Road transport capacity has been steadily leaving the market over the last few years. These exits, however, came on the heels of the massive COVID-era supply glut, cushioning its impact on the market. With capacity continuing to shrink through 2026, the industry will begin to feel the effects of this long-term restriction.
On a day-to-day basis, capacity is being cut in ways that have not always shown up on weekly rate charts due to the highly saturated starting point of the market. Fleets continue to quietly close operations, while others reduce their numbers. At the same time, investments in new equipment are being delayed and financing remains tight. The result is a market that still feels relaxed but is not built to withstand shocks.
This year, airlines will once again find themselves in a position of relative power. This not only allows businesses to earn higher rates, but also gives them the opportunity to make decisions designed to protect their networks and future cash flow. During this time, carriers will be able to prioritize working with carriers who have demonstrated their relational value during the crisis.
Shippers need to understand how shippers decide who gets trucks when the market changes, as well as how they can ensure they are on the short list when that happens.
While high-profile (or poorly managed) airline closures often make headlines, not all exits attract attention. Many operators simply stop renewing their authority, sell their equipment, and fold after another season of low margins. Every time that happens, the market loses more trucks.
In recent years, operator departures have looked more like a slow erosion of capacity than a drastic adjustment. However, as this trend continues, disruptions will begin to expose what little slack remains.
Less slack: There are fewer extra trucks waiting for a load.
Faster twist to tighten: A weather week, a compliance change or a seasonal burst hits harder.
Carrier selection becomes stricter: Cargo is still moving, but some carriers have priority over others.
If a carrier relies on spot coverage as its “plan,” that is essentially betting that there will always be extra capacity available at the exact time it is needed. That’s the bet that fails first in a tight market.
It is also important to note that the market does not need massive bankruptcies to harden. It also hardens when healthy fleets stop expanding. Many traders are moving from growth to discipline and operating efficiently to protect margins. When that mentality spreads, capacity can become more fragile.
Parked equipment: Older tractors are set aside rather than rebuilt.
Efficient dispatch: Fewer trucks retained to increase capacity.
Conservative Hiring: Fleets avoid adding seats they can’t keep occupied.
Replacement Only Estimates: Buy what you must, skip what you can.
When fleets retire new trucks, the market doesn’t feel it right away. It may become evident later, when demand stabilizes and the market realizes that the replacement portfolio is in short supply.
When capacity is reduced, shippers regain a sense of control they lack in more flexible markets. Given the freedom to choose their partners, carriers ask questions like: “Where do we get paid fairly? Where do our drivers waste the least time? Where do we avoid claims, chaos and surprises?”
Stop patterns: who burns driver hours and shrugs his shoulders
Payment behavior: late payment, short payment, accessories in dispute
Market behavior: Who abandoned their partners the moment the spot market became cheaper?
When demand returns, carriers don’t devote their energy to rebuilding burned relationships. They do their best transportation with customers they already trust.
Think of operator assignment as a scorecard. Rates matter, but they are just one item.
FactorWhat “good” looks likeWhat breaks trust quicklyTime at sender/receiverPayment qualityConsistencyNetwork settingOperational clarityRelationship history
If carriers want priority coverage, they should build their operations to get good results before the market adjusts. It’s impossible to outbid a broken process forever.
This means working to repair dents at their source by tracking dwell times, setting realistic goals, and fine-tuning processes. Carriers notice when carriers actually make improvements. Payments matter too. Fast, predictable and simple wins every time.
Carriers must engage with their carrier partners through market cycles. The carriers that remain stable when things are slow are the ones that get reliable trucks when capacity is reduced. Offer realistic delivery time: A forecast with 80% accuracy is much better than silence. Finally, build flexibility into appointments. Narrow windows do not impose discipline, they only create frustration and loss of service.
MigWay is designed for shippers who want control, not surprises. The company manages an asset-based fleet with 300 trucks and 500 trailers, supported by 24/7 in-house dispatch, live tracking, and zero outsourcing.
For shippers reviewing their 2026 route strategy, Migway can help strengthen execution now, before the market forces it.
Get a lane check: What breaks first when capacity is reduced?
Create a coverage plan: main operators, backups and surge options.