Skip to main content
Menu
(682) 978-8641
Get Started
MO

Missouri Truck Dispatch

Missouri sits at the geographic center of the US, where eastern and western freight networks converge. Kansas City and St. Louis are both top 10 intermodal hubs, and Missouri's position at the crossroads of I-44, I-70, and I-35 makes it a natural distribution center for the entire country.

Near

Geographic Center of US

2 (Top 10)

Intermodal Hubs

I-35, I-44, I-70

Major Interstates

50%

Within 500mi of US Pop

Kansas City intermodal rail hub and I-70 I-44 freight convergence in Missouri
Missouri sits at the geographic center of US freight movement

Major Freight Corridors

I-70 (Kansas City → Columbia → St. Louis)

Missouri's primary east-west corridor connecting two major metros. Consumer goods, intermodal, and manufacturing freight flow between KC and STL daily. Also connects to Denver (west) and Indianapolis (east).

I-44 (St. Louis → Springfield → Joplin → Tulsa)

Southwest corridor connecting St. Louis to the Ozarks, Oklahoma, and Texas. Follows the old Route 66. Manufacturing, agriculture, and distribution freight.

I-35 (Kansas City → Des Moines → Minneapolis)

North-south corridor connecting Kansas City to the Upper Midwest. Agricultural products, livestock, and manufactured goods.

I-49 (Kansas City → Joplin → Fort Smith, AR)

Emerging corridor connecting Kansas City to Northwest Arkansas (Walmart, Tyson, JB Hunt HQ). Retail and food freight.

Key Industries & Freight

Logistics/DistributionKC and STL are both top 10 intermodal/rail hubs. Distribution to central US.
AgricultureCorn, soybeans, cattle, hogs — Missouri is a major grain and livestock state
AutomotiveFord (Claycomo), GM (Wentzville) — assembly, parts, finished vehicles
Food ProcessingAnheuser-Busch (St. Louis), ConAgra, Cargill — beverages, processed foods, ingredients
Aerospace/DefenseBoeing (St. Louis), Whiteman AFB — military aircraft, defense equipment, components

Equipment Demand in Missouri

Dry VanHighIntermodal drayage, retail distribution, food and beverage
FlatbedHighSteel, construction, manufacturing, automotive
ReeferHighFood processing (AB, ConAgra), agricultural products, livestock
Power OnlyHighIntermodal trailer moves, KC and STL rail yards
Step DeckMediumManufacturing equipment, agricultural machinery, aerospace components
HotshotMediumUrgent auto parts (Ford Claycomo), Boeing components

Major Distribution Centers

  • 📦Kansas City — major intermodal hub, BNSF and UP rail yards
  • 📦Amazon — facilities across KC and STL metros
  • 📦Walmart — Bentonville HQ is just south; NW Arkansas DCs serve Missouri
  • 📦Ford — Kansas City Assembly Plant (Claycomo) — F-150 production
  • 📦Anheuser-Busch — St. Louis brewery and distribution network

Missouri Trucking Regulations

No Toll Roads

Missouri has no toll roads on any interstate — a significant advantage for carriers. All major highways are free.

Weight Limits

Missouri follows federal 80,000 lb limits. The state allows some higher weights on specific routes with permits.

IFTA Fuel Tax

Missouri fuel tax rate: $0.195/gallon — the second-lowest in the nation. This makes Missouri an excellent state for fuel purchases.

Frequently Asked Questions

Missouri sits at the geographic center of the US where eastern and western freight networks converge. Both Kansas City and St. Louis are top 10 intermodal hubs with major rail yards (BNSF, UP, NS). This central location means 50% of the US population is within 500 miles, making Missouri ideal for distribution operations.

Missouri has three major trucking advantages: no toll roads (every major highway is free), the second-lowest fuel tax in the nation ($0.195/gal), and a central location that provides efficient access to every major US market. These factors make Missouri one of the most cost-effective states for trucking operations.

Top outbound lanes: KC to Chicago (I-35/I-70, 530mi), KC to Dallas (I-35, 500mi), STL to Atlanta (I-44/I-65, 550mi), STL to Chicago (I-55, 300mi), and KC to Denver (I-70, 600mi). Missouri's central position provides strong rates to markets in every direction.

Missouri has two major assembly plants: Ford's Kansas City Assembly Plant in Claycomo (builds F-150 — America's best-selling vehicle) and GM's Wentzville Assembly (builds mid-size trucks and vans). These plants and their supplier networks create constant demand for parts delivery, raw materials, and finished vehicle transport.

Yes. Missouri's central US position and intermodal hub status make it excellent for dispatch operations. We handle all equipment types with expertise in KC/STL intermodal freight, Ford assembly lanes, agricultural hauling, and cross-country distribution routes.

Get Dispatched in Missouri

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

(682) 978-8641Get Started