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MI

Michigan Truck Dispatch

Michigan is synonymous with automotive manufacturing. The Big Three (GM, Ford, Stellantis) and thousands of Tier 1/2 suppliers create one of the densest manufacturing freight networks in the US. Beyond automotive, Michigan's Great Lakes ports, agricultural base, and growing logistics sector offer diverse freight opportunities.

#1

Rank in Auto Manufacturing

1,600+

Auto Parts Suppliers

38

Great Lakes Ports

#4

Rank in Manufacturing

Detroit automotive manufacturing freight with trucks at assembly plant loading docks
Michigan automotive manufacturing drives consistent freight demand

Major Freight Corridors

I-75 (Detroit → Flint → Saginaw → Mackinac)

Michigan's primary north-south corridor. Automotive parts move between Detroit assembly plants and Tier 1 supplier facilities throughout the I-75 corridor.

I-94 (Detroit → Kalamazoo → Chicago)

East-west corridor connecting Detroit's auto industry to Chicago and the Midwest. Consumer goods, automotive, and manufacturing freight.

I-96 (Detroit → Lansing → Grand Rapids)

Cross-state corridor linking Detroit to Grand Rapids — Michigan's second-largest metro and a major furniture/food processing hub.

Ambassador Bridge / Blue Water Bridge (US-Canada)

More truck freight crosses the US-Canada border at Detroit than any other point. Automotive parts, finished vehicles, and manufacturing supplies flow continuously.

Key Industries & Freight

AutomotiveGM (Detroit, Flint, Lansing), Ford (Dearborn, Wayne), Stellantis (Sterling Heights) — parts, assemblies, raw materials
FurnitureGrand Rapids — traditional furniture capital. Office furniture, institutional furniture, components
AgricultureCherries (#1 US), blueberries (#1 US), dairy, sugar beets, corn, soybeans
Cross-Border TradeMore US-Canada truck freight crosses at Detroit than any other border point
Defense/AerospaceDetroit Arsenal (Warren), military vehicle manufacturing, aerospace components

Equipment Demand in Michigan

FlatbedHighSteel, automotive stampings, manufacturing equipment, construction
Dry VanHighAutomotive parts (JIT), consumer goods, retail distribution
ReeferHighCherries, blueberries, dairy, food processing, Great Lakes fish
Step DeckHighHeavy automotive dies and tooling, manufacturing equipment
HotshotHighUrgent auto parts (production line down = expedited delivery)
Heavy HaulMediumAutomotive press dies, transformers, industrial equipment

Major Distribution Centers

  • 📦Detroit Metro — automotive parts distribution network (hundreds of JIT facilities)
  • 📦Amazon — 10+ facilities across Michigan (Romulus, Pontiac, Grand Rapids)
  • 📦Meijer — Grand Rapids HQ with major DC network across Michigan
  • 📦General Motors — multiple assembly and parts distribution facilities
  • 📦Ford — Rouge Complex (Dearborn), largest integrated factory in the world

Michigan Trucking Regulations

Michigan Weight Limits

Michigan allows up to 164,000 lbs on designated routes with special axle configurations — the highest weight limits in the US. This creates unique heavy-haul opportunities but requires specific equipment knowledge.

Winter Operations

Michigan winters (Nov-March) require chains/winter tires. Snow-related delays, seasonal weight restrictions on rural roads during spring thaw, and Great Lakes lake-effect snow impact operations.

IFTA Fuel Tax

Michigan fuel tax rate: $0.462/gallon — above the national average. Factor this into profitability calculations for Michigan lanes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Detroit's Big Three (GM, Ford, Stellantis) and 1,600+ Tier 1/2 suppliers create an enormous just-in-time freight network. Assembly plants operate on precise schedules — a parts delay can shut down a production line costing millions per hour. This creates constant demand for reliable freight hauling and premium rates for time-critical automotive loads.

Michigan allows up to 164,000 lbs on designated routes with specific multi-axle configurations — far above the federal 80,000 lb limit. This makes Michigan unique for heavy-haul operations. However, you need the right equipment (11-axle configurations) and knowledge of designated routes to take advantage of these higher limits.

Top outbound lanes: Detroit to Chicago (I-94, 280mi), Detroit to Toledo/Columbus (I-75), Detroit to Indianapolis (I-69), Grand Rapids to Chicago (I-96/I-94), and Detroit to Canada (Ambassador Bridge/Blue Water Bridge). Cross-border automotive freight consistently pays premium rates.

Very profitable. The Ambassador Bridge and Blue Water Bridge handle more truck freight than any other US-Canada crossing. Automotive parts, finished vehicles, and manufacturing supplies flow both directions daily. Cross-border loads typically pay premium rates due to customs requirements and additional paperwork.

Yes. Michigan's automotive freight network is one of our key markets. We dispatch all equipment types with deep expertise in Detroit JIT automotive lanes, Grand Rapids distribution, Great Lakes agricultural freight, and cross-border Canada operations.

Get Dispatched in Michigan

Our dispatchers know the Michigan freight market inside and out. Tell us your equipment type and preferred lanes — we'll keep your truck loaded and profitable.

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