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12 min read

Truck Dispatch Rates 2026: Complete Pricing Guide

What do dispatch services actually cost? We break down every pricing model, show you what's fair, what's overpriced, and how to compare companies apples-to-apples.

Truck dispatch rate comparison chart showing percentage-based flat rate and per-load pricing models
Dispatch rates range from 4-10% — but the cheapest rate is rarely the best value

Why This Guide Exists

The dispatch industry has a transparency problem. Some companies advertise "5% dispatch" but tack on $200 in monthly fees. Others charge 10% but deliver rates so good that your net revenue jumps 25%. The percentage alone tells you almost nothing.

We're a dispatch company (yes, we have skin in this game), but we also believe informed carriers make better decisions — and become better long-term clients. This guide gives you the real numbers, the real pricing models, and the questions to ask before committing your paycheck to anyone.

Breakeven analysis showing when flat rate dispatch becomes cheaper than percentage-based pricing
At $10,000+ weekly gross, flat rate dispatch saves you $350+ per week versus percentage pricing

The Three Dispatch Pricing Models

Nearly every dispatch company uses one of three pricing structures. Understanding each helps you compare companies and calculate your true cost.

1. Percentage-Based Pricing

The most common model. You pay a percentage of the gross load revenue on every load your dispatcher books.

Industry Range

4% – 10%

Most Common

5% – 8%

Pros: Low barrier to entry. You only pay when you earn. Cost scales with revenue. Dispatcher is incentivized to find higher-paying loads.

Cons: Costs more during high-revenue weeks. Can feel expensive on premium loads. Some dispatchers prioritize volume over quality to maximize their cut.

2. Flat Weekly Rate

You pay a fixed dollar amount per week regardless of how much freight your dispatcher books. Becoming more popular in 2026.

Semi Trucks

$150 – $400/wk

Box Truck/Hotshot

$200 – $500/wk

Pros: Predictable cost. Better value for high-revenue carriers. Pay the same on $5,000 loads as $1,500 loads.

Cons: You pay even during slow weeks. Some flat-rate services provide less individualized attention. Need consistent volume to justify the cost.

3. Per-Load Fee

A fixed dollar amount per load booked. Less common but used by some newer dispatch services.

Industry Range

$25 – $75/load

Best For

Part-time carriers

Pros: Great for part-time carriers who run fewer loads. Very transparent cost per transaction.

Cons: Dispatcher may be less motivated to maximize your rate (they get paid the same whether it's a $1,500 or $3,500 load). Not cost-effective for full-time carriers.

2026 Dispatch Rate Comparison by Equipment Type

Dispatch rates vary by equipment type because specialized trailers require more expertise and the freight typically pays more. Here's what the market looks like in 2026:

Equipment Type% Rate RangeFlat Rate RangeAvg Load Revenue
Dry Van5-7%$150-300/wk$2,000-4,500
Reefer5-8%$200-350/wk$2,500-5,500
Flatbed6-8%$200-350/wk$2,500-5,500
Step Deck6-8%$200-350/wk$2,500-5,000
Power Only5-7%$150-300/wk$1,800-4,000
Hotshot7-10%$250-400/wk$800-3,000
Box Truck7-10%$250-400/wk$600-2,500
Heavy Haul/RGN6-10%$300-500/wk$3,000-10,000+

Ranges reflect market averages across multiple dispatch providers. Individual rates vary by company, region, and service level.

Where Truck Dispatch Experts Fits

Full transparency — here's exactly what we charge:

Semi Truck Dispatch

Percentage rate6% per load
Flat rate$250/week
Setup fee$0
ContractNone

Covers: Dry Van, Reefer, Flatbed, Step Deck, Power Only, Heavy Haul

Box Truck & Hotshot

Percentage rate8% per load
Flat rate$350/week
Setup fee$0
ContractNone

Covers: Box Trucks, Sprinter Vans, Hotshot Trailers

Switch anytime: You can move between percentage and flat rate whenever it makes sense for your business. Most of our high-volume carriers choose flat rate. Carriers ramping up or running part-time prefer percentage. No penalty for switching.

Percentage vs Flat Rate: When to Switch

The breakeven point is simple math. If your weekly gross revenue exceeds the flat rate divided by the percentage rate, flat rate saves you money.

Weekly Gross6% Cost$250 FlatBetter Option
$3,000$180$250Percentage
$4,167$250$250Breakeven
$6,000$360$250Flat Rate
$8,000$480$250Flat Rate
$10,000$600$250Flat Rate
$15,000$900$250Flat Rate

Semi truck rates shown. For box truck/hotshot: 8% vs $350/week — breakeven at $4,375/week gross.

Hidden Fees to Watch For

The advertised dispatch rate is only part of the picture. Many carriers sign up at "5%" and end up paying the equivalent of 8-10% when hidden fees are included. Here are the most common:

Setup/Onboarding Fee

$50 – $500

One-time. Should be $0 at any reputable company.

Weekly Technology Fee

$25 – $75/wk

Charged for TMS access or tracking software. Often not disclosed upfront.

Broker Setup Fee

$10 – $50/broker

Per new broker they contact. Can add up fast on diverse load boards.

Paperwork/Admin Fee

$5 – $15/load

Per-load charge for rate confirmations and BOL processing.

After-Hours Fee

$50 – $100/call

Charged for dispatch support outside business hours.

Cancellation Penalty

$200 – $1,000+

Early termination fee for contracts. A major red flag.

Factoring Coordination Fee

0.5 – 2% extra

Additional percentage for coordinating with your factoring company.

How to Compare Dispatch Companies on Price

Don't compare the headline dispatch percentage. Compare the total monthly cost and, more importantly, the net revenue after all fees. Here's a framework:

1

Calculate Total Monthly Cost

Add up: dispatch fee (% × expected gross, or flat rate × 4 weeks) + all additional monthly fees. Ask each company for a complete written fee breakdown.

2

Ask About Trucks-per-Dispatcher Ratio

A dispatcher handling 5-8 trucks gives you real attention. One handling 20+ trucks is going to miss opportunities. The cheapest rate means nothing if your dispatcher can't focus on maximizing your loads.

3

Compare Net Revenue, Not Cost

A 6% dispatcher who negotiates $3.50/mi nets you more than a 4% dispatcher averaging $2.80/mi. Run the math on a typical month: (expected gross - total dispatch fees) = your take-home. The company that maximizes this number wins.

4

Ask for a Trial Period

Any company confident in their results should offer a no-contract trial. Run 2-4 weeks, compare your numbers to self-dispatching or your previous service. If they won't let you try without a contract, walk away.

5

Check What's Included

Does the rate include: load searching, rate negotiation, paperwork handling, broker setup, 24/7 support, billing assistance, and factoring coordination? Or are some of these extras? Full-service should mean full-service.

What Good Dispatch Is Actually Worth

The real question isn't "how much does dispatch cost?" — it's "does dispatch generate more revenue than it costs?" Here's where professional dispatch typically adds value:

+$0.20-0.50/mi

Higher Rates

Professional negotiation and market expertise consistently get above-average lane rates.

-5-10% empty miles

Less Deadhead

Route optimization and backhaul planning reduce unpaid miles between loads.

+15-25 hrs/month

More Driving Time

Hours spent searching and negotiating become billable driving hours instead.

2-3× options

Better Load Selection

Access to broker networks and shipper relationships you don't have on your own.

The math: A carrier grossing $12,000/month self-dispatching who switches to a 6% dispatch service generating $15,000/month pays $900 in fees but nets $2,100 more. That's a 233% return on the dispatch fee.

Pricing Red Flags

Any company requiring a long-term contract (6+ months) combined with high fees
Setup fees over $200 — you're paying to be a customer
Refusing to provide a complete written fee breakdown before signup
Charging for services that should be standard (broker calls, rate confirmations, basic support)
Unusually low rates (2-3%) with vague descriptions of 'additional service fees'
Percentage rates calculated on gross + fuel surcharge rather than just the line-haul rate
Requiring payment in advance before any loads are booked

Related Resources

TDE

Truck Dispatch Experts

Published Jan 20, 2026 · Updated Mar 1, 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

The industry average for semi truck dispatch is 5-8% of gross load revenue per load. Budget dispatch services charge 4-5%, mid-tier companies charge 5-7%, and premium/specialized dispatchers charge 7-10%. Flat weekly rates range from $150-400/week depending on equipment type and service level. At Truck Dispatch Experts, we charge 6% for semi trucks or $250/week flat rate, and 8% for box trucks/hotshot or $350/week flat rate.

It depends on your monthly gross revenue. If you gross over $10,000/week on a semi truck, the $250/week flat rate is cheaper than 6% (which would be $600+ per week). If you gross under $4,200/week, the percentage rate is cheaper. Most full-time owner-operators save money with flat rate pricing. We let you switch between the two anytime so you always get the better deal.

Ultra-low rates usually mean one of three things: the dispatcher handles too many trucks per person (less attention to your loads), they charge hidden fees for paperwork, setup, or broker communications, or they're new and using low pricing to attract initial clients. Always ask about hidden fees, how many trucks each dispatcher manages, and whether the rate includes ALL services or just load finding.

Some do — setup fees range from $50-500 in the industry. Reputable companies like ours charge $0 setup fees. If a company charges a large upfront fee combined with a long-term contract, that's a red flag. You shouldn't have to pay before seeing results.

Common hidden fees include: broker setup fees ($10-50 per new broker), weekly technology/software fees ($25-50/week), paperwork processing fees ($5-15 per load), after-hours support surcharges, and early cancellation penalties. Ask every dispatch company for a COMPLETE fee list in writing before signing up. At TDE, the dispatch percentage or flat rate is the only fee — period.

Yes, specialized equipment dispatch (reefer, flatbed, heavy haul) can justify higher rates because the loads pay more and require specific market knowledge. A dispatcher who gets you $4.50/mi on reefer loads at 8% is far more valuable than a generalist getting you $3.00/mi at 5%. Focus on net revenue after dispatch fees, not the fee percentage alone.

Yes, especially if you have multiple trucks, consistent volume, or specialized equipment. Fleet pricing (3+ trucks) typically comes with 1-2% lower rates. Some companies also offer loyalty discounts after 6-12 months. At TDE, we offer custom fleet pricing for 3+ trucks — contact us for a quote.

Transparent Pricing, Real Results

6% per load or $250/week flat rate for semi trucks. No setup fees, no hidden charges, no contracts. Try us risk-free and compare your numbers.

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