of non-compliant small carriers would have been sidelined, causing a severe capacity crunch. While this suspension provides temporary relief, the underlying compliance pressure remains high. Professional carriers are increasingly migrating to paid load boards to access vetted brokers and higher-paying freight, leaving free platforms saturated with high-risk, unvetted capacity. For brokers, these carrier dynamics require a strategic shift in sourcing. To attract reliable, compliant carriers, brokers must offer competitive rates that account for high fuel costs and prioritize transparency in their postings. Utilizing paid platforms with integrated credit scores and clear rate histories is essential to build trust with professional owner-operators. Additionally, brokers should assist carriers with compliance questions regarding the Motus transition, positioning themselves as valuable partners rather than just transaction coordinators.
This is a front-loaded execution market, not a late-week bargain market. Total available loads climbed to 132,773, up 16.8% from 113,721, and the all-mode average firmed to $2.91/mile. The opportunity is strongest now, before weather friction and reload slippage force replacement costs higher.
The board looks fuller than true usable capacity. Flooding in Missouri/Illinois and extreme heat in Minnesota/North Dakota are reducing productivity even where trucks are technically available. In freight, capacity counts less than executable capacity.
Dry van and flatbed offer the cleanest screen spreads today.
Reefer and heavy haul should be treated as service-first buys.
LTL (Less Than Truckload) / partial is your pressure-release valve today. With 9,976 loads and a $0.10/mile broker-side screen spread ($1.69 posted / $1.59 paid), flexible freight should be converted early before truckload turns into rescue pricing.
Carrier verification is a margin tool this week, not just a compliance task. The FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) registration transition is keeping paper capacity in the market, but the practical advantage goes to brokers who verify insurance, authority status, dispatch integrity, and actual truck location before tendering.
Demand came back faster than capacity discipline loosened. The all-mode average rate moved from $2.76/mile yesterday to $2.91/mile today. That is a meaningful early-week firming signal, especially with diesel still at $4.875/gallon.
Industrial freight is still setting the market tone. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized together account for 91,073 of 132,773 available loads, or roughly 68.6% of the board. That matters because the national average is still heavily influenced by industrial/open-deck freight, so do not price dry van using the blended national average alone.
Execution activity confirms that same pattern. By the morning snapshot, total loads moved were 17,237. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized accounted for 11,795 of those moved loads, or about 68.4%. Translation: open-deck and project freight are still driving tempo, urgency, and truck behavior.
Posted-versus-paid spread is only a screen signal. A $0.06 or $0.12/mile screen advantage is real opportunity, but only if you avoid the classic killers:
Carrier psychology is still conservative. At $4.875/gallon, carriers are not looking for flashy gross numbers. They are prioritizing:
Dry Van: buy early, especially in the Midwest
Reefer: protect service, sell the full trip
Flatbed: strongest clean margin play if scope is tight
Heavy Haul: quote carefully, not quickly
Specialized: relationship market, not a spread market
LTL / Partial: use it before truckload gets ugly
Missouri and Illinois flooding is a cycle-time problem first. The mistake is treating this as only a map problem. The real damage shows up in:
St. Louis-area and southern Missouri freight should carry extra buffer through Tuesday. Even where water stops rising, staging and local access do not normalize instantly. Carriers will still price uncertainty into lanes that only partially touch the disruption.
Heat is most expensive in the afternoon reefer cycle. In Minnesota and North Dakota, the risk is cumulative. By afternoon, carriers start pricing for:
The broker move is to shift the operating day. Best pickup windows in heat-affected reefer markets:
Chicago β Kansas City is being contingency-priced. Even if the core lane is still moving, carriers are pricing the next move into the first move. If they think Kansas City reloads may drag them toward disrupted Missouri networks, they will ask for protection now, not later.
Minneapolis β St. Louis reefer coverage will reward brokers who can sell continuity. Carriers will tolerate the heat/flood combination more easily when you can show:
St. Louis orbit freight needs conservative promises. Same-day recovery is unlikely once first appointments slip. The first pressure point is usually missed reloads, not dramatic road shutdown headlines.
Sell certainty, not false softness. The wrong message is: βThere are more loads on the board, so capacity is loose.β The right message is: βThere is freight volume and truck activity, but usable capacity is being filtered by weather, fuel, and reload risk.β
Ask for flexibility where it matters most. Push customers for:
Shorten quote validity. On weather- and produce-sensitive freight, hold rates for hours, not days. That protects margin and improves credibility when the market moves underneath the quote.
Separate linehaul from friction costs. Especially on flatbed and Missouri-adjacent lanes, quote:
Lead with trip quality, not just rate. Good carriers want to know:
Use reload planning as currency. This matters most in:
Post premium freight where premium carriers are looking. Professional carriers are increasingly filtering freight by broker reputation, clarity, and creditworthiness. Clean postings and strong communication are a real sourcing advantage today.
Verify before tendering. Because the FMCSA registration transition is preserving marginal paper capacity, todayβs practical checks should include:
Build backup coverage on every weather-sensitive load. A backup carrier costs nothing until you need one. A failed primary on a Midwest reefer or flatbed load can erase the entire dayβs spread.
Pad time before you pad rate. Many service failures this week will come from bad cycle-time assumptions, not bad linehaul pricing. Build realistic buffers first.
Document accessorial triggers up front. Especially for:
Avoid afternoon reefer surprises. If the load is produce, food, or temperature-sensitive, confirm:
Do not overcommit on heavy haul timing. Flood-related route adjustments and permit reality can change the delivery plan faster than a shipper update cycle.
Most likely outcome: 60%
Tighter outcome: 25%
Better outcome: 15%
Cover Midwest dry van and flatbed freight before the board gets more emotional. Prioritize Chicago-, Kansas City-, St. Louis-, and Missouri-adjacent reload chains.
Move reefer appointment requests out of the afternoon heat band. Early morning and evening windows will cover cleaner and often cheaper.
Use LTL/partial aggressively for flexible freight. Preserve truckload capacity for appointment-critical freight.
Shorten quote validity on weather-sensitive freight. Re-price quickly when pickup times move.
Sell the reload plan with the load. Especially on reefer and Midwest one-way moves.
Tighten carrier verification before tendering. Treat compliance and identity checks as margin defense.
Pre-negotiate accessorials on flatbed and Missouri-sensitive loads. Do not rely on after-the-fact recovery.
Track real execution metrics, not just board volume. Watch:
"The finish line is just the beginning of a whole new race."
β Unknown