COLUMBUS, Ind. —Truckload spot rates are on track to rise more than 40% y/y in June 2026, net fuel, according to ACT Research.
“Tighter supply remains the main reason for accelerating rates,” said Tim Denoyer, vice president and senior analyst, ACT. “As equipment investment declined and regulations fueled a driver shortage, the dislocation to an acutely tight TL market occurred fairly quickly this year. Most of this occurred before the May 14 Montgomery SCOTUS ruling, raising broker liability and further tightening capacity.”
A Supply-Driven Freight Cycle
The US freight cycle has so far been supply-driven, but the freight demand outlook is supported by tight inventories, improving industrial activity, declining capacity, and falling tariffs, as discussed in the latest release of the Freight Forecast: Rate and Volume OUTLOOK report.
“The ACT Driver Availability Index remained in shortage territory in May at 32.6,” Denoyer said. “While up from 31.5 in April, this survey-based diffusion index is neutral around 50 and acutely tight below 40. As seasonality softens after July 4th, some cooling off is likely, and load/truck trends have fallen from May to June, so the near-vertical trend is unlikely to persist. Net DOT operating authorities have improved a little in recent months in response to higher rates, and new Class 8 tractor sales are set to rise in 2H. But we think new regulations, including the MOTUS system requiring new USDOT numbers for all fleets from May onward, will continue to tighten capacity.”











